2009/5/14 Jayson Broughton <jbrough...@truecos.com>: > I know this question has beened asked a million times on this list (And yes, > I went through the nabble’s bacula-users archives over 2 days) but I think > my situation is slightly alittle more unique. So if anyone could help me > out, I would appreciate it! > > > > Here’s the background: > > We have 150+ clients scattered throughout 3 buildings, but all attached to > the main network line (1 main office, 2 offices are connected through ptp > wifi). Because we support 5 separate ‘companies’ that are owned by one big > company, my pools have been setup to reflect this. We also have 20 off-site > locations scattered through the US that are connected to the main director, > and backing up to a storage device on their local network (All connected via > VPN). > > > > I have a pool for each department that’s also part of one of the 5 > companies. So it comes out to 9 separate pools. Each pool is on a > different schedule to be backed up in a 24 hour period. > > > > Our storage device for the 150 clients is a 1TB snapserver (plenty of room > for what we need backed up). I have run tests the last 2 weeks using a > single pool of 9 machines backing up to the main storage daemon. And it > works great. > > > > What I’m curious about: > > Can I have all 9 of the pools backing up to 1 storage device definition? I > would have the pools set for 1 backup per pool, but want at least 5 > concurrent backups to the storage device itself. Or do I need to have > Device { } separate and pointing to a different directory for each of those > 9 pools to backup simultaneously? What would be the best practice for this? >
Use more than 1 device since a single device can only have 1 volume and thus 1 pool loaded. Since only 1 pool can be loaded jobs for other pools will block stopping most of your concurrency. John ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The NEW KODAK i700 Series Scanners deliver under ANY circumstances! Your production scanning environment may not be a perfect world - but thanks to Kodak, there's a perfect scanner to get the job done! With the NEW KODAK i700 Series Scanner you'll get full speed at 300 dpi even with all image processing features enabled. http://p.sf.net/sfu/kodak-com _______________________________________________ Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users