Hm very good question!
On Thu, 18 Oct 2007, Pablo Barbáchano wrote:
2038 is the end of UNIX epoch in 32bit systems. In 64bit systems is some
ridiculous value after the sun explodes etc
Question is if you import those images from a 32 bits NetBackup to a 64 bit
NetBackup, will they still expire in 2038 or automatically change to the 2^64 ?
----- Mensaje original ----
De: Justin Piszcz <jpiszcz AT lucidpixels DOT com>
Para: "Ellis, Jason" <Jason.Ellis AT imb DOT com>
CC: Veritas-bu AT mailman.eng.auburn DOT edu
Enviado: jueves, 18 de octubre, 2007 17:47:38
Asunto: Re: [Veritas-bu] I guess infinity isn't forever...
On Thu, 18 Oct 2007, Ellis, Jason wrote:
So I need to change the expiration date on a bunch of images to
infinity
(for legal reasons). I plan to write a script to parse a text file
taken
from a catalog search for the backupids of the needed images. I
tested
out changing the expiration date of an image to infinity manually
first.
When I ran a bpimagelist and converted the ctime for the expiration
date
I got back an expiration of "Mon Jan 18 19:14:07 2038."
My question is: Is this is just some random date that NetBackup
assigns
to images that are never supposed to expire?
2038 is the end of the UNIX epoch and that is why its associated with
infinite retention
Below is the bpexpdate command I ran:
bpexpdate -backupid pasnas01a_1191283460 -d infinity -force
Jason Ellis
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