On Sat, Sep 09, 2006 at 08:31:46AM -0400, Dan Langille wrote:
> Perhaps you should tell us why this machine is not on all the time.
This machine is my home server (internet and files), and makes too much
noise to leave running, and takes too much power too.
> Do you have any machines which are po
On Sat, Sep 09, 2006 at 08:08:04AM -0400, Dan Langille wrote:
> I think yes, it can work.
>
> When the box is powered up, Bacula will schedule jobs. Hopefully
> they'll run while the box is still up... The box must remain up
> while all jobs are run.
>
> What problems are you anticipating?
I
On Sat, Sep 09, 2006 at 08:31:46AM -0400, Dan Langille wrote:
> Perhaps you should tell us why this machine is not on all the time.
This machine is my home server (internet and files), and makes too much
noise to leave running, and takes too much power too.
> Do you have any machines which are p
Hello,
I'll try putting the question differently in the hope to get some help:
is it possible to use bacula (the director) on a machine that is not
always on. If yes, how can the schedule work ?
Thanks a lot.
--
Stéphane Epardaud
-
Hello,
I'm using bacula 1.38.9 (02 May 2006) on debian unstable linux i386.
My director is running on a machine which is shut down at night, and
turned on during the day at varying intervals. If I schedule jobs for a
certain hour (say 22:00) and the computer is not turned on at that time,
the sche