In message Mon, 24 Oct 1994 12:01:42 PDT,
MJ Lopatin <lopatin AT VNET.IBM DOT COM> writes:
>
>> We tried to restore a file /afs/uni-bonn.de/home/userid/xyz (defined
>> virtualmountpoint is /afs/uni-bonn.de/home/userid) to its original
>> location with the DSMC.AFS command.
>> ADSM restores not only the specified file, but all subdirectories to
>> /afs/uni-bonn.de/home/userid and also restores the old acls, which can
>> changed since backup and should remain changed.
> Try specifying -SUBDIR=NO on your restore command line, or setting
> SUBDIR NO in your dsm.opt file. This will prevent all those
> subdirectories from being restored, and should preserve your current
> acls.
Specifying -SUBDIR=NO on the restore command really prevented the
subdirectories and their acls from being restored.
But using the GUI restore only that file and no subdirectories are restored
even if -SUBDIR=YES. Why that difference?
> As far as whether new (current) acls and directory attributes should
> be preserved, or the old (backed-up) ones restored, I think the answer
could vary by user and by situation. We are considering some ways
> of letting you tell us which one you want (old or current directory)
> on the restore command, without adding yet another option, but we'd
> love some feedback on whether there is a need for this and how you
> would like to see it implemented. Then we'll see if we can do it.
I think that the answer really varies by the situation and I think there
is a need to tell which one is wanted (maybe with a default to be set).
Regards,
Baerbel Himpfen
/* Baerbel Himpfen */
/* Regionales Hochschulrechenzentrum E-Mail: HIMPFEN AT Uni-Bonn DOT De */
/* der Universit{t Bonn Phone : +49 228 73-3127 */
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