There are many many ways to do it. No doubt you will get other suggestions.
One way is to create a timestamp file when the full backup is run by adding:
to the beginning of your full backup script.
(Note: Although the content of timestamp will contain date/time information it is only the inode content that matters here.)
Then, when you want to take an incremental backup you find all files newer (modified after) than that timestamp and backup that list with the "-T" switch:
When I use tsm command: archive -subdir=yes /dir1/
to backup file system: /dir1
After I delete the contents under /dir1 and recovery it from TSM backup,
retrieve /dir1/
I found the link breaked. Such as:
Before:
ls -l
lrwxrwxrwx 1 abc develop 8 Apr 28 16:04 bin... (1 Reply)
Hey guys, I hope this is the right place to post. As i'm not too sure where this question would go.
The question is: How is backup and recovery carried out in major corporations. Even if you are not in a major corporation an answer would be great.
I'm doing some research as to how it's carried... (2 Replies)
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)
Can you please let me know a clear step by step procedure link/doc for an effective full backup and recovery procedure for a Redhat server with 2.6.34.9-69.fc13.x86_64 ?
Thanks in advance.
I also have the same question for Ubuntu Enterprise 12.04 if you would ...
thanks again (0 Replies)