On Mon, January 8, 2007 11:59 am, Erich Prinz wrote:
> Problem solved.
>
> This is pretty embarrassing for me. The software that is going to be
> replaced was still running on the system. Once that (and Bacula)
> services were stopped, btape and mt run fine.
Heh... I had something similar happen.
Problem solved.
This is pretty embarrassing for me. The software that is going to be
replaced was still running on the system. Once that (and Bacula)
services were stopped, btape and mt run fine.
Erich
On Jan 8, 2007, at 1:30 AM, Andreas Lüdtke wrote:
>>> Tape block granularity is 1024 byte
Same problem here.
Seems to me the default install should include appropriate
credentials for device access.
btape and running a bacula job both fail with permission denied.
Any ideas?
E
On Jan 7, 2007, at 4:01 PM, Ryan Novosielski wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> > Tape block granularity is 1024 bytes.
> > btape: ../../stored/butil.c:286 Using device: "Quantum" for writing.
> > 07-Jan 21:20 btape: Fatal Error at
> ../../stored/device.c:277 because:
> > dev open failed: ../../stored/dev.c:424 Unable to open
> device "Quantum" (Tape0):
> > ERR=Permission
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Andreas Lüdtke wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I installed bacula 2.0.0 on a windows 2003 sbs server. My tape drive is a
> quantum DLT-V4.
>
> I read that it's a good idea to test the drive first (37.1 Get Your Tape
> Drive Working). I
> entered the following com
Hi,
I installed bacula 2.0.0 on a windows 2003 sbs server. My tape drive is a
quantum DLT-V4.
I read that it's a good idea to test the drive first (37.1 Get Your Tape Drive
Working). I
entered the following command:
btape -c bacula-sd.conf Quantum
this returned:
Tape block granularity is 102