Louis, I hope this helps.
Alex Paschal
Storage Administrator
Freightliner, LLC
(503) 745-6850 phone/vmail
from _Using_the_B/A_Clients_ (Unix), page 38
When an entire directory or directory tree is restored, and the inactive,
latest, pick,
todate, and fromdateoptions are not specified on the restore command, TSM
keeps
track of which objects have been restored. If the restore process is
interrupted for any
reason, you can restart the restore at the point of interruption by entering
the restart
restore command. It is possible to create more than one restartable restore
session.
Use the query restore command to display a list of your restartable restore
sessions in
the server database. The existence of a restartable restore inhibits further
backups of
that file system until the restartable restore is completed using the
restart restore
command or the restartable restore is dropped using the cancel restore
command.
-----Original Message-----
From: Louis Wiesemann [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, December 20, 2000 6:03 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:
What determines that a restore job will be "restartable"? I've looked in
both the server and client manuals but all I have found are instructions for
restarting or querying restartable restores. The online help for the client
had some information about options that would make a restore
non-restartable, but we thought we had met the requirements and the restores
still do not show up as restartable. I queried the list for "restartable"
and found some information, but nothing specific. If you can point me to
the information about this I would appreciate it.
Thanks