Thanks for the reply Arthur.
The NetApp client is a very different beast from any other Legato client
I've worked with. Though the Legato ClientPak for NetApp README references
an na_install executable that is supposed to install nsrexecd on the NetApp,
there is no such process running on the NetApp (determined by issuing
rc_toggle_basic followed by ps on the filer console while a backup was in
progress). All that seems to be running on the filer is a java thread(s)
related to the backup. This makes sense as the ClientPak documentation also
says the it interfaces to java engine that runs on the filer.
The na_recover command actually executes on the administrative host
(apparently communicating to the java engine on the filer) rather than the
filer itself. There is no interactive mode available.
later...
Roger
-----Original Message-----
From: Arthur Darren Dunham [mailto:add@netcom.com]
Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2000 11:42 AM
To: Roger.Hackett(a)mms.gov
Subject: Re: Legato NetApp client
>
> We have a NetApp F760 running ONTAP 5.3.5 and the Legato NetWorker
ClientPak
> for NetApp, release 5.5 that we are configuring for deployment. In my
> initial tests I have been able to setup the NetApp as a Legato client,
> schedule backups from our Legato server, do manual backups from the admin
> host's mount point of specific NetApp volumes and restore entire save
sets.
>
> My problem/question concerns individual file restores. How does one
> determine if a specific file is in a specific save set? The Legato NetApp
> client docs state the you can use the mminfo command on the Legato host
and
> specify file names (mminfo -c filer_name -N /vol/volx/file_name) but both
> empirical tests and the mminfo manpage show that the -N option is for the
> save set name (such as /vol/vol0 or /vol/vol1) and no individual file
> information is returned. The results are essentially the same as using
the
> Indexes button of nwadmin, you get a list of save set names and save set
> ids.
Correct. mminfo peruses the media database (not the file database) and
has no information about individual files.
I have been able to restore a single file (na_recover -s nsrhost -S
> ssid -a /vol/vol0/qtree_name/filename) by listing each different ssid
until
> the request succeeds.
Hm.. I don't have the netapp client, so I'm not sure how this
differs...
The normal unix client is interactive if you don't specify a file.
After cd'ing into a directory, you can 'versions filename'. It will
display the differnet versions of that file that are on different tapes.
You could also do 'recover -s nsrhost -t <date>' and get back the last
version of the file that was prior to that date.
--
Darren Dunham ddunham(a)taos.com
Unix System Administrator Taos - The SysAdmin Company
Got some Dr Pepper? Santa Clara, CA
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