On Wednesday 15 November 2006 07:50, René Kanters wrote: I've added the list back, please use 'reply all' when replying to any mailing list. That way, the list archives can be searched with a very high probability of finding an answer to the problem you have because someone else already had it and most likely solved it. Which is true for both problems you have asked about so far. :-)
>Hi Gene, > >Thanks, that was indeed it. > >I was wondering whether you know why I get in my amdump.1 a lot of > >find diskspace: not enough diskspace. Left with 1952 K >driver: find_diskspace: time 0.138: want 1952 K > >and now that my incremental ones are working I get for an increment >backup the similar message > >driver: find_diskspace: time 0.142: want 64 K >find diskspace: not enough diskspace. Left with 64 K > >while my test tapes are 5MB and only backing up a set of files that >is 2MB big. By default, the holding disk area is 100% reserved for incrementals. To use it and its highly recommended to save shoe-shining wear and tear on the drive, you should change the keyword Reserved in your amanda.conf to allow it to be used for fulls too. I use 30% here. This 'holding disk' is a buffer area/directory on one of your hard drives that is used as a scratchpad area, where files being compressed are built up until that particular disklist entry is completed, at which point it is all written to the tape at the tape drives (or the interfaces) full speed. Without such a holding disk area setup and in use, any backup that involves compression will be written as the compressor spits it out, so the drive will be stopped and started many times, trying to recue back to where it wrote the last data each time. This wastes considerable time and multiplies the wear on the drive by quite a bit. -- Cheers, Gene "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author) Yahoo.com and AOL/TW attorneys please note, additions to the above message by Gene Heskett are: Copyright 2006 by Maurice Eugene Heskett, all rights reserved.