In your position, I would install Amanda (Open Source) and do the backups to
tape, directly from the Linux/390 system.

Understand that the CDL format will only allow you to back up your Linux/390
data at a "partition" level, not a file level.  If you want file level
backups, your no-extra-cost choices are something like Amanda, or the
various network-based options you've already figured out.  One other
possibility (if you've got DASD to burn) would be to have another DASD
volume to receive copies of your important files as backups.

Mark Post

-----Original Message-----
From: James Melin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, May 13, 2002 10:10 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: behaviour of tar


if you use the -u (update) function in TAR to freshen an archive, what
actually happens in the file? Is dead space created? Does the archive file
increase in size each time it is freshened or does it rebuild the archive
and just update the files that have changed?

The reason I ask is this:

I've been put in the unenviable situation of taking my linux experiment
into production. I am not ready in a number of areas, namely not at the
right kernal level to do CDL layout on disk, so I cannot backup using the
s/390 disk tools. We do not have and due to budget issues, will probably
not acquire Tivoli Storage manager, nor do I have VM and due to the same
budget issues, we will not be acquiring VM in the 2003 budget.

So my options for backing things up are
1) Tar critical directory trees on a daily, weekly and monthly basis, FTP
them to the HFS on s/390 so they get backed up by existant things.
2) Get NFS working on S/390 and Linux so that S/390 can mount my Linux file
system and back it up.

Given these two options (Or if anyone has a better idea - and no, refusing
to go production isn't an option) what is my best course of action? Does
anyone have a shell script that tars a directory and does some condition
code checking etc? I'm totally unfamiliar with unix shell scripting - I
usually use REXX for that in other environments.

Thanks gang.
I'm In Hell.


-J

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