On Tue, 2006-03-14 at 22:49 +0100, Stefan G. Weichinger wrote:
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> Thomas Widhalm schrieb:
>
> >> Have you tried resetting some parameters like bumpsize, bumpmult,
> >> and bumpdays? They may have an affect on your situation.
> >>
> > This could really be it. bumpsize was set 100Mb. Maybe, because this
> > setup was used to backup on a tape just once in a week. Unfortunately I
> > had to take over the whole machine without having time to look through
> > the configuration too much.
>
> If that didn't solve your issues you maybe share your config with us.
> This would help to get the picture.
Ok. It's below
>
> You mentioned you had to take over that server:
> Do you have any experience with Amanda already or not?
Well. All my experience with amanda I got with experimenting with this
server.
>
> Stefan.
amanda-shared.conf:
#
# amanda.conf - sample Amanda configuration file. This started off life
as
# the actual config file in use at CS.UMD.EDU.
#
# If your configuration is called, say, "csd", then this file normally
goes
# in /etc/amanda/csd/amanda.conf.
#
mailto "root" # space separated list of operators at your site
dumpuser "amanda" # the user to run dumps under
netusage 100000 Kbps # maximum net bandwidth for Amanda, in KB per
sec
# 4 weeks (dumpcycle) times 5 tapes per week
(just
# the weekdays) plus a few to handle errors that
# need amflush and so we do not overwrite the
full
# backups performed at the beginning of the
previous
# cycle
maxdumps 1
### ### ###
# WARNING: don't use `inf' for tapecycle, it's broken!
### ### ###
bumpsize 10 Mb # minimum savings (threshold) to bump level 1 ->
2
bumpdays 1 # minimum days at each level
bumpmult 4 # threshold = bumpsize * bumpmult^(level-1)
etimeout 1800 # number of seconds per filesystem for
estimates.
#etimeout -600 # total number of seconds for estimates.
# a positive number will be multiplied by the number of filesystems on
# each host; a negative number will be taken as an absolute total time-
out.
# The default is 5 minutes per filesystem.
# Specify tape device and/or tape changer. If you don't have a tape
# changer, and you don't want to use more than one tape per run of
# amdump, just comment out the definition of tpchanger.
# Some tape changers require tapedev to be defined; others will use
# their own tape device selection mechanism. Some use a separate tape
# changer device (changerdev), others will simply ignore this
# parameter. Some rely on a configuration file (changerfile) to
# obtain more information about tape devices, number of slots, etc;
# others just need to store some data in files, whose names will start
# with changerfile. For more information about individual tape
# changers, read docs/TAPE.CHANGERS.
# At most one changerfile entry must be defined; select the most
# appropriate one for your configuration. If you select man-changer,
# keep the first one; if you decide not to use a tape changer, you may
# comment them all out.
runtapes 1 # number of tapes to be used in a single run of
amdump
#tpchanger "chg-manual" # the tape-changer glue script
#tapedev "file:/data/amanda/" # the no-rewind tape device to be used
#tapedev "no-such-device" # the no-rewind tape device to be used
#tapedev "/dev/null" # the no-rewind tape device to be used
#rawtapedev "/dev/null" # the raw device to be used (ftape only)
#rawtapedev "no-such-device" # the raw device to be used (ftape only)
#changerfile "/var/lib/amanda/DailySet1/changer"
#changerfile "/var/lib/amanda/DailySet1/changer-status"
#changerfile "/etc/amanda/DailySet1/changer.conf"
#changerdev "/dev/null"
#changerdev "no-such-device"
#tapetype HP-DAT # what kind of tape it is (see tapetypes
below)
#labelstr "^DailySet1[0-9][0-9]*$" # label constraint regex: all
tapes must match
#tapetype CISOS-notape
#labelstr "^ONYX[0-9][0-9]*$" # label constraint regex: all tapes must
match
# Specify holding disks. These are used as a temporary staging area for
# dumps before they are written to tape and are recommended for most
sites.
# The advantages include: tape drive is more likely to operate in
streaming
# mode (which reduces tape and drive wear, reduces total dump time);
multiple
# dumps can be done in parallel (which can dramatically reduce total
dump time.
# The main disadvantage is that dumps on the holding disk need to be
flushed
# (with amflush) to tape after an operating system crash or a tape
failure.
# If no holding disks are specified then all dumps will be written
directly
# to tape. If a dump is too big to fit on the holding disk than it will
be
# written directly to tape. If more than one holding disk is specified
then
# they will all be used round-robin.
#holdingdisk hd2 {
# directory "/dumps2/amanda"
# use 1000 Mb
# }
#holdingdisk hd3 {
# directory "/mnt/disk4"
# use 1000 Mb
# }
# If amanda cannot find a tape on which to store backups, it will run
# as many backups as it can to the holding disks. In order to save
# space for unattended backups, by default, amanda will only perform
# incremental backups in this case, i.e., it will reserve 100% of the
# holding disk space for the so-called degraded mode backups.
# However, if you specify a different value for the `reserve'
# parameter, amanda will not degrade backups if they will fit in the
# non-reserved portion of the holding disk.
# reserve 30 # percent
reserve 0
# This means save at least 30% of the holding disk space for degraded
# mode backups.
# Amanda needs a few Mb of diskspace for the log and debug files,
# as well as a database. This stuff can grow large, so the conf
directory
# isn't usually appropriate. Some sites use /usr/local/var and
some /usr/adm.
# Create an amanda directory under there. You need a separate infofile
and
# logdir for each configuration, so create subdirectories for each conf
and
# put the files there. Specify the locations below.
#tapelist "/var/lib/amanda/DailySet1/tapelist" # list of used tapes
# tapelist is stored, by default, in the directory that contains
amanda.conf
# tapetypes
# Define the type of tape you use here, and use it in "tapetype"
# above. Some typical types of tapes are included here. The tapetype
# tells amanda how many MB will fit on the tape, how big the filemarks
# are, and how fast the tape device is.
# A filemark is the amount of wasted space every time a tape section
# ends. If you run `make tapetype' in tape-src, you'll get a program
# that generates tapetype entries, but it is slow as hell, use it only
# if you really must and, if you do, make sure you post the data to
# the amanda mailing list, so that others can use what you found out
# by searching the archives.
# For completeness Amanda should calculate the inter-record gaps too,
# but it doesn't. For EXABYTE and DAT tapes this is ok. Anyone using
# 9 tracks for amanda and need IRG calculations? Drop me a note if
# so.
# If you want amanda to print postscript paper tape labels
# add a line after the comment in the tapetype of the form
# lbl-templ "/path/to/postscript/template/label.ps"
# if you want the label to go to a printer other than the default
# for your system, you can also add a line above for a different
# printer. (i usually add that line after the dumpuser specification)
# dumpuser "operator" # the user to run dumps under
# printer "mypostscript" # printer to print paper label on
# here is an example of my definition for an EXB-8500
# define tapetype EXB-8500 {
# ...
# lbl-templ "/usr/local/amanda/config/lbl.exabyte.ps"
# }
define tapetype Quantum-DLT7000 {
comment "Quantum DLT7000 (hardware compression on: Xmn)"
length 29206 mbytes
filemark 30 kbytes
speed 1670 kps
}
define tapetype DEC-TZ89 {
comment "DEC TZ89 (hardware compression on: Xmn)"
length 29414 mbytes
filemark 24 kbytes
speed 1634 kps
}
define tapetype CISOS-notape {
comment "ONYX dummy tape"
length 1000 gbytes
filemark 0 kbytes # don't know a better value
speed 6000 kbytes # dito
}
define tapetype QIC-60 {
comment "Archive Viper"
length 60 mbytes
filemark 100 kbytes # don't know a better value
speed 100 kbytes # dito
}
define tapetype DEC-DLT2000 {
comment "DEC Differential Digital Linear Tape 2000"
length 15000 mbytes
filemark 8 kbytes
speed 1250 kbytes
}
# goluboff AT butch.Colorado DOT EDU
# in amanda-users (Thu Dec 26 01:55:38 MEZ 1996)
define tapetype DLT {
comment "DLT tape drives"
length 20000 mbytes # 20 Gig tapes
filemark 2000 kbytes # I don't know what this means
speed 1536 kbytes # 1.5 Mb/s
}
define tapetype SURESTORE-1200E {
comment "HP AutoLoader"
length 3900 mbytes
filemark 100 kbytes
speed 500 kbytes
}
define tapetype EXB-8500 {
comment "Exabyte EXB-8500 drive on decent machine"
length 4200 mbytes
filemark 48 kbytes
speed 474 kbytes
}
define tapetype EXB-8200 {
comment "Exabyte EXB-8200 drive on decent machine"
length 2200 mbytes
filemark 2130 kbytes
speed 240 kbytes
}
define tapetype HP-DAT {
comment "DAT tape drives"
# data provided by Rob Browning <rlb AT cs.utexas DOT edu>
length 1930 mbytes
filemark 111 kbytes
speed 468 kbytes
}
define tapetype DAT {
comment "DAT tape drives"
length 1000 mbytes # these numbers are not accurate
filemark 100 kbytes # but you get the idea
speed 100 kbytes
}
define tapetype MIMSY-MEGATAPE {
comment "Megatape (Exabyte based) drive through Emulex on Vax 8600"
length 2200 mbytes
filemark 2130 kbytes
speed 170 kbytes # limited by the Emulex bus interface,
ugh
}
# dumptypes
#
# These are referred to by the disklist file. The dumptype specifies
# certain parameters for dumping including:
# auth - authentication scheme to use between server and
client.
# Valid values are "bsd" and "krb4". Default: [auth
bsd]
# comment - just a comment string
# comprate - set default compression rate. Should be followed by
one or
# two numbers, optionally separated by a comma. The 1st
is
# the full compression rate; the 2nd is the incremental
rate.
# If the second is omitted, it is assumed equal to the
first.
# The numbers represent the amount of the original file
the
# compressed file is expected to take up.
# Default: [comprate 0.50, 0.50]
# compress - specify compression of the backed up data. Valid
values are:
# "none" - don't compress the dump output.
# "client best" - compress on the client using the best
(and
# probably slowest) algorithm.
# "client fast" - compress on the client using fast
algorithm.
# "server best" - compress on the tape host using the
best (and
# probably slowest) algorithm.
# "server fast" - compress on the tape host using a fast
# algorithm. This may be useful when a
fast
# tape host is backing up slow clients.
# Default: [compress client fast]
# dumpcycle - set the number of days in the dump cycle, ie, set how
often a
# full dump should be performed. Default: from
DUMPCYCLE above
# exclude - specify files and directories to be excluded from the
dump.
# Useful with gnutar only; silently ignored by dump and
samba.
# Valid values are:
# "pattern" - a shell glob pattern defining which
files
# to exclude.
# gnutar gets --exclude="pattern"
# list "filename" - a file (on the client!) containing
patterns
# re's (1 per line) defining which
files to
# exclude.
# gnutar gets --exclude-
from="filename"
# Note that the `full pathname' of a file within its
# filesystem starts with `./', because of the way amanda
runs
# gnutar: `tar -C $mountpoint -cf - --lots-of-
options .' (note
# the final dot!) Thus, if you're backing up `/usr'
with a
# diskfile entry like ``host /usr gnutar-root', but you
don't
# want to backup /usr/tmp, your exclude list should
contain
# the pattern `./tmp', as this is relative to the `/usr'
above.
# Please refer to the man-page of gnutar for more
information.
# Default: include all files
# holdingdisk - should the holding disk be used for this dump. Useful
for
# dumping the holding disk itself. Default:
[holdingdisk yes]
# ignore - do not back this filesystem up. Useful for sharing a
single
# disklist in several configurations.
# index - keep an index of the files backed up. Default: [index
no]
# kencrypt - encrypt the data stream between the client and server.
# Default: [kencrypt no]
# maxdumps - max number of concurrent dumps to run on the client.
# Default: [maxdumps 1]
# priority - priority level of the dump. Valid levels are "low",
"medium"
# or "high". These are really only used when Amanda has
no
# tape to write to because of some error. In that
"degraded
# mode", as many incrementals as will fit on the holding
disk
# are done, higher priority first, to insure the
important
# disks are at least dumped. Default: [priority medium]
# program - specify the dump system to use. Valid values are
"DUMP" and
# "GNUTAR". Default: [program "DUMP"].
# record - record the dump in /etc/dumpdates. Default: [record
yes]
# skip-full - skip the disk when a level 0 is due, to allow full
backups
# outside Amanda, eg when the machine is in single-user
mode.
# skip-incr - skip the disk when the level 0 is NOT due. This is
used in
# archive configurations, where only full dumps are done
and
# the tapes saved.
# starttime - delay the start of the dump? Default: no delay
# strategy - set the dump strategy. Valid strategies are
currently:
# "standard" - the standard one.
# "nofull" - do level 1 dumps every time. This can be
used,
# for example, for small root filesystems
that
# only change slightly relative to a site-
wide
# prototype. Amanda then backs up just the
# changes.
# "noinc" - do level 0 dumps every time.
# Unfortunately, this is not currently
# implemented. Use `dumpcycle 0'
# instead.
# "skip" - skip all dumps. Useful for sharing a
single
# disklist in several configurations.
# Default: [strategy standard]
#
# Note that you may specify previously defined dumptypes as a shorthand
way
# of defining parameters.
####
#### BEGIN USEFUL DUMPTYPES
####
define dumptype unix {
comment "Global definitions UNIX LINUX"
index yes
#exclude list ".amanda.excludes"
}
define dumptype unix-tar {
unix
program "GNUTAR"
}
define dumptype unix-tar-d0-c0-t1 {
unix-tar
comment "partitions full dumped with tar not zipped"
compress none
dumpcycle 0
}
define dumptype unix-tar-d1-c0-t1 {
unix-tar
comment "partitions incr dumped with tar not zipped"
compress none
strategy incronly
}
define dumptype unix-tar-d0-c1-t1 {
unix-tar
comment "partitions full dumped with tar zipped"
compress client fast
# dumpcycle 0 #changed by widhalmt 20060103
}
define dumptype unix-tar-d1-c1-t1 {
unix-tar
comment "partitions incr dumped with tar zipped"
#compress client fast
compress client best #changed by widhalmt 20060310
# strategy incronly #changed by widhalmt 20060103
}
define dumptype unix-dump {
unix
}
define dumptype unix-dump-d0-c0-t1 {
unix-dump
comment "partitions full dumped"
compress none
#dumpcycle 0 #changed by widhalmt 20060111
}
define dumptype unix-dump-d1-c0-t1 {
unix-dump
comment "partitions incr dumped"
compress none
strategy incronly
}
define dumptype unix-dump-d0-c1-t1 {
unix-dump
comment "partitions full dumped"
compress none
#dumpcycle 0 #changed by widhalmt 20060111
}
define dumptype unix-dump-d1-c1-t1 {
unix-dump
comment "partitions incr dumped"
compress none
strategy incronly
}
####
#### END USEFUL DUMPTYPES
####
define dumptype linux-holding-disk {
unix-tar
comment "The master-host holding disk itself"
holdingdisk no # do not use the holding disk
priority medium
}
define dumptype irix {
comment "Global definitions IRIX"
exclude list optional ".amanda_no"
}
define dumptype irix-root {
irix
comment "irix root partitions"
compress none
index
priority low
}
define dumptype irix-high-tar {
irix-root
comment "irix partitions dumped with tar"
program "GNUTAR"
compress client fast
priority high
}
define dumptype global {
comment "Global definitions"
# This is quite useful for setting global parameters, so you don't
have
# to type them everywhere. All dumptype definitions in this sample
file
# do include these definitions, either directly or indirectly.
# There's nothing special about the name `global'; if you create any
# dumptype that does not contain the word `global' or the name of
any
# other dumptype that contains it, these definitions won't apply.
# Note that these definitions may be overridden in other
# dumptypes, if the redefinitions appear *after* the `global'
# dumptype name.
# You may want to use this for globally enabling or disabling
# indexing, recording, etc. Some examples:
# index yes
# record no
}
define dumptype always-full {
global
comment "Full dump of this filesystem always"
compress none
priority high
dumpcycle 0
}
define dumptype root-tar {
global
program "GNUTAR"
comment "root partitions dumped with tar"
compress none
index
exclude list optional ".amanda_no"
priority low
}
define dumptype user-tar {
root-tar
comment "user partitions dumped with tar"
priority medium
}
define dumptype high-tar {
root-tar
comment "partitions dumped with tar"
priority high
}
define dumptype comp-root-tar {
root-tar
comment "Root partitions with compression"
compress client fast
}
define dumptype comp-user-tar {
user-tar
compress client fast
}
define dumptype holding-disk {
global
comment "The master-host holding disk itself"
holdingdisk no # do not use the holding disk
priority medium
}
define dumptype comp-user {
global
comment "Non-root partitions on reasonably fast machines"
compress client fast
priority medium
}
define dumptype nocomp-user {
comp-user
comment "Non-root partitions on slow machines"
compress none
}
define dumptype comp-root {
global
comment "Root partitions with compression"
compress client fast
priority low
}
define dumptype nocomp-root {
comp-root
comment "Root partitions without compression"
compress none
}
define dumptype comp-high {
global
comment "very important partitions on fast machines"
compress client best
priority high
}
define dumptype nocomp-high {
comp-high
comment "very important partitions on slow machines"
compress none
}
define dumptype nocomp-test {
global
comment "test dump without compression, no /etc/dumpdates recording"
compress none
record no
priority medium
}
define dumptype comp-test {
nocomp-test
comment "test dump with compression, no /etc/dumpdates recording"
compress client fast
}
# network interfaces
#
# These are referred to by the disklist file. They define the
attributes
# of the network interface that the remote machine is accessed through.
# Notes: - netusage above defines the attributes that are used when the
# disklist entry doesn't specify otherwise.
# - the values below are only samples.
# - specifying an interface does not force the traffic to pass
# through that interface. Your OS routing tables do that.
This
# is just a mechanism to stop Amanda trashing your network.
# Attributes are:
# use - bandwidth above which amanda won't start
# backups using this interface. Note that if
# a single backup will take more than that,
# amanda won't try to make it run slower!
define interface local {
comment "a local disk"
use 10000 kbps
}
define interface hme0 {
comment "100 Mbps ethernet"
use 100000 kbps
}
# You may include other amanda configuration files, so you can share
# dumptypes, tapetypes and interface definitions among several
# configurations.
#includefile "/usr/local/amanda.conf.main"
############ one of the amanda.confs:
org "IS" # your organization name for reports
inparallel 1 # maximum dumpers that will run in parallel
dumpcycle 8 # the number of days in the normal dump cycle
runspercycle 0 # the number of amdump runs in dumpcycle days
tapecycle 4 tapes # the number of tapes in rotation
# 4 weeks (dumpcycle) times 5 tapes per week
(just
# the weekdays) plus a few to handle errors that
# need amflush and so we do not overwrite the
full
# backups performed at the beginning of the
previous
# cycle
holdingdisk hd1 {
comment "main holding disk for IS"
directory "/data/amanda/IS" # where the holding disk is
use -1 # how much space can we use on it
# use 70 Mb # how much space can we use on it
# a negative value mean:
# use all space except that value
chunksize 2 Gb # size of chunk if you want big dump to be
# dumped on multiple files on holding disks
# N Kb/Mb/Gb split disks in chunks of size N
# 0 split disks in INT_MAX/1024 Kb
chunks
# -N Kb/Mb/Gb dont split, dump larger
# filesystems directly to tape
# (example: -2 Gb)
}
#tapedev "/dev/rmt/0mn" # the no-rewind tape device to be used
#da 2.band defekt... #tapedev "/dev/nst1" # the no-rewind tape
device to be used
#tapedev "/dev/nst0" # the no-rewind tape device to be used
tapedev "/dev/null"
tapetype DEC-TZ89 # see tapetype in amanda-shared.conf
labelstr "^IS[0-9][0-9]*$" # label constraint regex: all tapes must
match
infofile "/var/lib/amanda/IS/curinfo" # database filename
logdir "/var/lib/amanda/IS" # log directory
indexdir "/var/lib/amanda/IS/index" # index directory
includefile "/etc/amanda/amanda-shared.conf"
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--
*****************************************************************
* Thomas Widhalm Unix Administrator *
* University of Salzburg ITServices (ITS) *
* Systems Management Unix Systems *
* Hellbrunnerstr. 34 5020 Salzburg, Austria *
* widhalmt AT unix.sbg.ac DOT at +43/662/8044-6774 *
* gpg: 6265BAE6 *
* http://www.sbg.ac.at/zid/organisation/mitarbeiter/widhalm.htm *
*****************************************************************
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