Re: [BackupPC-users] 8.030.000, Too much files to backup ?

2012-01-12 Thread Jean Spirat
cutting in 4 the backup done the trick, i also moved the part that took the longest to tar. Curiously this is not the part with the most files but the part with the most directoryies that takes so long to backup :) anyway the 8Millions files are backed up now. thanks for your help. regards,

Re: [BackupPC-users] OT: NAS GUI for native Linux (preferably RHEL)

2012-01-12 Thread Timothy J Massey
Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote on 01/10/2012 02:54:12 PM: Like I said, I'm looking for the general interface provided by every NAS I've ever seen. Of course, each of them is specific to their device. I'm hoping there's a version out there for generic Linux. Does anyone have

Re: [BackupPC-users] OT: NAS GUI for native Linux (preferably RHEL)

2012-01-12 Thread Timothy J Massey
hans...@gmail.com wrote on 01/10/2012 08:00:45 PM: I highly recommend OpenFiler. The code itself is open-source, but t's not very diligently supported by the community. However I was a total newbie to the world of Linux and have never needed any - it's been solid as a rock, and has every

Re: [BackupPC-users] OT: NAS GUI for native Linux (preferably RHEL)

2012-01-12 Thread Timothy J Massey
Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote on 01/10/2012 08:12:10 PM: On Tue, Jan 10, 2012 at 2:59 PM, Tyler J. Wagner ty...@tolaris.com wrote: So, my question: is there a NAS GUI out there that can be added on top of standard Linux (preferably RHEL, but very willing to consider others)

Re: [BackupPC-users] OT: NAS GUI for native Linux (preferably RHEL)

2012-01-12 Thread Timothy J Massey
hans...@gmail.com wrote on 01/10/2012 09:11:09 PM: On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 8:18 AM, Chris Parsons chris.pars...@petrosys.com.au wrote: Id highly recommend Nexenta. It is much more feature complete than Openfiler and linux. Futher to this, with my experiences, BackupPC performs much

Re: [BackupPC-users] OT: NAS GUI for native Linux (preferably RHEL)

2012-01-12 Thread Michel Jacobs
go with unraid. It has rsync capabilities , is free (with three disks) and works like a charm (version 4.7). Based on slackware. -- website: te paard naar sint Petersburg http://tepaardnaarsintpetersburg.nl mail: majac...@xs4all.nl mailto://majac...@xs4all.nl skype:

Re: [BackupPC-users] OT: NAS GUI for native Linux (preferably RHEL)

2012-01-12 Thread Timothy J Massey
Timothy J Massey tmas...@obscorp.com wrote on 01/12/2012 02:02:32 PM: Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote on 01/10/2012 02:54:12 PM: If your hardware can handle a small amount of overhead and you can manage it from a windows client, you might consider VMware ESXi (the free

Re: [BackupPC-users] OT: NAS GUI for native Linux (preferably RHEL)

2012-01-12 Thread Timothy J Massey
Michel Jacobs majac...@xs4all.nl wrote on 01/12/2012 02:29:32 PM: go with unraid. It has rsync capabilities , is free (with three disks) and works like a charm (version 4.7). Based on slackware. It is an interesting solution. One big problem: I *need* striped arrays. I will be dealing

Re: [BackupPC-users] OT: NAS GUI for native Linux (preferably RHEL)

2012-01-12 Thread Les Mikesell
On Thu, Jan 12, 2012 at 1:24 PM, Timothy J Massey tmas...@obscorp.comwrote: Timothy J Massey tmas...@obscorp.com wrote on 01/12/2012 02:02:32 PM: Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote on 01/10/2012 02:54:12 PM: If your hardware can handle a small amount of overhead and you can

Re: [BackupPC-users] OT: NAS GUI for native Linux (preferably RHEL)

2012-01-12 Thread Michel Jacobs
well, i suppose you looked it up, but me thinks this solution would be perfect: you have the capacity of two disks of whatever size is available right now in ONE system. Do you have files that are larger than 1,5 terabytes?? If that's the case you certainly need striped.. -- website: te

Re: [BackupPC-users] OT: NAS GUI for native Linux (preferably RHEL)

2012-01-12 Thread Tyler J. Wagner
On 2012-01-12 19:11, Timothy J Massey wrote: Exactly. Webmin is little more than webified configuration files. You use Firefox instead of ssh, but the process is nearly identical. Fair enough. For now, Webmin is what I'm using, on top of CentOS 6.2. But if you've ever used a NAS, you know

Re: [BackupPC-users] trying to improve the speed at which backuppc rsync back up processes a large binary file in incremental backups

2012-01-12 Thread Adam Goryachev
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On 09/01/12 09:00, Les Mikesell wrote: On Sun, Jan 8, 2012 at 4:48 AM, John Habermann jhaberm...@cook.qld.gov.au wrote: You can see that the backup of the /opt share takes nearly the total time of the incremental taking about 8 and half hours