It appears that you're trying to restore files from one OS (Macintosh)
onto a machine running another OS (Windows). With a rare exception or
two, that will not work, since the filesystem structures are radically
different.
--
Mark Stapleton (stapleton AT berbee DOT com)
Berbee Information Networks
Office 262.521.5627
>-----Original Message-----
>From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager [mailto:ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU] On
>Behalf Of Sujay Dinakar R.
>Sent: Sunday, January 30, 2005 11:40 PM
>To: ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU
>Subject: Re: File has a corrupt named stream
>
>Thanks Richards,
>
>Message ANS2048E, is comming the error log,
>
>Environment:
>
>Tsm server V. 5.1.0 and client V. 5.2.0 is on Windows 2000 Server.
>
>I was trying to restore the files to the Network path to a X
>Server G5 Mac OS 10.3, when I try to restore the same files on
>the local/Network W2K it goes smooth without any err. is there
>any cross platform issue in restoring? I would like to know
>this because I like to take the backup from the X raid which
>is connected to Xserver from a Win 2K client, since all of my
>previous backups are taken from the windows I want to continue
>to user Win 2K client for backup/restore.
>
>Sujay Dinakar R.
>
>
>Richard Sims <rbs AT BU DOT EDU> wrote:
>On Jan 29, 2005, at 6:14 AM, Sujay Dinakar R. wrote:
>> for all the files what ever I try to restore.
>> To day I had received a problem in the TSM client: it is showing as
>> "File has a corrupt named stream"
>>
>> Can any one please guide me why the problem is occuring.
>
>When posting, help us to help you by providing a realistic
>amount of information, including your operating environment
>type, TSM client/server levels, and file system type, as well
>as message numbers (most typically found in the dsmerror.log
>file). In this case, it would also be helpful to have a lot
>more context, as in whether the restoral client and file
>system are the same ones which originated the backup file you
>are attempting to restore, and whether the operating system
>environment had changed over the intervening interval.
>
>I would surmise that your environment is Windows and that the
>file system type is NTFS. You may be trying to employ a
>relatively modern TSM client to restore data which had been
>backed up with an older client, where that backup client had a
>defect such that in the presence of an unusual circumstance,
>the data was not backed up correctly. This may be message
>ANS2048E, where APAR IC33922 notes that the backup may be bad,
>as addressed by other APARs. If this is the case, there isn't
>much you can do except try to make the most of what data may
>have restored.
>
>Richard Sims http://people.bu.edu/rbs
>
>
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