On Sun, 28 Oct 2012, Tilman Schmidt wrote:
> Am 26.10.2012 20:00, schrieb noob1321:
>> So after some work with Comcast and tinkering around we found that the
>> problem is actually Bacula. By doing speed tests from the client machine we
>> saw that before we started using bacula it was around
I have used backup solutions in the past which supported a bare-metal
recovery using a modified version of a live disk. The one that remains
most clearly in mind is Backup-Exec (which has changed names several
times) for windows. Using a disk created specifically for disaster
recovery you woul
Presumably the configuration files (in their most recent form) are already
stored on the tapes. An automated way of finding and pulling them would be
useful, perhaps bundled with a tape scan to find the most recent catalog?
Clint
On Mon, 5 Dec 2011, Pablo Marques wrote:
> Thanks you Jesse for
I am seeing a number of different (bad) behaviors when I run bat.exe on my
Windows 7 system. Unfortunately, Google doesn't seem to have any
information about the problems I am seeing.
I have used Bacula (and bat) on Linux for a couple years, so I'm familiar
with how stuff is supposed to work.