Author: Jitendra Thakur <JITENDRA.KUMAR AT HUTCHINDIA DOT COM>
Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2003 16:12:06 +0530
Dear *SMites I have an AIX system which has 65 filesystems in total and I want to backup 27 filesystems out of these. Is there any other way apart from specifying each one of them (there again we hav
Author: Daniel Sparrman <daniel.sparrman AT EXIST DOT SE>
Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2003 12:04:05 +0100
Use the domain parameter in your dsm.sys file to specify which filesystems that should be backed up. Best Regards Daniel Sparrman -- Daniel Sparrman Exist i Stockholm AB Propellervägen 6B 183 62 HÄGE
Author: "Seay, Paul" <seay_pd AT NAPTHEON DOT COM>
Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2003 09:54:42 -0500
Have you considered using the dsm.opt to contain exclude.fs commands for the ones you do not want to backup and let it just backup everything else. Paul D. Seay, Jr. Technical Specialist Northrop Gru
The limit of 20 names on a command line is some developer's mighty poor concept of product usability, artificially handicapping the command in an environment which affords far more flexibility. You
Author: Bill Boyer <bill.boyer AT VERIZON DOT NET>
Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2003 12:18:49 -0500
Or maybe create a client option set that has "Exclude.FS" for the filesystems they don't want backed up. Seems they are trying to keep the configuration centrally on the TSM server and not have to mo
Richard, Back in V1 of the product, the limitation of 20 operands on the command line was thought to be a good idea. Many (if not all) UNIX shells expand un-quoted wildcard characters with a list of
Jim - Thanks for pointing out that new option. It's not yet in the current clients manual (which still quotes a hard limit of 20) so I wasn't aware of it. Thoughts on it below. My honest opinion: Wh