How do I restore 200GB fast? I have googled but can't find any simple tips/steps. I did the rsync restore but it seems to be taking forever so I cancelled it. Now I am downloading the tar at 10mb/
Author: Timothy J Massey <tmassey AT obscorp DOT com>
Date: Tue, 21 Dec 2010 15:02:48 -0500
Gimili <gimili17 AT gmail DOT com> wrote on 12/21/2010 01:28:27 PM: at Gigabit NICs should be able to move roughly 70MB/s *IF* everything else can handle that: backup computer's hard drive, CPU and R
On 12/21/2010 3:02 PM, Timothy J Massey wrote: Tar's needs are pretty low, but if the pool is compressed (or if you selected a compressed TAR), that could make a big difference. Rsync isn't going to
Author: Timothy J Massey <tmassey AT obscorp DOT com>
Date: Tue, 21 Dec 2010 19:01:11 -0500
On 12/21/2010 3:02 PM, Timothy J Massey wrote: Tar's needs are pretty low, but if the pool is compressed (or if you selected a compressed TAR), that could make a big difference. Rsync isn't going to
Author: "Pedro M. S. Oliveira" <pmsoliveira AT gmail DOT com>
Date: Wed, 22 Dec 2010 00:28:08 +0000
time will also varies with the type of data you are recovering. small files take a lot of time cheers pedro On Dec 22, 2010 12:09 AM, "Timothy J Massey" <tmassey AT obscorp DOT com> wrote: > > > Sen
Author: Timothy J Massey <tmassey AT obscorp DOT com>
Date: Tue, 21 Dec 2010 22:05:41 -0500
gimili <gimili17 AT gmail DOT com> wrote on 12/21/2010 04:55:36 PM: Much appreciated! So Given what you said (a small folder restored correctly), then yes, a larger folder should work equally as well
Author: Timothy J Massey <tmassey AT obscorp DOT com>
Date: Tue, 21 Dec 2010 22:06:45 -0500
"Pedro M. S. Oliveira" <pmsoliveira AT gmail DOT com> wrote on 12/21/2010 07:28:08 PM: Yeah, and that would cause a longer pause at the beginning before the files start to transfer in creating that r
Author: "d.davolio AT mastertraining DOT it" <d.davolio AT mastertraining DOT it>
Date: Wed, 22 Dec 2010 12:35:13 +0100
To see in depth what's happening you can check if rsync process are running from a shell: ps -ef |grep -a rsync This should work on every linux/unix server. On 12/22/2010 04:06 AM, Timothy J Massey w
On 12/22/2010 6:35 AM, d.davolio AT mastertraining DOT it wrote: To see in depth what's happening you can check if rsync process are running from a shell: ps -ef |grep -a rsync This should work on ev
Author: "Tyler J. Wagner" <tyler AT tolaris DOT com>
Date: Wed, 22 Dec 2010 13:49:23 +0000
My biggest complaint about BackupPC (and I have few), is that both backups and restores show nothing when in progress. At least with rsync. I'd prefer something like a way to see the last 10 files co
Author: Richard Shaw <hobbes1069 AT gmail DOT com>
Date: Wed, 22 Dec 2010 08:25:54 -0600
On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 7:49 AM, Tyler J. Wagner <tyler AT tolaris DOT com> wrote: I wonder if you could use "iotop" as well. It should show the rsync process and how much (or more precisely how fast
Thanks this is very help! Looks like it is stuck on one file. ** Would it help to stop backuppc and restart the job? Will it be faster the second time? This seems to be ok. Thanks again for everyone'
Author: "Tyler J. Wagner" <tyler AT tolaris DOT com>
Date: Wed, 22 Dec 2010 14:50:22 +0000
No need to stop BackupPC. Just cancel the backup, or kill the rsync commands on the target. Regards, Tyler -- "The map is not the territory." -- Alfred Korzybski -- Forrester recently released a repo
I don't see an option to cancel a restore job from the web interface. Is this an option? So on the target I see: rsync 10041 root 1r REG 8,17 115191313 58262536 /home/20090220_newxbackup.sql So would
Author: "Tyler J. Wagner" <tyler AT tolaris DOT com>
Date: Wed, 22 Dec 2010 15:54:36 +0000
Browse to the client. Hit "Stop/Dequeue Backup". What this really means is "Stop/Dequeue all actions related to this client". Yes. Not in any way you're likely to notice. The files will still be copi
Author: Keith Edmunds <kae AT midnighthax DOT com>
Date: Wed, 22 Dec 2010 16:10:58 +0000
On Wed, 22 Dec 2010 13:49:23 +0000, "Tyler J. Wagner" <tyler AT tolaris DOT com> said: ...or just lsof -c rsync ...which will do exactly the same. If you run, instead: watch lsof -c rsync ...you can
Author: "Tyler J. Wagner" <tyler AT tolaris DOT com>
Date: Wed, 22 Dec 2010 16:28:13 +0000
So much more convenient. Thanks. Regards, Tyler -- "Complaining about ionizing radiation on your way to a plane flight is like complaining about a TSA pat-down on your way to Caligula's palace." -- S
A big thanks to everyone for all the help. I ended up using the command line tool BackupPC_tarCreate. I then copied the large tar file over using ftp and then expanded it. I could not get the direct
Author: Keith Edmunds <kae AT midnighthax DOT com>
Date: Thu, 30 Dec 2010 12:22:18 +0000
Next time: tail -f log.txt -- -- Learn how Oracle Real Application Clusters (RAC) One Node allows customers to consolidate database storage, standardize their database environment, and, should the n