A little late on this one, but I would also recommend making a copy of what images exist on disk before you expire them and save it. This way, if you do end up expiring an image with no copy, you at
This script should help (for 6.5.*): #!/bin/sh usage() { echo "usage: `basename $0` storage_unit_path" } if [ $# -ne 1 ] then usage exit 1 fi cd $1 for BACKUP_ID in `ls -1 *.info *.img | sed -e 's/_C
Author: Pedro Moranga Gonçalves <pgoncalves AT uolinc DOT com>
Date: Thu, 5 Feb 2009 15:24:22 -0200
These one do the same thing and gives the space used per image. I use it in 6.0. [ -z "$1" ] && echo "usage: `basename $0` STAGING_AREAS" >&2 && exit 1 for i in $*; do cd $i ls | cut -d_ -f 1,2 | sor
Author: "Matthew Stier" <Matthew.Stier AT us.fujitsu DOT com>
Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2009 16:24:34 -0500
Background: Solaris 10 master/media server with several filesystems mounted from SAN to act as DSSU's. Backups are done using cron initiated backup scripts, which call the applicable policy. Whe the
Issue: Need to rebuild the filesystems hosting the DSSU's. Since these tapes are already backed up to tape, what do I need to do to purge all the images? What you need to do is for each image on tap
Background: Solaris 10 master/media server with several filesystems mounted from SAN to act as DSSU's. Backups are done using cron initiated backup scripts, which call the applicable policy. Whe the