Yes, I'm aware that I will have to do that to salvage
the volume - however for the short term, what steps do
I need to do to make this volume available in the
library so the user can restore the one file he is
interested in right now?


--- Bob Booth - UIUC <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> You will probably have to mark the tape that has the
> bad 'file' on it as
> 'destroyed', or restore that volume using the
> offsite tape(s), then do the
> restore..  Depending on the number of offsite tapes
> it may take to rebuild the
> bad volume, you might be better off just updating
> the bad tape to destroyed and
> issuing the request.
>
> bob
>
> On Mon, Jan 06, 2003 at 12:30:33PM -0800, Michelle
> DeVault wrote:
> > I have a damaged file now marked unavailable in my
> > primary storage pool.  A user tried to restore a
> file,
> > but the restore failed since the tape is now
> > unavailable, and the tape in the copy pool is
> offsite.
> >  I've recalled the tape from offsite, but now
> what?
> >
> > 1.  Change volume access from offsite to readonly
> > 2.  checkin libvol library volume status=private
> > search=no checklabel=barcode
> > 3.  Then issue the restore command again - will it
> > find the volume now?
> >
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