Author: James Austin <zx_viper_xz AT hotmail DOT com>
Date: Sat, 21 Jun 2008 12:49:11 +1000
I have been noticing that my nightly incremental backups have been quite large (>300 meg) when not much data is being changed. I am assuming that this is due to the size of the log files in /var/log.
Author: "John Drescher" <drescherjm AT gmail DOT com>
Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2008 23:23:35 -0400
If your files here are getting this big I recommend you keep them under control with logrotate. Yes. But if you do back this up it will compress very well on tape or using the builtin compression. E
James, List Files JobID=xxxx works for me (Version: 1.38.11 (28 June 2006)). cmr -- Debian 'Etch' - Registered Linux User #241964 -- "More laws, less justice." -- Marcus Tullius Ciceroca, 42 BC -- Ch
Author: James Austin <zx_viper_xz AT hotmail DOT com>
Date: Mon, 23 Jun 2008 13:20:49 +1000
This only provides me with a list of files and the total amount, I am trying to find the size on a file by file basis. James. -- Check out the new SourceForge.net Marketplace. It's the best place to
Author: Annette Jäkel <jaekel AT math.TU-Berlin DOT DE>
Date: Mon, 23 Jun 2008 09:59:27 +0200
Am 21.06.2008 19:17 Uhr schrieb "C M Reinehr" unter <cmr AT amsent DOT com>: That lists the files but not the size of the single files, only the summary. I think James want to see the single size of
You're correct--my bad. I chose the catalog backup as a sample job which, as it happens, only contains one file! After taking a quick look at the make tables script for my version, it doesn't appear
Author: John Jorgensen <jorgnsn AT lcd.uregina DOT ca>
Date: Mon, 23 Jun 2008 14:19:17 -0600
I'm not certain, but I believe the LStat field of the catalog's File relation encodes the metadata supplied by bacula-fd during the backup. If you're willing to look through the source code to see wh
[SNIP!] Yes, that's how your MIME-encoded message looks. -- Your message, as decodeded reads: [SNIP!] [SNIP!] Actually, I believe that the size of each file is stored in the catalog. The problem is t