-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Niall == Niall O Broin [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Niall Speak to me brother ! I've been posting about a similar problem here but
Niall I've got no responses. Do you get messages like these in the report:
Niall serv1 /boot lev 0 FAILED
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
I backup 7 local systems with Amanda.
Three Linux boxes (1 Debian/i386, 1 RH/i386, 1 RH/Netwinder), and
four NetBSD/i386 boxes. There is a NetBSD/ipf firewall between the backup
server (NetBSD/i386) and some of the boxes. Some of the backups also occur
On Sun, May 05, 2002 at 01:36:16PM -0400, Michael Richardson wrote:
Niall serv1 /boot lev 0 FAILED [Request to serv1 timed out.] serv1 /
Niall lev 0 FAILED [Request to serv1 timed out.]
Bingo. What is the firewall?
A Linux box with 2.4.x (10, I think) and iptables (using SuSE's
On Sat, May 04, 2002 at 08:02:58PM -0400, Michael Richardson wrote:
I backup 7 local systems with Amanda.
Three Linux boxes (1 Debian/i386, 1 RH/i386, 1 RH/Netwinder), and
four NetBSD/i386 boxes. There is a NetBSD/ipf firewall between the backup
server (NetBSD/i386) and some of the
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Niall == Niall O Broin [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I backup 7 local systems with Amanda.
Three Linux boxes (1 Debian/i386, 1 RH/i386, 1 RH/Netwinder), and four
NetBSD/i386 boxes. There is a NetBSD/ipf firewall between the backup
server
On Sun, 5 May 2002, Niall O Broin wrote:
On Sat, May 04, 2002 at 08:02:58PM -0400, Michael Richardson wrote:
The three behind the firewall fail frequently, but not 100% of the time.
I setup backups for just those hosts, and watch with tcpdump. I've built with
the appropriate port
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Ulrik == Ulrik Sandberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Ulrik On Sun, 5 May 2002, Niall O Broin wrote:
On Sat, May 04, 2002 at 08:02:58PM -0400, Michael Richardson wrote:
The three behind the firewall fail frequently, but not 100% of the
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
I backup 7 local systems with Amanda.
Three Linux boxes (1 Debian/i386, 1 RH/i386, 1 RH/Netwinder), and
four NetBSD/i386 boxes. There is a NetBSD/ipf firewall between the backup
server (NetBSD/i386) and some of the boxes. Some of the backups also occur