Difference between revisions of "Bacula and Bareos"
(→Configure On CentOS 6.5) |
(→Configure On CentOS 6.5) |
||
Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
*I am going to start with one drive so first I am going to format it (create a partition first (cfdisk)): | *I am going to start with one drive so first I am going to format it (create a partition first (cfdisk)): | ||
*Quote: | *Quote: | ||
− | |||
Assuming the drive was assigned node /dev/sdc, the partition can now be formatted and labeled using: | Assuming the drive was assigned node /dev/sdc, the partition can now be formatted and labeled using: | ||
− | mke2fs -t ext4 -O large_file /dev/sdc1 | + | mke2fs -t ext4 -O large_file /dev/sdc1 |
This will create a new ext4 file system on the partition. Now unplug the drive, wait a few seconds, then plug it back in. After re-attaching the drive, the name of the symlink in /dev/disk/by-uuid pointing to the filesystem partition's device node, (/dev/sdc1 in the example above), will reveal the UUID that can be used in a magazine directive in a vchanger configuration file to assign the removable drive to an autochanger. On many systems, the UUID of the filesystem can also be determined with the blkid command. | This will create a new ext4 file system on the partition. Now unplug the drive, wait a few seconds, then plug it back in. After re-attaching the drive, the name of the symlink in /dev/disk/by-uuid pointing to the filesystem partition's device node, (/dev/sdc1 in the example above), will reveal the UUID that can be used in a magazine directive in a vchanger configuration file to assign the removable drive to an autochanger. On many systems, the UUID of the filesystem can also be determined with the blkid command. | ||
− | + | ||
==Links== | ==Links== |
Revision as of 15:08, 3 March 2014
CentOS 6.5 Install
yum install mysql-server mysql-devel
service mysqld start chkconfig mysqld on mysqladmin -u root password Y0uR3l173P455w0rd
yum install bareos-database-mysql yum install bareos
/usr/lib/bareos/scripts/create_bareos_database -u root -p /usr/lib/bareos/scripts/make_bareos_tables -u root -p /usr/lib/bareos/scripts/grant_bareos_privileges -u root -p
service bareos-dir start service bareos-sd start service bareos-fd start
Links
- http://www.unixmen.com/install-and-configure-bacula-server-in-centos-6-4-rhel-6-4/
- http://www.bareos.org/en/documentation.html
- http://doc.bareos.org/master/html/bareos-manual-main-reference.html
Archlinux GUI Admin
yaourt bareos-bat
Configure On CentOS 6.5
Since I use disks I start with installing vchanger
The link above has a script but it looks like the one on sourceforge (which is referenced in the link) is newer and compiles. Even then, I decided to pull the rpm from pbone
wget ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/repositories/home:/pstorz/CentOS_CentOS-6/x86_64/vchanger-0.8.6-10.3.x86_64.rpm yum install vchanger-0.8.6-10.3.x86_64.rpm
- I am going to start with one drive so first I am going to format it (create a partition first (cfdisk)):
- Quote:
Assuming the drive was assigned node /dev/sdc, the partition can now be formatted and labeled using:
mke2fs -t ext4 -O large_file /dev/sdc1
This will create a new ext4 file system on the partition. Now unplug the drive, wait a few seconds, then plug it back in. After re-attaching the drive, the name of the symlink in /dev/disk/by-uuid pointing to the filesystem partition's device node, (/dev/sdc1 in the example above), will reveal the UUID that can be used in a magazine directive in a vchanger configuration file to assign the removable drive to an autochanger. On many systems, the UUID of the filesystem can also be determined with the blkid command.