I use the ASCII headers for portability incase I need to restore to another
server with a different tar version.
-Derek
At 06:29 PM 7/25/2006, Jaime wrote:
On Jul 25, 2006, at 9:03 AM, Derek Ragona wrote:
Using tar with a SDLT I set the blocksize at 1024
and use ASCII headers (-c)
On Jul 25, 2006, at 9:03 AM, Derek Ragona wrote:
Using tar with a SDLT I set the blocksize at 1024
and use ASCII headers (-c)
Thanks for the advice. I hadn't thought about block size. Why do
you use the ASCII headers?
Jaime
Using tar with a SDLT I set the blocksize at 1024
and use ASCII headers (-c)
-Derek
At 05:18 PM 7/24/2006, Jaime wrote:
I'm attempting to use tar to feed my filesystem(s) to a DLT tape
drive. I've done this with FreeBSD 3 through 5 and DAT (DDS-3 and
DDS-4) tapes for years. T
On Jul 24, 2006, at 10:23 PM, Micah wrote:
To save you some time, from my notes:
#finds all files modified before 1971
find / ! -newermt "1971-01-01 20:30"
I missed the part about "!" in the command. Thanks for the reply.
I would have been at this for at least an hour of, "What the heck?
Jaime wrote:
On Jul 24, 2006, at 7:24 PM, Micah wrote:
I had the same problem recently and Google told me to look for files
with malformed dates. I used "find" to search for files dated before
Jan 1, 1970, and found one dated 1901. As soon as I "touch"ed the
problematic file, tar worked.
On Jul 24, 2006, at 7:24 PM, Micah wrote:
I had the same problem recently and Google told me to look for
files with malformed dates. I used "find" to search for files dated
before Jan 1, 1970, and found one dated 1901. As soon as I
"touch"ed the problematic file, tar worked.
Many thanks.
Jaime wrote:
I'm attempting to use tar to feed my filesystem(s) to a DLT tape
drive. I've done this with FreeBSD 3 through 5 and DAT (DDS-3 and
DDS-4) tapes for years. The command now appears to work for a while and
then dies with this message about 2.5 hours into the process:
archive_w