>>>>> On Tue, 05 May 2009 13:15:39 -0600, alexan...@nautae.eti.br said:
a> Ok, I gave up of doing DVD writing by Bacula. FYI, I've been doing it for 2 years or so; once it was up and running it works fairly well. I do save the parts to a separate folder after writing them to the DVD just to make sure, but most of the time they just get deleted. Occasionally an older disk will fail to burn properly and I either need to hard-burn the parts (again) to the disk or simply mark the disk as bad in the pool and let bacula recover based on that knowledge. a> I'm not confident about using removable usb disk because it's not a a> safe made media. Of course DVD too, but I think DVDs are more reliable a> than usb disk, there isn't electricity to read the data. DVDs are likely less reliable than any form of external disk. That being said, external disks are still more than a stack of DVDs. Eventually you'll spend as much as an external disk though. DVDs don't handle writing to them a huge number of times, so eventually they go bad and need to be thrown away (eventually just from scratches, no matter *how* careful I try to be). The biggest problem in my book is that I don't want the external disk spinning while I'm awake for noise reasons; I'd need a power-up/down before/after the backup. -- "In the bathtub of history the truth is harder to hold than the soap, and much more difficult to find." -- Terry Pratchett ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The NEW KODAK i700 Series Scanners deliver under ANY circumstances! Your production scanning environment may not be a perfect world - but thanks to Kodak, there's a perfect scanner to get the job done! With the NEW KODAK i700 Series Scanner you'll get full speed at 300 dpi even with all image processing features enabled. http://p.sf.net/sfu/kodak-com _______________________________________________ Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users