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Operating Systems AIX LTO5 Catridge 1.5 TB Natvie capactiy unable to hold 1.44TB data in one volume Post 302813903 by MichaelFelt on Tuesday 28th of May 2013 10:19:32 AM
Old 05-28-2013
I see you are using the -v argument
Quote:
-v
Causes the backup command to display additional information
about the backup. When using the -v flag, the size of the file
as it exists on the archive is displayed in bytes. Additionally,
a total of these file sizes is displayed when all files have
been processed. Directories are listed with a size of 0.
Symbolic links are listed with the size of the symbolic link.
Hard links are listed with the size of the file, which is how
hard links are archived. Block and character devices, if they
were backed up, are listed with a size of 0.
Further, as the files are already compressed I would disable hardware compression - since it is unlikely it is giving you much assistance.

Together with the -v option you should be able to determine who much space backup thinks it has written to the device.

Last edited by MichaelFelt; 05-28-2013 at 11:20 AM.. Reason: oops: you are already using -v - went from suggestion to question!
 

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Size(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation						 Size(3pm)

NAME
Term::Size - Retrieve terminal size (Unix version) SYNOPSIS
use Term::Size; ($columns, $rows) = Term::Size::chars *STDOUT{IO}; ($x, $y) = Term::Size::pixels; DESCRIPTION
Term::Size is a Perl module which provides a straightforward way to retrieve the terminal size. Both functions take an optional filehandle argument, which defaults to *STDIN{IO}. They both return a list of two values, which are the current width and height, respectively, of the terminal associated with the specified filehandle. "Term::Size::chars" returns the size in units of characters, whereas "Term::Size::pixels" uses units of pixels. In a scalar context, both functions return the first element of the list, that is, the terminal width. The functions may be imported. If you need to pass a filehandle to either of the "Term::Size" functions, beware that the *STDOUT{IO} syntax is only supported in Perl 5.004 and later. If you have an earlier version of Perl, or are interested in backwards compatibility, use *STDOUT instead. EXAMPLES
1. Refuse to run in a too narrow window. use Term::Size; die "Need 80 column screen" if Term::Size::chars *STDOUT{IO} < 80; 2. Track window size changes. use Term::Size 'chars'; my $changed = 1; while(1) { local $SIG{'WINCH'} = sub { $changed = 1 }; if ($changed) { ($cols, $rows) = chars; # Redraw, or whatever. $changed = 0; } } RETURN VALUES
Both functions return "undef" if there is an error. If the terminal size information is not available, the functions will normally return "(0, 0)", but this depends on your system. On character only terminals, "pixels" will normally return "(0, 0)". BUGS
It only works on Unix systems. AUTHOR
Tim Goodwin, <tim@uunet.pipex.com>, 1997-04-23. Candidate for maintainership: Adriano Ferreira, <ferreira@cpan.org>, 2006-05-19. perl v5.14.2 2012-03-04 Size(3pm)
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