On 1/25/10 1:36 AM, Sorin Srbu wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Timothy Murphy [mailto:gayle...@eircom.net]
Sent: Monday, January 25, 2010 4:21 AM
To: backuppc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: [BackupPC-users] Unable to read 4 bytes - most useless error
message
ever?
Is there
Unless you need the teamed NICs for some other reason besides your
backups, it doesn't seem like you should even bother with it. Because
even at 4MB/second, that is still only 32 Mbit/sec, which a 1Gbps
connection can clearly handle just fine.
- Stu
On 1/23/10 1:10 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
?
Thanks!
Stuart Matthews
--
Throughout its 18-year history, RSA Conference consistently attracts the
world's best and brightest in the field, creating opportunities for Conference
attendees to learn about information security's
Well, I certainly understand the merits of a server vs. desktop
hardware for server usage. But, I am not really willing to spend the
money for this, hence my assuming no hardware failures.
To spend the extra money for that hardware may be to not get the
hardware cost approved at all. In which
Well, I figured it out.
Looked in /home/backuppc/data/log/LOG (I am a BackupPC newb, and didn't
know that it had its own log)
Found out that I needed to install the File::Listing perl module
Backups are working now as they were before.
Thanks for the suggestions!
- Stu
Stuart Matthews wrote
on the server, but that
didn't change the behavior. I am able to ssh into my client machines as
the backuppc user without any passwords or prompts, showing that the SSH
keys are working. The top command also shows close to 0% CPU usage.
Any ideas on how to diagnose this problem?
Thanks,
Stuart Matthews
Hi Les,
It is from the copy on sourceforge, installed on FreeBSD, and when I
manually start a backup from the web interface there are no additional
XFer or Error logs created.
Thanks,
Stuart Matthews
Les Mikesell wrote:
Stuart Matthews wrote:
Hi all. I just upgraded BackupPC from 3.0