Re: Amanda and the windows world [Q]

2003-02-13 Thread Dieter Meinert
Does anyone have experience with an amanda => SERVER  in a windows environment ? 
Unfortunately I don't have any Unix/Linux host available.

I compiled the complete amanda package under Cygwin 1.3.10, I just don't know how to 
start the server and how to connect to the client. 

I used amanda on different Unices for several years and would like to have it running 
here, too. 

 Regards
Dieter Meinert
 
 




Re: Amanda and the windows world [Q]

2003-02-13 Thread Jon LaBadie
On Thu, Feb 13, 2003 at 08:47:09AM +0100, Dieter Meinert wrote:
> Does anyone have experience with an amanda => SERVER  in a windows environment ? 
> Unfortunately I don't have any Unix/Linux host available.
> 
> I compiled the complete amanda package under Cygwin 1.3.10, I just don't know how to 
>start the server and how to connect to the client. 
> 
> I used amanda on different Unices for several years and would like to have it 
>running here, too. 
> 
I don't recall anyone reporting compiling and using, under cygwin,
the server portions of amanda.

-- 
Jon H. LaBadie  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 JG Computing
 4455 Province Line Road(609) 252-0159
 Princeton, NJ  08540-4322  (609) 683-7220 (fax)



Re: Amanda and the windows world [Q]

2003-02-13 Thread Brian White
> Does anyone have experience with an amanda => SERVER  in a windows environment ?
> Unfortunately I don't have any Unix/Linux host available.
> 
> I compiled the complete amanda package under Cygwin 1.3.10, I just don't know how to 
>start the server and how to connect to the client.

Hmmm...  Having just done builds of Amanda under CygWin (client only), I
did notice a message from ./configure about some lib calls missing and thus
the server would not work.

  Brian
 ( [EMAIL PROTECTED] )

---
 The power to shape the future is earned through persistence.  No other
  quality is as essential to success.  It is the sandpaper that breaks
 down all resistance and sweeps away all obstacles.  It is the ability
 to move mountains one grain of sand at a time.