hi, thanks for your answer but, i still have problems....
i change some couple of parameter in /etc/stinit.def . the tonight's backup seems to be stalled... here is the "ps -u amandabackup" 31331 ? 00:00:00 amdump 31342 ? 00:00:00 driver 31351 ? 00:04:37 taper 31352 ? 00:04:59 dumper 31353 ? 00:00:00 dumper 31354 ? 00:00:00 dumper 31355 ? 00:00:00 dumper 31356 ? 00:01:05 taper 31929 ? 00:06:39 amandad 31989 ? 00:00:00 sendbackup 31991 ? 00:04:40 sendbackup 31992 ? 00:00:00 sh 31994 ? 00:00:00 gzip 31995 ? 00:01:49 tar 31996 ? 00:00:01 sed 31997 ? 00:00:00 sh <defunct> the amstatus DailySet1 always show : Using /etc/amanda/DailySet1/amdump from Tue Feb 13 01:45:01 CET 2007 calys:/home 0 13011769k wait for dumping lesia01:/Data 0263299570k dumping to tape (1:47:13) lesia01:/home 2 145480k finished (1:47:00) mesopl:/home 1 34940k finished (1:47:13) secchirh:/home 2 39720k finished (1:47:08) soleil:/home 1 40700k finished (1:47:04) soljuke:/home 1 210k finished (1:46:55) SUMMARY part real estimated size size partition : 7 estimated : 7 276572296k flush : 0 0k failed : 0 0k ( 0.00%) wait for dumping: 1 13011769k ( 4.70%) dumping to tape : 1 263299570k ( 95.20%) dumping : 0 0k 0k ( 0.00%) ( 0.00%) dumped : 6 261050k 263560527k ( 0.10%) ( 0.09%) wait for writing: 0 0k 0k ( 0.00%) ( 0.00%) wait to flush : 0 0k 0k (100.00%) ( 0.00%) writing to tape : 0 0k 0k ( 0.00%) ( 0.00%) failed to tape : 0 0k 0k ( 0.00%) ( 0.00%) taped : 5 261050k 260957k (100.04%) ( 0.09%) tape 1 : 5 261050k 260957k ( 0.07%) DailySet1-70 3 dumpers idle : not-idle taper writing, tapeq: 0 network free kps: 4294937496 holding space : 7168000k (100.00%) chunker0 busy : 0:00:00 ( 0.00%) chunker1 busy : 0:00:00 ( 0.00%) chunker2 busy : 0:00:00 ( 0.00%) chunker3 busy : 0:00:00 ( 0.08%) dumper0 busy : 0:00:10 ( 8.10%) dumper1 busy : 0:00:02 ( 2.21%) dumper2 busy : 0:00:09 ( 7.36%) dumper3 busy : 0:00:13 ( 9.86%) taper busy : 0:00:24 ( 18.31%) 0 dumpers busy : 0:00:14 ( 10.68%) no-diskspace: 0:00:13 ( 93.10%) 1 dumper busy : 0:00:05 ( 3.98%) no-diskspace: 0:00:03 ( 62.77%) no-bandwidth: 0:00:01 ( 37.23%) 2 dumpers busy : 0:00:00 ( 0.00%) 3 dumpers busy : 0:00:07 ( 5.88%) no-diskspace: 0:00:07 (100.00%) 4 dumpers busy : 0:00:00 ( 0.00%) i have attach the disklist and amanda.conf so i asking myself if my failure was due to a scsi timeout.....because of the sh defunct process on the client. (/Data from the backup server itself) thanks to help me to understand what's going on....; julien Le mercredi 7 février 2007 17:35, Julien Brulé a écrit : > hi all, > > i am trying to backup big filesystem and i get this errors > > ---------------------------------------------- > mptscsi: ioc2: attempting task abort! (sc=0000010272788040) > scsi22 : destination target 6, lun 0 > command = Move medium/play audio(12) 00 00 00 00 f0 00 07 00 00 00 > 00 mptscsi: ioc2: task abort: SUCCESS (sc=0000010272788040) > mptscsi: ioc2: attempting bus reset! (sc=0000010272788040) > scsi22 : destination target 6, lun 0 > command = Move medium/play audio(12) 00 00 00 00 f0 00 07 00 00 00 > 00 mptbase: ioc2: IOCStatus(0x0048): SCSI Task Terminated > mptscsi: ioc2: bus reset: SUCCESS (sc=0000010272788040) > mptbase: ioc2: IOCStatus(0x0043): SCSI Device Not There > mptscsi: ioc2: Attempting host reset! (sc=0000010272788040) > mptbase: Initiating ioc2 recovery > mptbase: ioc2: IOCStatus(0x0043): SCSI Device Not There > scsi: Device offlined - not ready after error recovery: host 22 channel 0 > id 6 lun 0 > mptbase: ioc2: IOCStatus(0x0043): SCSI Device Not There > st0: Error 10000 (sugg. bt 0x0, driver bt 0x0, host bt 0x1). > mptbase: ioc2: IOCStatus(0x0043): SCSI Device Not There > st0: Error 10000 (sugg. bt 0x0, driver bt 0x0, host bt 0x1). > st0: Error on write filemark. > mptbase: ioc2: IOCStatus(0x0043): SCSI Device Not There > st0: Error 10000 (sugg. bt 0x0, driver bt 0x0, host bt 0x1). > mptbase: ioc2: IOCStatus(0x0043): SCSI Device Not There > ---------------------------------------------- > > > I don't know if this is a hardware or a config problem. I doesn't cut out > the filesystem. > > the scsi card is a SCSI storage controller: LSI Logic / Symbios Logic > 53c1030 PCI-X Fusion-MPT Dual Ultra320 SCSI (rev 07) > > and the library is : > > scsi26 : ioc2: LSI53C1030, FwRev=01032700h, Ports=1, MaxQ=255, IRQ=233 > Vendor: HP Model: Ultrium 3-SCSI Rev: G25H > Type: Sequential-Access ANSI SCSI revision: 03 > st: Version 20040403, fixed bufsize 32768, s/g segs 256 > Attached scsi tape st0 at scsi26, channel 0, id 4, lun 0 > st0: try direct i/o: yes (alignment 512 B), max page reachable by HBA > 3145727 Vendor: OVERLAND Model: LXB Rev: 0107 > Type: Medium Changer ANSI SCSI revision: 02 > > > I am using this packages : > > amanda-client-2.4.4p3-1 > amanda-server-2.4.4p3-1 > amanda-2.4.4p3-1 > > This error comes when the taper is at the end of the tape. I should do a > reset on the library to see the lto3 reader again, and then the tape is > shown as slot 1: not an amanda tape (Input/output error). > > the amanda report show : > > /-- lesia01 /Data lev 0 FAILED [data write: Connection reset by peer] > sendbackup: start [lesia01:/Data level 0] > sendbackup: info BACKUP=/sbin/dump > sendbackup: info RECOVER_CMD=/sbin/restore -f - ... > sendbackup: info end > > | DUMP: Date of this level 0 dump: Wed Feb 7 01:51:33 2007 > | DUMP: Dumping /dev/cciss/c0d0p8 (/Data) to standard output > | DUMP: Label: none > | DUMP: Writing 10 Kilobyte records > | DUMP: mapping (Pass I) [regular files] > | DUMP: mapping (Pass II) [directories] > | DUMP: estimated 266810611 blocks. > | DUMP: Volume 1 started with block 1 at: Wed Feb 7 01:54:19 2007 > | DUMP: dumping (Pass III) [directories] > | DUMP: dumping (Pass IV) [regular files] > | DUMP: 3.39% done at 30136 kB/s, finished in 2:22 > | DUMP: 7.08% done at 31474 kB/s, finished in 2:11 > | DUMP: 10.94% done at 32446 kB/s, finished in 2:02 > | DUMP: 14.53% done at 32310 kB/s, finished in 1:57 > | DUMP: 18.18% done at 32337 kB/s, finished in 1:52 > | DUMP: 21.82% done at 32344 kB/s, finished in 1:47 > | DUMP: 25.65% done at 32590 kB/s, finished in 1:41 > > \-------- > > thanks for your help > > (sorry for my poor english..) > > > julien brulé
# # amanda.conf - sample Amanda configuration file. This started off life as # the actual config file in use at CS.UMD.EDU. # # If your configuration is called, say, "csd", then this file normally goes # in /etc/amanda/csd/amanda.conf. # org "DailySet1" # your organization name for reports mailto "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" # space separated list of operators at your site dumpuser "amandabackup" # the user to run dumps under inparallel 4 # maximum dumpers that will run in parallel netusage 600 Kbps # maximum net bandwidth for Amanda, in KB per sec dumpcycle 4 weeks # the number of days in the normal dump cycle runspercycle 20 # the number of amdump runs in dumpcycle days tapecycle 25 tapes # the number of tapes in rotation # 4 weeks (dumpcycle) times 5 tapes per week (just # the weekdays) plus a few to handle errors that # need amflush and so we do not overwrite the full # backups performed at the beginning of the previous # cycle ### ### ### # WARNING: don't use `inf' for tapecycle, it's broken! ### ### ### bumpsize 20 Mb # minimum savings (threshold) to bump level 1 -> 2 bumpdays 1 # minimum days at each level bumpmult 4 # threshold = bumpsize * bumpmult^(level-1) etimeout 300 # number of seconds per filesystem for estimates. #etimeout -600 # total number of seconds for estimates. # a positive number will be multiplied by the number of filesystems on # each host; a negative number will be taken as an absolute total time-out. # The default is 5 minutes per filesystem. # Specify tape device and/or tape changer. If you don't have a tape # changer, and you don't want to use more than one tape per run of # amdump, just comment out the definition of tpchanger. # Some tape changers require tapedev to be defined; others will use # their own tape device selection mechanism. Some use a separate tape # changer device (changerdev), others will simply ignore this # parameter. Some rely on a configuration file (changerfile) to # obtain more information about tape devices, number of slots, etc; # others just need to store some data in files, whose names will start # with changerfile. For more information about individual tape # changers, read docs/TAPE.CHANGERS. # At most one changerfile entry must be defined; select the most # appropriate one for your configuration. If you select man-changer, # keep the first one; if you decide not to use a tape changer, you may # comment them all out. runtapes 2 # number of tapes to be used in a single run of amdump tpchanger "chg-zd-mtx" # the tape-changer glue script tapedev "/dev/nst0" # the no-rewind tape device to be used #rawtapedev "/dev/null" # the raw device to be used (ftape only) #changerfile "/var/lib/amanda/DailySet1/changer" #changerfile "/var/lib/amanda/DailySet1/changer-status" changerfile "/etc/amanda/DailySet1/changer.conf" changerdev "/dev/sg1" tapetype HP-LTO3 # what kind of tape it is (see tapetypes below) labelstr "^DailySet1-[0-9][0-9]*$" # label constraint regex: all tapes must match # Specify holding disks. These are used as a temporary staging area for # dumps before they are written to tape and are recommended for most sites. # The advantages include: tape drive is more likely to operate in streaming # mode (which reduces tape and drive wear, reduces total dump time); multiple # dumps can be done in parallel (which can dramatically reduce total dump time. # The main disadvantage is that dumps on the holding disk need to be flushed # (with amflush) to tape after an operating system crash or a tape failure. # If no holding disks are specified then all dumps will be written directly # to tape. If a dump is too big to fit on the holding disk than it will be # written directly to tape. If more than one holding disk is specified then # they will all be used round-robin. # #holdingdisk hd1 { # comment "main holding disk" # directory "/var/tmp/amanda-holding" # where the holding disk is # use 3000 Mb # how much space can we use on it # # a negative value mean: # # use all space except that value ## chunksize 2 Gb # size of chunk if you want big dump to be # # dumped on multiple files on holding disks # # N Kb/Mb/Gb split disks in chunks of size N # # 0 split disks in INT_MAX/1024 Kb chunks # # -N Kb/Mb/Gb dont split, dump larger # # filesystems directly to tape # # (example: -2 Gb) #} # holdingdisk hd2 { directory "/tmp/amanda-hold1" use 4000 Mb chunksize 2 Gb } holdingdisk hd3 { directory "/usr/local/tmp/amanda-hold2" use 3000 Mb chunksize 2 Gb } # If amanda cannot find a tape on which to store backups, it will run # as many backups as it can to the holding disks. In order to save # space for unattended backups, by default, amanda will only perform # incremental backups in this case, i.e., it will reserve 100% of the # holding disk space for the so-called degraded mode backups. # However, if you specify a different value for the `reserve' # parameter, amanda will not degrade backups if they will fit in the # non-reserved portion of the holding disk. # reserve 30 # percent # This means save at least 30% of the holding disk space for degraded # mode backups. # Amanda needs a few Mb of diskspace for the log and debug files, # as well as a database. This stuff can grow large, so the conf directory # isn't usually appropriate. Some sites use /usr/local/var and some /usr/adm. # Create an amanda directory under there. You need a separate infofile and # logdir for each configuration, so create subdirectories for each conf and # put the files there. Specify the locations below. infofile "/etc/amanda/DailySet1/curinfo" # database filename logdir "/etc/amanda/DailySet1" # log directory indexdir "/etc/amanda/DailySet1/index" # index directory tapelist "/etc/amanda/DailySet1/tapelist" # list of used tapes # tapelist is stored, by default, in the directory that contains amanda.conf # tapetypes # Define the type of tape you use here, and use it in "tapetype" # above. Some typical types of tapes are included here. The tapetype # tells amanda how many MB will fit on the tape, how big the filemarks # are, and how fast the tape device is. # A filemark is the amount of wasted space every time a tape section # ends. If you run `make tapetype' in tape-src, you'll get a program # that generates tapetype entries, but it is slow as hell, use it only # if you really must and, if you do, make sure you post the data to # the amanda mailing list, so that others can use what you found out # by searching the archives. # For completeness Amanda should calculate the inter-record gaps too, # but it doesn't. For EXABYTE and DAT tapes this is ok. Anyone using # 9 tracks for amanda and need IRG calculations? Drop me a note if # so. # If you want amanda to print postscript paper tape labels # add a line after the comment in the tapetype of the form # lbl-templ "/path/to/postscript/template/label.ps" # if you want the label to go to a printer other than the default # for your system, you can also add a line above for a different # printer. (i usually add that line after the dumpuser specification) # dumpuser "operator" # the user to run dumps under # printer "mypostscript" # printer to print paper label on # here is an example of my definition for an EXB-8500 # define tapetype EXB-8500 { # ... # lbl-templ "/usr/local/amanda/config/lbl.exabyte.ps" # } ## #define tapetype QIC-60 { # comment "Archive Viper" # length 60 mbytes # filemark 100 kbytes # don't know a better value # speed 100 kbytes # dito #} # #define tapetype DEC-DLT2000 { # comment "DEC Differential Digital Linear Tape 2000" # length 15000 mbytes # filemark 8 kbytes # speed 1250 kbytes #} # ## [EMAIL PROTECTED] ## in amanda-users (Thu Dec 26 01:55:38 MEZ 1996) #define tapetype DLT { # comment "DLT tape drives" # length 20000 mbytes # 20 Gig tapes # filemark 2000 kbytes # I don't know what this means # speed 1536 kbytes # 1.5 Mb/s #} # #define tapetype SURESTORE-1200E { # comment "HP AutoLoader" # length 3900 mbytes # filemark 100 kbytes # speed 500 kbytes #} # #define tapetype EXB-8500 { # comment "Exabyte EXB-8500 drive on decent machine" # length 4200 mbytes # filemark 48 kbytes # speed 474 kbytes #} # #define tapetype EXB-8200 { # comment "Exabyte EXB-8200 drive on decent machine" # length 2200 mbytes # filemark 2130 kbytes # speed 240 kbytes #} # #define tapetype HP-DAT { # comment "DAT tape drives" # # data provided by Rob Browning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> # length 1930 mbytes # filemark 111 kbytes # speed 468 kbytes #} # #define tapetype DAT { # comment "DAT tape drives" # length 1000 mbytes # these numbers are not accurate # filemark 100 kbytes # but you get the idea # speed 100 kbytes #} # #define tapetype MIMSY-MEGATAPE { # comment "Megatape (Exabyte based) drive through Emulex on Vax 8600" # length 2200 mbytes # filemark 2130 kbytes # speed 170 kbytes # limited by the Emulex bus interface, ugh #} # #http://wiki.zmanda.com/index.php/Tapetype_definitions#LTO_Ultrium_3_with_400.2F800_Gbyte_tapes define tapetype LTO3-400 { comment "LTO Ultrium 3 400/800, compression off" length 402432 mbytes filemark 0 kbytes speed 71702 kps } define tapetype LTO3-400-HWC { comment "LTO Ultrium 3 400/800, compression on" length 401408 mbytes filemark 0 kbytes speed 74343 kps } define tapetype HP-LTO3 { comment "just produced by tapetype prog (hardware compression on)" length 386048 mbytes filemark 0 kbytes speed 67921 kps } # dumptypes # # These are referred to by the disklist file. The dumptype specifies # certain parameters for dumping including: # auth - authentication scheme to use between server and client. # Valid values are "bsd" and "krb4". Default: [auth bsd] # comment - just a comment string # comprate - set default compression rate. Should be followed by one or # two numbers, optionally separated by a comma. The 1st is # the full compression rate; the 2nd is the incremental rate. # If the second is omitted, it is assumed equal to the first. # The numbers represent the amount of the original file the # compressed file is expected to take up. # Default: [comprate 0.50, 0.50] # compress - specify compression of the backed up data. Valid values are: # "none" - don't compress the dump output. # "client best" - compress on the client using the best (and # probably slowest) algorithm. # "client fast" - compress on the client using fast algorithm. # "server best" - compress on the tape host using the best (and # probably slowest) algorithm. # "server fast" - compress on the tape host using a fast # algorithm. This may be useful when a fast # tape host is backing up slow clients. # Default: [compress client fast] # dumpcycle - set the number of days in the dump cycle, ie, set how often a # full dump should be performed. Default: from DUMPCYCLE above # exclude - specify files and directories to be excluded from the dump. # Useful with gnutar only; silently ignored by dump and samba. # Valid values are: # "pattern" - a shell glob pattern defining which files # to exclude. # gnutar gets --exclude="pattern" # list "filename" - a file (on the client!) containing patterns # re's (1 per line) defining which files to # exclude. # gnutar gets --exclude-from="filename" # Note that the `full pathname' of a file within its # filesystem starts with `./', because of the way amanda runs # gnutar: `tar -C $mountpoint -cf - --lots-of-options .' (note # the final dot!) Thus, if you're backing up `/usr' with a # diskfile entry like ``host /usr gnutar-root', but you don't # want to backup /usr/tmp, your exclude list should contain # the pattern `./tmp', as this is relative to the `/usr' above. # Please refer to the man-page of gnutar for more information. # Default: include all files # holdingdisk - should the holding disk be used for this dump. Useful for # dumping the holding disk itself. Default: [holdingdisk yes] # ignore - do not back this filesystem up. Useful for sharing a single # disklist in several configurations. # index - keep an index of the files backed up. Default: [index no] # kencrypt - encrypt the data stream between the client and server. # Default: [kencrypt no] # maxdumps - max number of concurrent dumps to run on the client. # Default: [maxdumps 1] # priority - priority level of the dump. Valid levels are "low", "medium" # or "high". These are really only used when Amanda has no # tape to write to because of some error. In that "degraded # mode", as many incrementals as will fit on the holding disk # are done, higher priority first, to insure the important # disks are at least dumped. Default: [priority medium] # program - specify the dump system to use. Valid values are "DUMP" and # "GNUTAR". Default: [program "DUMP"]. # record - record the dump in /etc/dumpdates. Default: [record yes] # skip-full - skip the disk when a level 0 is due, to allow full backups # outside Amanda, eg when the machine is in single-user mode. # skip-incr - skip the disk when the level 0 is NOT due. This is used in # archive configurations, where only full dumps are done and # the tapes saved. # starttime - delay the start of the dump? Default: no delay # strategy - set the dump strategy. Valid strategies are currently: # "standard" - the standard one. # "nofull" - do level 1 dumps every time. This can be used, # for example, for small root filesystems that # only change slightly relative to a site-wide # prototype. Amanda then backs up just the # changes. # "noinc" - do level 0 dumps every time. # Unfortunately, this is not currently # implemented. Use `dumpcycle 0' # instead. # "skip" - skip all dumps. Useful for sharing a single # disklist in several configurations. # Default: [strategy standard] # # Note that you may specify previously defined dumptypes as a shorthand way # of defining parameters. # # Paramètres globaux pour sauvegarde ----->> index=yes et record=yes # define dumptype global { comment "Global definitions" # This is quite useful for setting global parameters, so you don't have # to type them everywhere. All dumptype definitions in this sample file # do include these definitions, either directly or indirectly. # There's nothing special about the name `global'; if you create any # dumptype that does not contain the word `global' or the name of any # other dumptype that contains it, these definitions won't apply. # Note that these definitions may be overridden in other # dumptypes, if the redefinitions appear *after* the `global' # dumptype name. # You may want to use this for globally enabling or disabling # indexing, recording, etc. Some examples: index yes record yes } define dumptype always-full { global comment "Full dump of this filesystem always" compress none priority high dumpcycle 0 } # # Pour les partitions "/" # define dumptype comp-root { global comment "Root partitions with compression" compress client fast priority low } define dumptype nocomp-root { comp-root comment "Root partitions without compression" compress none } define dumptype nocomp-root-index { comp-root comment "Root partitions without compression" compress none index yes } define dumptype nocomp-root-index-nohold { comp-root comment "Root partitions without compression" compress none index yes holdingdisk no } define dumptype root-tar { global program "GNUTAR" comment "root partitions dumped with tar" compress none index exclude list "/usr/local/lib/amanda/exclude.gtar" priority low } define dumptype comp-root-tar { root-tar comment "Root partitions with compression" compress client fast } define dumptype high-tar { root-tar comment "partitions dumped with tar" priority high } # # Pour les autres partitions # define dumptype user-tar { root-tar comment "user partitions dumped with tar" priority medium } define dumptype comp-user-tar { user-tar compress client fast } define dumptype comp-user { global comment "Non-root partitions on reasonably fast machines" compress client fast priority medium } define dumptype nocomp-user { comp-user comment "Non-root partitions on slow machines" compress none } # # Pour les espaces temporaires de sauvegarde # define dumptype holding-disk { global comment "The master-host holding disk itself" holdingdisk no # do not use the holding disk priority medium } # # Pour grands espaces disque # define dumptype comp-high { global comment "very important partitions on fast machines" compress client best priority high } define dumptype nocomp-high { comp-high comment "very important partitions on slow machines" compress none } # # Pour grands espaces disque découpé tape_splitsize # define dumptype comp-high-split { global tape_splitsize 40 gb comment "very important partitions to split on fast machines" compress client best } define dumptype nocomp-high-split { comp-high-split tape_splitsize 40 gb comment "very important partitions to split on slow machines" compress none } # # # Pour grands espaces disque avec tar découpé tape_splitsize # define dumptype comp-high-tar-split { global program "GNUTAR" tape_splitsize 40 gb comment "very important partitions to split on fast machines" compress client best } define dumptype nocomp-high-tar-split { comp-high-split program "GNUTAR" tape_splitsize 40 gb comment "very important partitions to split on slow machines" compress none } # Pour test --->> record=no # define dumptype nocomp-test { global comment "test dump without compression, no /etc/dumpdates recording" compress none record no priority medium } define dumptype comp-test { nocomp-test comment "test dump with compression, no /etc/dumpdates recording" compress client fast } # network interfaces # # These are referred to by the disklist file. They define the attributes # of the network interface that the remote machine is accessed through. # Notes: - netusage above defines the attributes that are used when the # disklist entry doesn't specify otherwise. # - the values below are only samples. # - specifying an interface does not force the traffic to pass # through that interface. Your OS routing tables do that. This # is just a mechanism to stop Amanda trashing your network. # Attributes are: # use - bandwidth above which amanda won't start # backups using this interface. Note that if # a single backup will take more than that, # amanda won't try to make it run slower! define interface local { comment "a local disk" use 1000 kbps } #define interface eth0 { # comment "10 Mbps ethernet" # use 400 kbps #} # define interface bond0 { comment "100 Mbps ethernet" use 400 kbps } # You may include other amanda configuration files, so you can share # dumptypes, tapetypes and interface definitions among several # configurations. #includefile "/usr/local/amanda.conf.main"
#fichier disklist #--------------------------------------------------------- # Serveur calys #-------------------------------------------------------- calys /home nocomp-user #calys /var/lib/mysql nocomp-user #--------------------------------------------------------- # Serveur lesia01 #-------------------------------------------------------- #partition root #lesia01 / nocomp-root-index -1 local #partition home lesia01 /home nocomp-root-index -1 local #partition Data lesia01 /Data nocomp-high-tar-split -1 local #--------------------------------------------------------- # Serveur mesopl #-------------------------------------------------------- mesopl /home nocomp-user #--------------------------------------------------------- # Serveur secchirh #-------------------------------------------------------- secchirh /home nocomp-user #secchirh /data_raid nocomp-user #--------------------------------------------------------- # Serveur soleil #-------------------------------------------------------- soleil /home nocomp-user #soleil /data1 nocomp-user #soleil /data2 nocomp-user #soleil /data3 nocomp-user #soleil /data4 nocomp-user #soleil /raid0 nocomp-user #--------------------------------------------------------- # Serveur soljuke #-------------------------------------------------------- soljuke /home nocomp-user #soljuke /juke nocomp-user #soljuke /data nocomp-user #--------------------------------------------------------- # Serveur venus #--------------------------------------------------------- #venus /home nocomp-user #venus /data nocomp-user #--------------------------------------------------------- # Autres Machines #partition home #pcspajb sda4 nocomp-user -1 bond0