Am 19.04.2011 15:37, schrieb hymie!: > > So one of my machines has a few zillion tiny little files. > > My full backup took 44 hours. I can deal with that if I have to. > My incremental backup has been running for 10 hours now. > Files=71,560 Bytes=273,397,510 Bytes/sec=7,666 Errors=0 > Files Examined=14,675,372 > > I know that bacula has to look at each file to determine if it's > changed. And I am investigating whether or not we actually need to > keep all of these little files, or if we can zip them up into archives. > > In the meantime, I'm just wondering if there is some why to speed up my > backups. For example, > signature=sizeonly > or > signature=stupid > or some other undocumented and unrecommended (but needed) way to > speed up the verification of file changes (or lack thereof). > > Thanks. > > --hymie! http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymie hy...@lactose.homelinux.net
Hi, do you use accurate backups? If not, the signature isn't used anyway. Regular incrementals and differentials are done by timestamp. If you do, you can specify the metadata that is used by accurate jobs to compare files in the fileset: http://bacula.org/5.0.x-manuals/en/main/main/Configuring_Director.html#8553 Regards, Christian Manal ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Benefiting from Server Virtualization: Beyond Initial Workload Consolidation -- Increasing the use of server virtualization is a top priority.Virtualization can reduce costs, simplify management, and improve application availability and disaster protection. Learn more about boosting the value of server virtualization. http://p.sf.net/sfu/vmware-sfdev2dev _______________________________________________ Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users