On 14-10-24 05:28 AM, Andrea
Carpani wrote:
On 24/10/2014
12:47, Kern Sibbald wrote:
No, the SD and
the FD cannot be reloaded. On the FD in principle it
would be easy, but on the SD, it would be complicated if
drives
changed. What would you do with Jobs that are using a drive
that
would be removed from the reload?
I'm not that deep into backup software, so maybe I'm saying
something
stupid, but a config reload could do the same thing that other
software
do, that is:
- continue servicing current requests with the previous conf
and
- use the new conf for new requests.
Something like a graceful restart apache does.
Does this make sense?
.a.c.
Sense to humans yes, sense to program code not so much.
The nature of the SD is that its configuration should almost never
change - all it has for config is an inventory of hardware
devices. There's a certain elegance in simplicity that would be
lost trying to cover what should be a fairly narrow use case.
Imagine all the debugging you have to do - is this job failing
because it is trying to use the config as it appears in the config
file, or some other config in memory from some time in the past?
What happens if we now have different device names referring to
the same physical device, we now need a whole locking mechanism
that can cover the use case of multiple versions of the SD config
accessing the same physical device, possibly with different
parameters and names. How would you be able to tell which version
of the config a given job is using? Remember it is easy to start
a backup job that can last a couple of days - a full backup of a
huge fileserver for instance.
Things would get really messy really fast, with practically no
benefit. Your SD config likely changes what, once or twice per
year? If that? It is much safer to just restart the SD when you
have an idle period between backups.
Bryn