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Re: [rdiff-backup-users] Warning: Extended attributes file not found
From: |
Steve White |
Subject: |
Re: [rdiff-backup-users] Warning: Extended attributes file not found |
Date: |
Tue, 8 Jan 2008 14:56:28 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Mutt/1.4.2.2i |
Andrew,
On 8.01.08, Andrew Ferguson wrote:
> Steve White wrote:
> >> The Warning message indicates that rdiff-backup cannot find the Extended
> >> Attributes storage file, which is normally kept in rdiff-backup-data/ .
> >> So yes, it is saying which file triggered the problem.
> >>
> > I don't follow. As I said, no file name was reported.
> >
> > In what way is it saying which file triggered the problem?
> >
> > Often I get a report just like this:
> >
> > Warning: Extended attributes file not found
>
> The message is: "Extended attributes" file not found.
>
> The file in which rdiff-backup stores the extended attributes could not
> be found. This is an unusual error, because it means that rdiff-backup
> didn't store extended attributes in the past, but is now looking for them.
>
> Make a small test backup on your client. (eg, "rdiff-backup test
> test-backup"). Then look in the "test-backup/rdiff-backup-data/" folder
> -- you will probably see a file
> "test-backup/rdiff-backup-data/extended_attributes.2008-....." --- that
> is the "Extended attributes" file.
>
Ah.
I did your test, on both the client and server. On both I see such
"extended_attributes*" files.
I have a recommendation: the message ought to read
Warning: "extended_attributes*" file not found.
> >> Did you perhaps change your rdiff-backup configuration between runs?
> >
> > I don't think the rdiff-backup configuration changed.
>
> Then something else has changed, such as the pyxattr module has been
> installed, or extended attributes have been enabled on a volume.
>
My best guess is that something changed on the target machine, where I
recently upgraded the operating system there. But I didn't change
the filesystems in question.
> >> Do you have extended attributes setup on the server but not the client?
> >
> > How would I know that?
>
>
> Well, what OS are the server and client running on? On Mac OS X, you
> have to enable them by hand on 10.4 client, but they are enabled by
> default on 10.4 server; not sure about 10.5. On linux, you use the
> user_xattr option when mounting ext3. Not sure about other options.
>
Would that be in the fstab file? I don't see anything like that.
It just uses the "defaults" for ext3. According to "man mount", that
is just
rw, suid, dev, exec, auto, nouser, and async
But I really suspect it was the recent upgrade that did this (from
Scientific Linux 4.5 to 5.0). There is often a big mess in the
upgrade involving partition labels.
> See what 'mount' tells you on both the client and server. However, all
> of this information will be reported by "rdiff-backup -v5 ..."
>
Well I tried
mount -l
but it didn't tell me much. The partitions are all ext3, all mounted
essentially the same, for instance:
Target:
/dev/sdb6 on /work3 type ext3 (rw) [/work3]
Source:
/dev/sdb2 on /work3 type ext3 (rw) []
Well... could the partition label be evidence of extended attributes?
Cheers!
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Steve White +49(331)7499-202
Computer Programmierer Zi. 35 Bg. 20
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Astrophysikalisches Institut Potsdam (AIP)
An der Sternwarte 16, D-14482 Potsdam
Vorstand: Prof. Dr. Matthias Steinmetz, Peter A. Stolz
Stiftung privaten Rechts, Stiftungsverzeichnis Brandenburg: III/7-71-026
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