On 08.08.2012 11:13, Michael D. Wood wrote:
> Yes. The shares are created on the Windows VM. The security
> permissions were changed to only allow administrator and bacula
> access. I then created entries in fstab on the Linux machine where
> bacula-director is running. I created mount points for each share on
> the Windows VM. I created a
> .smbcredentials file that gets parsed by fstab for the correct
> credentials to mount the smb shares from Windows. The mount
> directories were chown'ed to the user bacula and group bacula.
> Verified I could read and write to the shares from the Linux server
> and files that were created were owned by bacula.
>
> This is currently backing up a Windows DC, 2 x Linux servers (mail,
> web, Mysql, openfire, DNS etc.). I've also got the bacula-client
> package installed on my pfSense router/firewall. Couldn't get this to
> work from the web interface, so I just modified the bacula config
> files manually via SSH. Working great. So now if I look at the
> shares on the Windows vm all my backups have ran and are in their
> respective folders.
>
> Hope that answered any questions.
>
> --
> Michael D. Wood
> ITSecurityPros.org
> www.itsecuritypros.org
So Bacula backs up the pure VMDK files, fully every time (as partial
file backups are not supported)?
--
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