Author: ksetiaps at yahoo.com.sg (Kelana Putra Setia)
Date: Thu, 1 Jun 2006 20:58:25 +0800 (CST)
Hi All, Any opinions to the differences of a tape in FROZEN or SUSPENDED state? Thanks in advance .... Cheers, Kevin Setia __________________________________ Yahoo! Movies - Search movie info and cel
Author: Richard.Mansell at ccc.govt.nz (Mansell, Richard)
Date: Fri, 2 Jun 2006 13:33:00 +1200
Frozen: The volume is unavailable for future backups. A frozen volume never expires, even after the retention period ends for all backups on the media. This means that the media ID is never deleted
What questions do you have _after_ reading the descriptions under "Media Lists Report," "Media Summary Report" and "Media Server Properties" in your System Administrator's Guide, Volume I, for start
Author: william.d.brown at gsk.com (william.d.brown AT gsk DOT com)
Date: Fri, 2 Jun 2006 09:03:33 +0100
We SUSPEND all tapes as they are ejected from the robot after the overnight backups. That way, if we have to bring them back on site for a restore, NetBackup will not try to append further backups to
Basically that's the difference. When a tape is frozen, after it expires, it stays frozen and unavailable. (the data on the tape will expire, don't freeze tapes to keep data around) A suspended tape
FYI - We are running NB 5.0 MP3 and running Vaulting. When we brought tapes back onsite to test SQL DB restores (as we have nothing else to do ever), we found that Vaulting would remove the tape even
Author: Eric.Ljungblad at CopleyPress.com (Eric Ljungblad)
Date: Mon, 5 Jun 2006 00:40:23 -0700
Restoring a Oracle/lawson DB 10 gig should take no longer than 4 to 6 hours MAx even on DLT7000 - if longer there is a time clock issue and or speed issue depending on a couple of things? We used to