Hi, Bill. Here are a few options to get a text list:
1) Run a reconciliation - that should list all bad stubs in the hsmmonitor-orphan.log. You can then parse the hsmmonitor-orphan.log to delete the stubs or simply exclude them from the copy. 2) You might be able to get this information from the TSM DB: select hl_name, ll_name, whatever_else from archives where node_name= and filespace_name= and fsid= and archive_date before copygroup_fixed_date-365 days. However, I haven't tried this and can't confirm that HSM does HL_ and LL_ADDRESS like I would expect. 3) If you're handy with scripting, you can do a "dir /s" and parse the output for lines with "(" in them but not the string "File(s)". The file sizes of migrated files appears in parens. You can get the directory names by parsing for "Directory of". 4) <facetious> I'm not too familiar with the search/restore option, but if it has a "print" function, you can print it to a tiff file or something and then do OCR on it. </facetious> Yuck. :-) ________________________________ Alex Paschal Storage Solutions Engineer MSI Systems Integrators (503) 943-6919 - Office ________________________________ Your Business. Better. -----Original Message----- From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager [mailto:ads...@vm.marist.edu] On Behalf Of Bill Boyer Sent: Monday, August 10, 2009 9:24 AM To: ADSM-L@VM.MARIST.EDU Subject: [ADSM-L] Identify HSM Migrated files on Windows I need a way to get a list of files that have been migrated so I can exclude them from being copied to a new server. The client is using Robocopy (don't laugh!) and when it hits a migrated file the copy terminates. The problem is that HSM was not setup correctly and the archive copygroup was left at 365-days and not change to Nolimit. So after a year all this migrated data expired and is gone from the TSM server. They want to copy everything EXCEPT for the stub files to a new server. Any ideas on how to get a list? Using the search and restore option gets me a list, but I can't copy/paste from that list. Any help is appreciated. Bill Boyer "He who laughs last probably made a back-up." Murphy's law of computing This message (including any attachments) is intended only for the use of the individual or entity to which it is addressed and may contain information that is non-public, proprietary, privileged, confidential, and exempt from disclosure under applicable law or may constitute as attorney work product. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any use, dissemination, distribution, or copying of this communication is strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, notify us immediately by telephone and (i) destroy this message if a facsimile or (ii) delete this message immediately if this is an electronic communication. Thank you.