On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 2:58 PM, MPish44
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:

> My thought is while that is great perhaps its time to move to an "excludes"
> type of system, granted its a manual effort across hundreds of Unix servers
> and we will probably have to manage the excludes in many the same ways...


By default, a file system usually needs to be backed up.  You may have bad
backups if it happens to contain something like an Oracle database, and you
won't have an application-consistent backup, but at least you'll have
something.

It definitely gets harder with active/passive clusters since NetBackup
doesn't really support them very well, but something is better than
nothing.  When your admins tell you how the file system really needs to be
handled, you can adjust your backup policies to do the right thing.  By if
they forget to tell you anything at all, at worst case you'll have a generic
file system backup.

We tend to do most of our backups with a generic all_local_drives type of
policy coupled with some exclude for things like database volumes, and then
use application-specific policies to cover them.

Simple is always good.  The less you have to muck with it, the more likely
you are to be successful.

   .../Ed

Ed Wilts, RHCE, BCFP, BCSD, SCSP, SCSE
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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