11-29-2006
Your shot in the dark was not far off. Turns out there is a Linux server that it's mounted to, or somehow connected to for backup of data. That machine was down suffering from a bad power cord, making it unreachable.
Thanks for your reply.
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
Hi all,
Just started holidays (ya!) and Murphy's Law has kicked in already (doh!).
I'm looking after (when at work) two SCO 5.0.5 Systems running on Netfinity 5500 Servers (Model # 8662-3RY). Every once and a while the production server just reboot's itself. There is no mention of a cause... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Cameron
8 Replies
2. Programming
Hello all,
I have the following question:
if you join a multicast group (with setsockopt() and IP_ADD_MEMBERSHIP) and specify INADDR_ANY as network interface to join on, the kernel is supposed to choose which interface to use (if there are multiple network interfaces, of course).
Does... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: AlexI
2 Replies
3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
Can someone advise me how to find the last system rebooted date(s)? Thanx N Regards,
Hush (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: hush
2 Replies
4. AIX
I've recently changed my gateway setting using SMIT. Everything went fine except that the gateway setting kept reverting back to the old one everytime I reboot the server.
I'm on AIX 5.2 running p-Series. Thanks for any info. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: dereklow
3 Replies
5. Solaris
dear all,
I have 2 T2000 with solaris 10 and oracle 10g installed on it. these two servers are rebooted by itself.
could anyone help me investigate the cause.
the message log is attached
thanx, (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: fsmadi
3 Replies
6. Solaris
Hello Everyone ,
I am a new member to this forum and came to know about this from so many of my friends . I face one issue last day when suddenly the system got rebooted ( But don,t know why ) . Can someone please help me in investigating this issue as to why the system got rebooted and who... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: gera_sachin125
4 Replies
7. Linux
Hi,
Once again I came to get rescued in a situation where one of my workstations has this ierd thing that "xinetd" won't start at reboot or shutdown. I have done the follwoing but no change in results.
chkconfig --list xinetd
xinetd 0:off 1:off 2:on 3:on 4:on 5:on ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: harjitsingh
2 Replies
8. Solaris
Hi all,
i want to know the procedure reboot the server through console if the system is completely down.Please help me if anybody knows this. I would really thanfull to all.
regards
Krishna Murthy (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: murthy76
1 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
hi there. new problem for me!!! i have been using a Sabayon Linux 3.5 distribution and yesterday when i turned the system on it stopped responding, i mean it freeazed. i was listening to music on Audacious and suddenly the system is ice cold...baby. what to do. Since i've tried 'reiserfsck' the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: dvas83
0 Replies
bup(1) General Commands Manual bup(1)
NAME
bup - Backup program using rolling checksums and git file formats
SYNOPSIS
bup [global options...] <command> [options...]
DESCRIPTION
bup is a program for making backups of your files using the git file format.
Unlike git(1) itself, bup is optimized for handling huge data sets including individual very large files (such a virtual machine images).
However, once a backup set is created, it can still be accessed using git tools.
The individual bup subcommands appear in their own man pages.
GLOBAL OPTIONS
--version
print bup's version number. Equivalent to bup-version(1)
-d, --bup-dir=BUP_DIR
use the given BUP_DIR parameter as the bup repository location, instead of reading it from the $BUP_DIR environment variable or
using the default ~/.bup location.
COMMONLY USED SUBCOMMANDS
bup-fsck(1)
Check backup sets for damage and add redundancy information
bup-ftp(1)
Browse backup sets using an ftp-like client
bup-fuse(1)
Mount your backup sets as a filesystem
bup-help(1)
Print detailed help for the given command
bup-index(1)
Create or display the index of files to back up
bup-on(1)
Backup a remote machine to the local one
bup-restore(1)
Extract files from a backup set
bup-save(1)
Save files into a backup set (note: run "bup index" first)
bup-web(1)
Launch a web server to examine backup sets
RARELY USED SUBCOMMANDS
bup-damage(1)
Deliberately destroy data
bup-drecurse(1)
Recursively list files in your filesystem
bup-init(1)
Initialize a bup repository
bup-join(1)
Retrieve a file backed up using bup-split(1)
bup-ls(1)
Browse the files in your backup sets
bup-margin(1)
Determine how close your bup repository is to armageddon
bup-memtest(1)
Test bup memory usage statistics
bup-midx(1)
Index objects to speed up future backups
bup-newliner(1)
Make sure progress messages don't overlap with output
bup-random(1)
Generate a stream of random output
bup-server(1)
The server side of the bup client-server relationship
bup-split(1)
Split a single file into its own backup set
bup-tick(1)
Wait for up to one second.
bup-version(1)
Report the version number of your copy of bup.
SEE ALSO
git(1) and the README file from the bup distribution.
The home of bup is at <http://github.com/apenwarr/bup/>.
AUTHORS
Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com>.
Bup unknown- bup(1)