On Mon, Nov 11, 2013 at 11:45:06PM +0100, Jean-François Leroux wrote:
> Sorry, found it. It's restoreclient in one word.
>
>
Great to hear, where did you find this information?
Uwe
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Sorry, found it. It's restoreclient in one word.
2013/11/11 Jean-François Leroux
> Hi, I have a script where I restore some machines on one big disk array.
> It starts with:
>
> *restore client=$1-fd where=/data/restore/$1 select current all done*
>
> then I have to write
>
>
> *mod*
> *5 (re
Hi, I have a script where I restore some machines on one big disk array.
It starts with:
*restore client=$1-fd where=/data/restore/$1 select current all done*
then I have to write
*mod*
*5 (restore client)*
then choose the correct client for restoration.
Is there a command line word for that,
I have managed to look back on the old server and the way that I got round it
was to run a script that then called restore from bconsole.
Thinking about it, it would never work because the
client =
in the restore job specifies the client to be restored, not where to. What is
needed is a
Res
On Thursday 22 November 2012 08:46:10 Jummo wrote:
> Hi Gary,
>
> Could you post the log information of the particular job?
> Could you post the commands you have used for the restore and the output?
>
> Thanks
>
>-- Jummo
Jummo
Here is the bconsole session for the restore. The job log is bel
Hi Gary,
Could you post the log information of the particular job?
Could you post the commands you have used for the restore and the output?
Thanks
-- Jummo
--
Monitor your physical, virtual and cloud infrastructure
I have the following restore job in bacula-dir.conf
Job {
Name = "RestoreFiles"
Type = Restore
Client=lou-fd
FileSet="Linux Full"
Storage = eddie1-File
Priority = 9 # restore has higher priority
Pool = Default
On Dec 1, 2011, at 6:48 AM, Viacheslav Biriukov wrote:
> Hello.
>
> I want always restore files to the one Client by default. How can I do this?
A given Bacula configuration needs only one restore job. The restore-to client
is set
by Bacula at run time. It defaults to the client on which the
Hello.
I want always restore files to the one Client by default. How can I do this?
Thanks.
--
Viacheslav Biriukov
BR
http://biriukov.com
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Kevin Keane wrote:
> Connection refused indicates that you can't even get a TCP connection to
> the FD. You can actually verify that with telnet. On the server, type:
>
> telnet arabella-100.example.com 9102
>
> The list of possible reasons for this is fairly short:
>
> - The FD isn't running.
ectly
> or indirectly, use, disclose, distribute, print or copy any part of this
> message if you are not the intended recipient.
>
>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: John Kennedy [mailto:john.kenn...@publishingtechnology.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, June 09, 2009 7:16 AM
Connection refused indicates that you can't even get a TCP connection to
the FD. You can actually verify that with telnet. On the server, type:
telnet arabella-100.example.com 9102
The list of possible reasons for this is fairly short:
- The FD isn't running. Use netstat -ltunp to confirm that
We had a Bacula client machine die recently.
I have reinstalled the machine with Debian - Lenny. I installed the
bacula-client package from the Lenny repos. Our Bacula server is running
version 2.2.6.
I have edited /etc/bacula/bacula.conf (on the client) to have:
FDAddress =
but when trying to r
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