+--- In a previous state of mind, "Mark D Simmons" mds@gbnet.net wrote: | | NDMPCopy is a little bit creaky but allows you to control explicitly which directories get | copied. It's very useful. When I say it's a bit creaky I mean I've observed some strange | and uneven behaviours from it performance wise. It's never threatened our data though and | so we still use it without qualms.
Once I got it built, the tool seemed quite nice. The speeds I was seeing were about 500K/sec (at best). But, the source filer is quite busy. There were some very odd problems with the ndmpcopy. It simply stopped once (that sucked). This was after having spent 3 hours getting to that point (and 10 hours left, according to the program). Not very happy when that occured.
| We've also used the prototype technology Dave alluded to and that goes like the proverbial | off a shovel! I think we were seeing 20+GB/hr between a F330 and an F520. It makes a full | copy of a filer (ie we had to be careful to boot with the right OS floppy and such, one of | the few times you have to care which CPU you're using) no more, no less.
Sounds great. My only question (which I think was answered by Beepy) was if you can run the tool while still serving data? The only reason I did not pursue the BMM was that I could not afford any downtime. I hope that future migrations will be less painful. (well, at least faster).
| Sorry this mail isn't very timely, but I hope it's useful to someone.
Thanks for the reply. I have found it quite interesting.
Alexei