I've setup a second backuppc server to help carry the load (and it's
quite a decent machine too: Quad Xeon 2Ghz). For some reason I just
can't get the 1st full backup to complete successfully. Here's the log:
2010-08-01 13:00:00 full backup started for directory /
2010-08-04 18:28:27 Aborting
Hello Tyler.
2. Wait for a packager to make a 3.2.0 Debian package and
upgrade via the package manager.
I advise #2.
Sorry, I didn't check whether the deb package has already been made. Of
course I will the use apt to upgrade.
My question has more to do with the new features and config
On Thursday 12 Aug 2010 09:42:06 Boniforti Flavio wrote:
2. Wait for a packager to make a 3.2.0 Debian package and
upgrade via the package manager.
I advise #2.
Sorry, I didn't check whether the deb package has already been made. Of
course I will the use apt to upgrade.
No one has
Hey
I don't know if this helps, But I am having the same problem on my
Ubuntu server. I did a apt-get update middle of last week and it seems
to of stopped working. Not sure if your on the same OS and maybe if you
also did a upgrade?
Thanks
Chris.
On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 05:03:47PM -0500,
Hello list,
using backuppc/testing version 3.1.0 on debian lenny, for some days now,
at least one machine is backed up two times a day:
2010-08-12 12:00:04 incr backup started back to 2010-08-09 09:00:01 (backup
#502) for directory /home/falko
2010-08-12 12:51:25 incr backup 506 complete, 982
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I have the case where a laptop user with 150GB of data could be on one
of two locations which are connected by router. Our network guys do not
want a full backup to run for the user when he's on the opposite end of
router to the backuppc
On Thu, Aug 12, 2010 at 07:30:55PM -0400, Marcelino Mata wrote:
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I have the case where a laptop user with 150GB of data could be on one
of two locations which are connected by router. Our network guys do not
want a full backup to run for
I would use DumpPreUserCmd to ping the machine and parse its return IP
address to give an exit status that returns true if and only if it is
on the desired subnet. If this only applies to selected hostnames then add
in logic to make sure that the test only applies to those hostnames.
Marcelino
Marcelino Mata wrote:
I have the case where a laptop user with 150GB of data could be on one
of two locations which are connected by router. Our network guys do not
want a full backup to run for the user when he's on the opposite end of
router to the backuppc computer. The ping latency