No, no backup was run between the full backup when the files were there and the next backup AFTER the files were restored.
I've read a bit about the basejob feature though not in detail, it sounds more like a data de-duplication feature which would be useful later on, are you suggesting that I would need that in order to avoid this problem?
On 01/04/2010 03:05, Ralf Gross wrote:
Steve Costaras schrieb:I've been diving into Bacula the past 2-3 weeks to come up with a backup system here for some small server count but very large data store sizes (30+TiB per server). In the coarse of my testing I have noticed something and want to know if it's by design (in which case it would be very wasteful of tapes); a misconfiguration on my part (possible as I said I've only been playing with it for the past 2-3 weeks), or a bug. Ok, what I'm seeing is that I do a full backup of the client machine, that runs well; I then delete an entire subdirectory say /var/ftp/{DIRA} which has say 10,000 files or about 1TiB or data. I then do a restore of that directory from tape (last backup was a full). Now I am seeing that the next incremental I do has the full /var/ftp/{DIRA} being backed up again as if it were all new files, likewise a differential will also back up this directory in full again as well. In my mind at least since this directory was in the full backup and I have accurate mode on, the backup system should KNOW that the files are already on tape (the full backup that was used to do the restore) and should only back up /NEW/ files added to that directory since that last backup not the entire directory structure after a restore. Can anyone comment?Did you run a backup when all the files in /var/ftp/{DIRA} were deleted? Or was the next incremental run after all files were restored again? Maybe you are looking for the upcoming Basejob feature? http://sourceforge.net/apps/wordpress/bacula/2009/09/30/new-basejob-feature/ Ralf ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This SF.Net email is sponsored by the Verizon Developer Community Take advantage of Verizon's best-in-class app development support A streamlined, 14 day to market process makes app distribution fast and easy Join now and get one step closer to millions of Verizon customers http://p.sf.net/sfu/verizon-dev2dev _______________________________________________ Bacula-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users
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