volcopy does work well, the destination volume blocks are copied identically to the source volume. One benefit of using ndmpcopy is that the data is written contiguously which will eliminate any fragmentation.
Mike
-----Original Message----- From: Caven, Marilyn [mailto:mcaven@nlc.com] Sent: Wednesday, July 24, 2002 8:20 AM To: 'Geoff Hardin'; toasters Subject: RE: moving files between filers
If the development data is on a separate volume from the production data you can do a volcopy which works quite well. There is an option to turn up the throttle of the volcopy to 10 (max) on source filer. The destination volume must be offline when the data is being copied and it will write over anything on the destination volume.
If the dev and prod data is on the same volume, I've always used tar and directed the output to a nfs mounted filesystem from another filer.
Marilyn Next Level Communications
-----Original Message----- From: Geoff Hardin [mailto:geoff.hardin@dalsemi.com] Sent: Wednesday, July 24, 2002 7:35 AM To: toasters Subject: moving files between filers
What is the preferred method of moving directories between filers?
I was wondering what method the toaster community in general preferred. In the past I have used tar from my UNIX admin host, rsync, dump/restore, ndmpcopy, and cp. I have about given up on ndmpcopy because even across GbE, I see better thruput using tar or dump/restore. A couple of the admins I've spoken to swear by rsync, but I have only used it sparingly.
I have a clustered pair of F760s, one filer for a production database and the second for a development database. Originally, both the production and development work was on the first filer, but space for production work began to run low. We are now moving development data off the production filer onto the development filer and we want to minimize the impact to the production filer while moving the data in a timely manner to the development system. The filers are on the same backup GbE LAN, so the network connection between the two is stable and fast.
Any thoughts, opinions, or war stories greatly appreciated.
Geoff Hardin geoff.hardin@dalsemi.com Difficulty is the excuse history never accepts.