* Jon LaBadie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [20031124 15:23]: > On Mon, Nov 24, 2003 at 02:57:56PM -0500, Jean-Francois Malouin wrote: > > * Jon LaBadie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [20031124 14:15]: > > > On Mon, Nov 24, 2003 at 11:59:41AM -0500, Jean-Francois Malouin wrote: > > > > Hi, > > > > > > > > I'm having strange problems with the include thingy in an > > > > entry in my disklist: > > > > > > > > bullcalf /data/nihpd/nihpd1/data/assembly_0 /data/nihpd/nihpd1/data/assembly { > > > > include "./0*" > > > > exclude "./[1-9]*" > > > > high-tar > > > > } 1 > > > > > > > > Looking at what got written to tape (a full backup) I see only > > > > directories (no files at all!), and even from the exclude part...ie > > > > just the hierarchy structure of /data/nihpd/nihpd1/data/assembly all > > > > the way down... > > > > > > > > > > Don't know about your bad backup, but in your DLE you should not > > > have both the include and THAT exclude. I.e., the include will > > > automatically drop any toplevel dir that does not match "./0*". > > > > That is want I want! > > All subdirs in there have a pattern [0-9]\{6\} , ie, 6 digits. There > > are other subdirs but there are not to be backed up. You see, my > > problem is that /data/nihpd/nihpd1/data/assembly can contains 100's of > > GB and I'm using 4 LTO tape drives, so I have to split that thing in > > small chuncks... > > > > Eventually I'll have 10 DLE's, those starting with ./0* ./1* ... > > you get the picture. > > > > > > > > I think the only valid exclude usage would be for things under > > > the 0* directories. For example 'exclude "./0*/tmp"'. Though > > > I must admit I've never tried that combination. > > > > Have a look at my other post in this thread. The index file for that > > DLE doesn't start with "./" but with "/"...Is my gnutar at fault here? > > I thought that v1.13.25 had good karma... > > No, the index should start with "/", > but it should not start with "/-/" > unless you have a top-level directory named "-".
yes, there is a directory "./-" Most prob'ly a luser typo :) jf > > -- > Jon H. LaBadie [EMAIL PROTECTED] > JG Computing > 4455 Province Line Road (609) 252-0159 > Princeton, NJ 08540-4322 (609) 683-7220 (fax) -- We see in what we think we fear The clouding of our thoughts made clear