Author: rhugga <nbu-forum AT backupcentral DOT com>
Date: Tue, 01 Nov 2011 08:29:26 -0700
I worked around this problem by running scripts against each filer and comparing this to the include/exclude list for each policy. I was in an environment with over 200 netapp filers and this was a c
Author: Heathe Yeakley <hkyeakley AT gmail DOT com>
Date: Tue, 4 Oct 2011 15:29:08 -0500
I have a procedural question, not a technical one. I just switched over to capacity based licensing and I'm trying to setup NDMP. Master Server - RHEL 5 Media Server #1 - RHEL 5 Media Server #2 - RHE
Author: Nic Solomons <Nic.Solomons AT attenda DOT net>
Date: Wed, 5 Oct 2011 09:59:39 +0100
I would say firstly: disregard shares… NDMP is performed at the volume level, so that is what I would be looking at (“vol status” or “df”) For me, we track the backups u
Author: Joshua Fielden <joshua.fielden AT gmail DOT com>
Date: Wed, 5 Oct 2011 11:20:59 -0600
In a previous life where we had weak change control and this scenario was a problem, I wrote a script to dump and sort the policy (bppllist -l... | grep "^Include:" | sed| sort), and compare that lis
Author: jazzygeoff <nbu-forum AT backupcentral DOT com>
Date: Wed, 05 Oct 2011 08:02:56 -0700
Hi, I have solved this problem by gathering (every morning) a list of all the netapp volumes in my estate (>vol status), and a list of all my netbackup policies (>bppllist), and effectively doing a "