On Sat, Oct 18, 2003 at 03:29:13PM -0400, Jon LaBadie wrote: > On Sat, Oct 18, 2003 at 11:24:05PM +0530, Rohit Peyyeti wrote: > > FAILURE AND STRANGE DUMP SUMMARY: > > localhost /h lev 0 FAILED [dumps too big, but cannot incremental dump new disk] > > [plus three more of the same] > > This suggests to me that the DLE's are each larger than your tape.
I don't think so. In that case, the message would have been "dump larger than tape, but cannot yada yada" (Phase 1 of delay_dumps()). The "dumps too big" variant comes from Phase 2, when a full dump is due, but planner wants to postpone it and do an incremental instead, to fit all the DLEs onto the tape. In the case of a new disk, as you pointed out, the do-an-incremental-instead option isn't possible, so planner's only choice is to skip the DLE entirely. Rohit: The answer, as Jon said, is to add DLEs a few at a time -- or, in your case, it looks like *one* at a time :-(, so as not to ask Amanda to put more on a tape than will fit. Or else just don't worry about it; leave all of the DLEs in there and let them fight it out for tape space :-) Sooner or later, they'll all make it onto tape, as //windows/UsersG3 did this time. I doubt that it'll happen any faster if you follow the usual advice and only add them slowly. The only advantages of doing it that way are: - you won't get Amanda shouting at you that YOUR BACKUPS FAILED!! - if some DLEs are more important to back up than others, you get to put those into the backup system first, rather than letting Amanda choose randomly which one(s) to add in any given run > > --> some NT_STATUS_OBJECT_NAME_NOT_FOUND errors <-- Someone recently posted a solution to that, I think. Couldn't hurt to check the archives for it. -- | | /\ |-_|/ > Eric Siegerman, Toronto, Ont. [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | / When I came back around from the dark side, there in front of me would be the landing area where the crew was, and the Earth, all in the view of my window. I couldn't help but think that there in front of me was all of humanity, except me. - Michael Collins, Apollo 11 Command Module Pilot