Hello Richard: avoid NFS for protocol performance issues. Go for iscsi.
Regards,
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Enviado por TypeMail
Em 4 de dez de 2015 12:48, pelo 12:48, Richard Robbins <rerobb...@itinker.net>
escrito:
>I am new to Bacula and would like to run the Bacula director on a
>CentOS 7
>virtual machine with the FQDN of bacula.itinker.net and use a NAS
>device as
>my storage repository. For now, my NAS is a somewhat dated Netgear
>ReadyNAS device that I'm going to replace with a new Synology box in
>the
>not-too-distant future.
>
>I've got Version 7.0.5 of the Bacula components runnning on the Centos
>machine and can backup and restore to a local directory without
>difficulty. I'm struggling to get the NAS into the mix.
>
>In my all local configuration I backup to /bacula/backup and restore to
>/bacula/restore.
>
>I had hoped that I could tweak the system so that I mount an NFS v3
>share
>at /bacula/backup.
>
>The OS mounts the NFS share at that point and I'm able to read and
>write
>files without difficulty but when I fire up Bacula the program hangs
>with
>accompanying warning messages "Warning: bsock.c:112 Could not connect
>to
>Storage daemon on bacula.itinker.net:9103. ERR=Connection refused.
>
>Since I'm able to read and write the NFS share outside of Bacula I'm
>stumped as to what's getting the way when Bacula runs.
>
>In a perfect world I suppose I'd run the director and SD on the NAS
>itself,
>but I'm not up to attempting to build the current Bacula system on my
>older
>NAS. Maybe I should try to compile the storage daemon but not the
>director
>on the NAS and then point the director on my VM to a daemon running on
>the
>NAS. But that too is more work than just mounting the NFS share as I
>am
>doing at the moment.
>
>Another approach would be to create an iSCSI target and pass that to my
>VM
>as a virtual disc which would just be embedded in the virtual hardware
>prior to system boot time, but I'd like to avoid that if possible.
>
>Your thoughts and guidance will be greatly appreciated.
>
>-- Rich
>
>
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