One also needs to be careful about filespace boundaries - dsmc will not
traverse nor even display a filespace in a lower-level directory unless
its mountpoint was also backed up as a directory in that lower-level
filespace.
-- Skylar Thompson (skylar2 AT u.washington DOT edu)
-- Genome Sciences Department, System Administrator
-- Foege Building S046, (206)-685-7354
-- University of Washington School of Medicine
On 07/08/13 15:15, Erwann Simon wrote:
> Geoff,
>
> Let's try with a trailing /or putting quotes around your file specification.
>
> Be careful with the shell interpreting the star and not the TSM Client.
>
> I think that a user who archives files becomes the owner of the archives and
> should be able to queriy them.
>
> Erwann
>
>
> Geoff Gill <avalnche96 AT YAHOO DOT COM> a écrit :
>
>> I was wondering if perhaps this makes sense to anyone. While logged on
>> as a user, not root, an archive is run. dsmc archive /var/log/test/*
>> with -deletefiles. archive ran, shows 8 files archived and 5 files
>> deleted.
>>
>> dsmc q archive /var/log/test/* -subdir yes, dsmc q archive
>> /var/log/test, dsmc q archive /var/log/test -subdir=yes all return
>> ANS1092W No files matching search criteria were found.
>>
>> So the question: Is it possible a user could archive files and not see
>> anything with the query? Is it possible I have a client level problem,
>> which I'm trying to research now. what else am I missing? I have asked
>> them to log in as root and do the query but won't get a response till
>> tomorrow so I thought I'd see I got any hits here.
>>
>> Thank You
>> Geoff Gill
>
|