Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Linux Slackware What is the medium usually used to backup large trees? Post 302750201 by jim mcnamara on Monday 31st of December 2012 06:12:13 AM
Old 12-31-2012
If you mean directory trees, tape. Not disk.
 

6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

Backup single large file

Hi I have a single large file 11gb that I need to copy/backup to tape then restore on another system. I tried tar but that complained about the file being too large Anyone have any suggestions how I can do this with AIX 5.2 Much appreciated. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Alvescot
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

CGI , Perl and Trees

I have been trying to get this for weeks now but maybe someone knows or has a snippet of code to display a collapsible tree view. something like this: +Yahoo! -/site.html -/site2.html +Google -/site.php -/site2.php (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Dabheeruz
1 Replies

3. Programming

2-4 trees in C

i am trying to write a program in order to learn how to work with trees and especially 2-4 trees. the general idea is that each node is represented by 4 cells and 5 pointers? (maybe 2 arrays then? ) let's suppose that we insert simply int numbers in all cells. firstly we initialize the root... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bashuser2
2 Replies

4. Solaris

Medium Changer not detected.

Hello Gurus, We are in the process of configuring SAN based backup for our DB hosted on Solaris 10 (SPARC and X86) Servers. But the Robotic arm (Medium Changer - HP) is not getting detected on the server. Need experts help in checking this from the host (Solaris Server) end. Thank You. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: EmbedUX
0 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

rsync backup mode(--backup) Are there any options to remove backup folders on successful deployment?

Hi Everyone, we are running rsync with --backup mode, Are there any rsync options to remove backup folders on successful deployment? Thanks in adv. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: MVEERA
0 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to copy very large directory trees

I have constant trouble with XCOPY/s for multi-gigabyte transfers. I need a utility like XCOPY/S that remembers where it left off if I reboot. Is there such a utility? How about a free utility (free as in free beer)? How about an md5sum sanity check too? I posted the above query in another... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: siegfried
3 Replies
TP(5)								File Formats Manual							     TP(5)

NAME
tp - DEC/mag tape formats DESCRIPTION
The command tp dumps files to and extracts files from DECtape and magtape. The formats of these tapes are the same except that magtapes have larger directories. Block zero contains a copy of a stand-alone bootstrap program. See bproc(8). Blocks 1 through 24 for DECtape (1 through 62 for magtape) contain a directory of the tape. There are 192 (resp. 496) entries in the directory; 8 entries per block; 64 bytes per entry. Each entry has the following format: struct { char pathname[32]; int mode; char uid; char gid; char unused1; char size[3]; long modtime; int tapeaddr; char unused2[16]; int checksum; }; The path name entry is the path name of the file when put on the tape. If the pathname starts with a zero word, the entry is empty. It is at most 32 bytes long and ends in a null byte. Mode, uid, gid, size and time modified are the same as described under i-nodes (see file system filsys(5)). The tape address is the tape block number of the start of the contents of the file. Every file starts on a block boundary. The file occupies (size+511)/512 blocks of continuous tape. The checksum entry has a value such that the sum of the 32 words of the directory entry is zero. Blocks above 25 (resp. 63) are available for file storage. A fake entry has a size of zero. SEE ALSO
filsys(5), tp(1) BUGS
The pathname, uid, gid, and size fields are too small. TP(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:14 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy