12-31-2012
Thanks. Yes, directory trees. But for a home computer like mine, which lacks tapes, what would the medium be? Perhaps optical media? Or flash memory? I mean that most commonly used by desktop computer users.
6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
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
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
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
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
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
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
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
svn-fast-backup
svn-fast-backup(1) General Commands Manual svn-fast-backup(1)
NAME
svn-fast-backup - very fast backup for Subversion fsfs repositories.
SYNOPSIS
svn-fast-backup [-q] [-k{N|all}] [-f] [-t] [-s] repos_path backup_dir
DESCRIPTION
svn-fast-backup uses rsync snapshots for very fast backup of a Subversion fsfs repository at repos_path to backup_dir/repos-rev, the latest
revision number in the repository. Multiple fsfs backups share data via hardlinks, so old backups are almost free, since a newer revision
of a repository is almost a complete superset of an older revision.
This is good for replacing incremental log-dump+restore-style backups because it is just as space-conserving and even faster; there is no
inter-backup state (old backups are essentially caches); each backup directory is self-contained. It has the same command-line interface
as svn-hot-backup(1) (if you use --force), but only works for fsfs repositories.
svn-fast-backup keeps 64 backups by default and deletes backups older than these; this can be adjusted with the -k option.
OPTIONS
-h, --help
Shows some brief help text.
-q, --quiet
Quieter-than-usual operation.
-k, --keep=N
Keep a specified number of backups; the default is to keep 64.
-k, --keep=all
Do not delete any old backups at all.
-f, --force
Make a new backup even if one with the current revision exists.
-t, --trace
Show actions.
-s, --simulate
Don't perform actions.
AUTHOR
Voluntary contributions made by many individuals. Copyright (C) 2006 CollabNet.
2006-11-09 svn-fast-backup(1)