On 17/11/2012 3:05 AM, Dan Langille wrote: > You mention that you checked mtime, and atime. What about ctime? FYI, > Bacula, to my knowledge, does not backup depending up on atime. Thinking about it - if you "mv" a directory somewhere, and then "mv" it back, you have, effectively, created a new directory tree.
Without looking at the source code, if I was writing the scanner, at *this* point I would mark that directory tree to be backed up, even if the name is the same you cannot know that the content is identical, for all you know that three was deleted and re-created. Why bother walking a tree that is new, once you know it is new, you back it up. And, after backing up computers on-and-off for three decades, I worry about not *enough* data being backed up, if I saw more than I had expected, I would assume I had unrealistic expectations, examine my assumptions again, and realise something like, "Such and such a process touches (huge set of files) and tacks a line on the end of each, so of course they all get backed up." Or whatever. The list of files getting backed up would be interesting, as would the Job definitions and so on. Cheers, Gary B-) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Monitor your physical, virtual and cloud infrastructure from a single web console. Get in-depth insight into apps, servers, databases, vmware, SAP, cloud infrastructure, etc. Download 30-day Free Trial. Pricing starts from $795 for 25 servers or applications! http://p.sf.net/sfu/zoho_dev2dev_nov _______________________________________________ Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users