ADSM-L

Re: select query question

2003-01-22 15:04:03
Subject: Re: select query question
From: Andrew Raibeck <storman AT US.IBM DOT COM>
To: ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU
Date: Wed, 22 Jan 2003 13:02:01 -0700
In general you can not get a file's attributes with an admin client.

You can find the file modification date via the GUI's restore function.
You don't actually have to restore the file to do this.

Regards,

Andy

Andy Raibeck
IBM Software Group
Tivoli Storage Manager Client Development
Internal Notes e-mail: Andrew Raibeck/Tucson/IBM@IBMUS
Internet e-mail: storman AT us.eyebm DOT com (change eye to i to reply)

The only dumb question is the one that goes unasked.
The command line is your friend.
"Good enough" is the enemy of excellence.




David Longo <David.Longo AT HEALTH-FIRST DOT ORG>
Sent by: "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" <ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU>
01/22/2003 12:52
Please respond to "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager"


        To:     ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU
        cc:
        Subject:        select query question



One of my users wants to be able to see what the timestamp on
a backed up file is without restoring the file.  NOT the timestamp
of the time it was backed up but what the timestamp on the client
system was for that file when it was backed up.

Ex: backup was at 11pm last night and test.txt was backed up.
The timestamp of the file on the client at the time was 3:15pm.
Is there a sql select that shows this?  I looked at tables some and
it was not obvious, found the timestamp of the backup time but
not the actual "attributes" of the backup file.

I have TSM server 4.2.2.10.

Thanks,


David B. Longo
System Administrator
Health First, Inc.
3300 Fiske Blvd.
Rockledge, FL 32955-4305
PH      321.434.5536
Pager  321.634.8230
Fax:    321.434.5509
david.longo AT health-first DOT org


"MMS <health-first.org>" made the following
 annotations on 01/22/2003 02:54:10 PM
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