Thanks for the idea.
From: Donaldson, Mark
[mailto:Mark.Donaldson AT Staples DOT com]
Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2009
5:14 PM
To: Judy Hinchcliffe; VERITAS-BU AT mailman.eng.auburn DOT edu
Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] help in
understanding a MAC ls
You could do something like this for one
stream...
NEW_STREAM
/mydir/[!a-zA-Z0-9]*
This would catch any directory not
starting with a non-alphanumeric.
Make sure you've got one or it'll error
with a status 71. I get around this by putting /etc/password in every
stream, it's always there (unix, of course).
-M
From:
veritas-bu-bounces AT mailman.eng.auburn DOT edu
[mailto:veritas-bu-bounces AT mailman.eng.auburn DOT edu] On Behalf Of judy_hinchcliffe AT administaff DOT com
Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2009
3:12 PM
To:
VERITAS-BU AT mailman.eng.auburn DOT edu
Subject: [Veritas-bu] help in
understanding a MAC ls
/mydir/Administaff
Artwork
/mydir/Photography
/mydir/~USDataLink
/mydir/Logos
/mydir/ASF Small
Business Classic
/mydir/Fonts
/mydir/>Growth
/mydir/>Support
/mydir/>Development
/mydir/>Client
Services
They have asked me
to backup the above dirs.
On AIX I would not
have a dir that started with ~ or >
The above is about 400
gig, and I want to break it into smaller jobs.
Normaly I would do
that with
New stream
/mydir/a*
/mydir/b*
/mydir/c*
New stream
/mydir/d*
/mydir/e*
/mydir/f
But looking at the
names of these dirs with the ~ and > I don’t think I will get
them.
Can someone else who
knows MAC explain to me what the ~ and > are and how you would break
up the backup into smaller jobs?