Thanks Aaron Troy!
Troy Frank wrote:
That's what it looked like to me too. The restore path was missing a
colon and a trailing \ .
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 1/18/2006 2:02:07 PM
poa:restore/ ?
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 01/18/06 02:37PM
Troy thanks,
If I wanted to restore a post office to a
Troy thanks,
If I wanted to restore a post office to a restore folder area on the
same box using point-n-time (1/06/06) what would a command line restore
look like? I have the the following which seems to be missing something
restore pitd=1/06/2006 -pitt=07:00-subdir=yes docgw1/poa:\cohq*
poa:restore/ ?
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 01/18/06 02:37PM
Troy thanks,
If I wanted to restore a post office to a restore folder area on the
same box using point-n-time (1/06/06) what would a command line restore
look like? I have the the following which seems to be missing something
restore
That's what it looked like to me too. The restore path was missing a
colon and a trailing \ .
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 1/18/2006 2:02:07 PM
poa:restore/ ?
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 01/18/06 02:37PM
Troy thanks,
If I wanted to restore a post office to a restore folder area on the
same box using
Hello,
I am having trouble restoring a Novell Post office box using
point-n-time,
A client wants a restore using a specific data but the file structure
doesn't
for that date. But when I do normal restore without point n time I see
the file structure. Does anyone have a specific way they restore
We have a separate restore server that we put all of our groupwise
restores onto. Because groupwise makes you restore the whole P.O. just
to get at one person's email, it would be a bit cumbersome for us to do
it on the live servers. On the groupwise servers themselves, I run a
dsmc set access