I meant something different. If I change a fileset then bacula will upgrade the next job to a full backup for consistency reasons. That's documented behaviour and has nothing to do with the reload command.
Now my question is: How does bacula detect that the fileset changed? Does it do something like a checksum over the config file? Would it think I changed the fileset just because I change some whitespace in the fileset definition or put it into another file? -Sebastian On Wednesday 22 June 2005 14:22, Dominic Marks wrote: > On Tuesday 21 June 2005 13:25, Sebastian Stark wrote: > > Will splitting up bacula-dir.conf into several files lead to bacula > > seeing new FileSets and upgrading to Full backups next run? If I > > don't change anything else of course. > > I don't think so. If you want Bacula to pick up any changes, > I think the right method is to log in to the console and run > the reload command once you have made your changes. > > > -Sebastian > > HTH, -- Sebastian Stark -- http://www.kyb.tuebingen.mpg.de/~stark Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics Spemannstr. 38, 72076 Tuebingen Phone: +49 7071 601 555 -- Fax: +49 7071 601 552 ------------------------------------------------------- SF.Net email is sponsored by: Discover Easy Linux Migration Strategies from IBM. Find simple to follow Roadmaps, straightforward articles, informative Webcasts and more! Get everything you need to get up to speed, fast. http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=7477&alloc_id=16492&op=click _______________________________________________ Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users