Hello,
On 12/22/2006 4:36 AM, Dan Trainor wrote:
Hi -
I've been playing around with Bacula lately, and am quite simply amazed.
Kern, I've really got to hand it to you and your team - you have all
put together an amazing piece of software. Thank you for many, many
years to come, as I
I found this today:
Backup Recovery
by W. Preston
Publisher: O'Reilly
Pub Date: December 01, 2006
ISBN-10: 0-596-10246-1
ISBN-13: 978-0-596-10246-3
Pages: 800
From http://safari.oreilly.com/0596102461
It then explains several open source backup products that automate
backups using those
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There was a notice about this on the list some time ago -- I
subsequently picked it up. Interestingly enough, it appears to be the
edition before Bacula appeared in the book (Bacula is not anywhere in
the index). I guess I should read more carefully.
On Fri, 22 Dec 2006, Ryan Novosielski wrote:
There was a notice about this on the list some time ago -- I
subsequently picked it up. Interestingly enough, it appears to be the
edition before Bacula appeared in the book (Bacula is not anywhere in
the index). I guess I should read more
Hello Everyone,
This list has been an incredible source of help so far.
I am trying to compile bacula 1.38.11 on AIX 5.3.
After messing with all kinds of packages and little fixes,
I have it down to where it goes all the way through the make
process except for the tools section which results in
Hi to all,
I have the following situation.
A linux box with fd + sd on it has to make a daily backup.
The backup level is always incremental.
Backup goes to a disk storage (2 external usb hdd) that rotate randomly.
What I don't know how to do is to trigger a Full backup whenever
the drives are
When I try to restore a file that was backed up in windows using the
native windows backup method (backupread) to Linux I get the Win32 data
stream not supported on this Client error. Obviously there is good
reason for this as the backupread stream isn't going to make any sense
to any other
Hello,
I'm currently considering setting up a small below the radar Bacula
installation.
I happen to have NetApp NearStore VTLs with capacity on them, that I can use
as my back-end.
VTL is a virtual tape library, i.e a collection of disk that presents itself
on a FibreChannel port as
I only briefly tested Arkeia back in the day. 2001 or thereabouts
Must say I liked some of the concepts, like savepacks, and the way you can
nest savepacks.
Also liked the concept of drivepacks, I seem to remember.
Third, I liked the idea of a schedule that had a concept of a hierarchy
Hi,
On 12/22/2006 11:15 PM, Meidal, Knut wrote:
Hello,
I’m currently considering setting up a small “below the radar” Bacula
installation.
I happen to have NetApp NearStore VTLs with capacity on them, that I can
use as my back-end.
...
The magic happens when the application
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