Dear People,
at first an apology if that has been already answered, but I have researched
Web, Mailing lists etc, but to no avail.
My problem is as follows:
I want to back up the Documents directory of the home directoris of the
users. The basic structure is:
/home/username/Documents
In
On Feb 6, 2008 4:20 PM, Thomas Mohr [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear People,
at first an apology if that has been already answered, but I have researched
Web, Mailing lists etc, but to no avail.
My problem is as follows:
I want to back up the Documents directory of the home directoris of the
On Mittwoch 06 Februar 2008, you wrote:
On Feb 6, 2008 4:20 PM, Thomas Mohr [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear People,
at first an apology if that has been already answered, but I have
researched Web, Mailing lists etc, but to no avail.
My problem is as follows:
I want to back up the
On Wed, 6 Feb 2008 22:20:25 +0100, Thomas Mohr said:
Dear People,
at first an apology if that has been already answered, but I have researched
Web, Mailing lists etc, but to no avail.
My problem is as follows:
I want to back up the Documents directory of the home directoris of the
I should probably add that I want to backup *only* the Documents
subdirectories.
With the directive wilddir = /home/*/Documents nothing gets backed up
whereas the directive wilddir = /home/t* backs up all user directories
beginning with t.
On Mittwoch 06 Februar 2008, you wrote:
The problem is that bacula finds the files by walking over the directory
structure, using the exclude options to prune the walk. In your example
above, it prunes /home/foo before it finds /home/foo/Documents.
Ahhh !!! I see, that explains all !
You
[EMAIL PROTECTED] aka Martin Simmons schrieb
mit Datum Wed, 6 Feb 2008 22:02:09 GMT in m2n.bacula.users:
| On Wed, 6 Feb 2008 22:20:25 +0100, Thomas Mohr said:
| then all user directories beginning with t are backed up
| bwild matches /home/*/Documents with /home/username/Documents
|
| what am