Author: Christoph Pilgram <Christoph.Pilgram AT BC.BOEHRINGER-INGELHEIM DOT COM>
Date: Wed, 2 Aug 2006 07:48:50 +0200
Hi all, I try do do an point-in-time-restore to the 19-Jul-2006 on a w2k-Server (TSM Client 5.3.4.0). I can go down in the gui just to the mountpoint but I dont see that base-directory. Do I make a p
Author: "Bos, Karel" <Karel.Bos AT ATOSORIGIN DOT COM>
Date: Wed, 2 Aug 2006 10:01:35 +0200
No, its not a bug but WAS. You "just" have to use the command line interface to do this restore. Regards, Karel Hi all, I try do do an point-in-time-restore to the 19-Jul-2006 on a w2k-Server (TSM Cl
Author: Andrew Raibeck <storman AT US.IBM DOT COM>
Date: Wed, 2 Aug 2006 07:04:17 -0600
It's not just a matter of the retention values, but also the number of versions. Assuming you run backup on a daily basis, if an object changes every day, then you will only be able to restore that o
Does anyone else out there think that this is a bad design? We have lots of users who fall into this trap, and I'm tiring of having to explain it to them. First, they use PIT-restore when they don't
End user training is also very important and disclosures and other documentation should be given to the user so situations do not happen. To you have training meetings or anything like that? Document
TSM is very complex. It has a lot of options and features. Training sessions are a great way to show users how to use the product, but not as a means to discuss the non-intuitive parts of the product