2012/4/13 Martin Simmons mar...@lispworks.com:
storage.conf looks bogus -- where did you get it from?
The SD normally reads a file called bacula-sd.conf and you should add a second
Director resource to it (with the Password from the bacula-dir.conf).
This is the configuration running when I
Hello
I use Bacula 5.0.3
On few linux servers I have got BDD dumps that run every nights at a
specified time.
For synchronism reasons between databases theses backups are run via
crontab and not directly from bacula.
I need that bacula save theses databases dumps every morning
- The filesystem
On 16.04.2012 12:09, Hugo Letemplier wrote:
Hello
I use Bacula 5.0.3
On few linux servers I have got BDD dumps that run every nights at a
specified time.
For synchronism reasons between databases theses backups are run via
crontab and not directly from bacula.
I need that bacula save
Hi,
I am using Bacula 5.0.1 running on an Ubuntu 10.04 64-bit server with a Dell
PowerVault TL2000 tape library attached via a SAS controller. In the
library are two LTO4 drives and I am using LTO4 media. From a backup over
the weekend I found the following message in the bacula log:
Hi,
I am using Bacula 5.0.1 running on an Ubuntu 10.04 64-bit server with a Dell
PowerVault TL2000 tape library attached via a SAS controller. In the
library are two LTO4 drives and I am using LTO4 media. From a backup over
the weekend I found the following message in the bacula log:
I am using Bacula 5.0.1 running on an Ubuntu 10.04 64-bit server with a Dell
PowerVault TL2000 tape library attached via a SAS controller. In the
library are two LTO4 drives and I am using LTO4 media. From a backup over
the weekend I found the following message in the bacula log:
Il 16/04/2012 15:59, Jack Cobb ha scritto:
Hi,
I am using Bacula 5.0.1 running on an Ubuntu 10.04 64-bit server with a
Dell PowerVault TL2000 tape library attached via a SAS controller. In
the library are two LTO4 drives and I am using LTO4 media. From a backup
over the weekend I found the
Thanks for the quick reply. No errors that I can find in dmesg. However,
there are a lot of jpeg files on this server...that does make sense that
compressed files cannot be compressed a second time.
Also if you are using encryption in bacula. I am not sure if that
bacula uses compressible
On Fri, 13 Apr 2012 14:13:41 -0400, Phil Stracchino said:
On 04/13/2012 01:02 PM, Martin Simmons wrote:
On Tue, 10 Apr 2012 15:27:22 -0400, Phil Stracchino said:
You shouldn't think of a temporary table as persistent DB data. Think
of them instead as part of the transient state of a
On Fri, 13 Apr 2012 21:47:04 +0100, Joe Nyland said:
On 13 Apr 2012, at 18:14, Martin Simmons wrote:
On Wed, 11 Apr 2012 11:09:12 +0100, =?utf-8?Q?Joe Nyland?= said:
Ok, firstly: sorry for not following up sooner. There have been several
replies for this thread since my last reply,
On 04/16/2012 10:38 AM, Martin Simmons wrote:
I think it should be impossible to make a database backup that represents a
point in the middle of anything. By should be impossible I mean that either
MySQL should always prevent it or database clients should use MySQL in such a
way that allows
On Sat, 14 Apr 2012 13:53:37 +0200, Hugo Letemplier said:
2012/4/11 Martin Simmons mar...@lispworks.com:
On Wed, 4 Apr 2012 16:59:58 +0200, Hugo Letemplier said:
Hello, I have tested encryption/decryption on many bacula backups but
one job is tricky
I have Linux, MacOSX and Windows
Bacula 5.0.2. This fileset:
FileSet {
Name = toe_home_x
Include {
Options {
exclude = yes
wilddir = /mnt/toe/data*/home/*/.NetBin
wilddir = /mnt/toe/data*/home/*/.Trash
wilddir = /mnt/toe/data*/home/*0
wilddir = /mnt/toe/data*/home/*1
wilddir =
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