Hi There,
I've seen this error on some hosts for quite a while now, and ignored it.
Recently I took the time to look a bit deeper.
Started the backup from the commandline like:
/usr/share/backuppc/bin/BackupPC_dump -v -i nemo > logfile 2>&1
I was rather surprised seeing a 4.8GB logfile jus
To add the rsync versions:
backkupc side: 3.1.3-6
remote side: 3.2.3-2
M.
On 11/17/20 10:01, Marcus Hardt wrote:
> Hi There,
>
> I've seen this error on some hosts for quite a while now, and ignored it.
>
> Recently I took the time to look a bit deeper.
>
> S
Hi,
I need to restore a backup
This works for some folders and files but not for all
Trying various combinations I found one file which reproducably shows this
error, while others reproducably don't. The errornous file is 56 MB, and
direct download via the webinterface works.
Backups also fai
Hi,
btw: this problem seems to be client unspecific. I see the same errors using
smbclient and rsync via ssh.
M.
And, of course I'm in deep shit now, since I told everone how super great
backuppc was...
M.
On Monday 13 September 2010 14:32:16 Marcus Hardt wrote:
> Hi,
>
Try using
/usr/share/backuppc/bin/BackupPC_zcat
(it's there on debian, but might be elsewhere on other distros)
M.
On Monday 13 September 2010 17:32:06 Mike Bydalek wrote:
> zcat or you can gunzip
>
> Regards,
> Mike
>
> On Sep 13, 2010, at 1:20 AM, IvyAlice
wrote:
> > Hello everybody,
>
On Monday 13 September 2010 23:26:42 Les Mikesell wrote:
> On 9/13/2010 10:49 AM, Marcus Hardt wrote:
[..]
> > And, of course I'm in deep shit now, since I told everone how super
> > great backuppc was...
>
> There is at least the option of downloading an archive fi
Update:
tar xf restore.tar will fail, if restore.tar is pretty big
cat restore.tar | tar x seems to work
And I thought windows was terrible...
M.
On Monday 13 September 2010 23:26:42 Les Mikesell wrote:
> On 9/13/2010 10:49 AM, Marcus Hardt wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> &g
Update:
On Tuesday 14 September 2010 13:16:01 Marcus Hardt wrote:
> Update:
>
> tar xf restore.tar will fail, if restore.tar is pretty big
fails
> cat restore.tar | tar x seems to work
fails
But:
using the 'i' option for
-i, --ignore-zeros
i
p archive from the GUI instead? Or using
> BackupPC_zipCreate on the CLI?
>
> -Robin
>
> On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 03:22:28PM +0200, Marcus Hardt wrote:
> > Update:
> >
> > On Tuesday 14 September 2010 13:16:01 Marcus Hardt wrote:
> > > Update:
> >
s are
written into it?)
I'll check the file system of the XP host.
M.
> -Robin
>
> On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 03:22:28PM +0200, Marcus Hardt wrote:
> > Update:
> >
> > On Tuesday 14 September 2010 13:16:01 Marcus Hardt wrote:
> > > Update:
>
[..]
> I think it does the basic permissions that map to unix equivalents. It
> doesn't preserve acls, nor does it have any way to work around the
> existing ones - so you may have files that you can read in the backups
> but can't write back over the existing copy
Right. There might be files al
On Thursday 23 September 2010 19:43:14 Robin Lee Powell wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 23, 2010 at 05:52:26PM +0200, Marcus Hardt wrote:
> > [..]
> >
> > > I think it does the basic permissions that map to unix
> > > equivalents. It doesn't preserve acls, nor doe
On Thursday 23 September 2010 20:06:40 Les Mikesell wrote:
> On 9/23/2010 12:47 PM, Michael Stowe wrote:
> >> I really don't think that would work.
> >
> > It would not work, nor is it possible, since Windows can't delete files
> > that are in use.
>
> Rsync normally creates a tmp file with a d
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