[rhel - user] backup error message in mail

m.roth at 5-cent.us m.roth at 5-cent.us
Thu Jun 13 17:04:17 UTC 2013


Constance   Morris wrote:
> [mailto:redhat-list-bounces at redhat.com] On Behalf Of m.roth at 5-cent.us
>> Constance   Morris wrote:
>>
>>> Has anyone ever received the following 2 types of backup error
>>> messages in their linux mail:
>>
>> 1.)
>>
>>> tar: Error exit delayed from previous errors Backup complete...taking
>>> CP out of hot backup mode at: Tue May 7 02:54:20
>
>> This one reminds me of when either a) the filesystem's full, or b) trying
>> to back up something that shouldn't be backed up, like /dev/<anything>...
>> or maybe the tarfile it's creating, itself. You might try running it
>> manually, and see what happens.
>
<snip>
>> 2.)
>>
>>>From user at portal.domain.edu  Tue Apr 30 05:55:13 2013
>> Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2013 05:55:12 -0400
>>> From: user at portal.domain.edu (Cron Daemon)
>>> To: user at portal.domain.edu
>>> Subject: Cron <user at portal> /opt/luminis/bin/hotbackoff
>>> X-Cron-Env: <SHELL=/bin/sh>
>>> X-Cron-Env: <HOME=/home/user>
>>> X-Cron-Env: <PATH=/usr/bin:/bin>
>>> X-Cron-Env: <LOGNAME=user>
>>> X-Cron-Env: <USER=user>
>>> System hot backup state has been set to off.
>>
>>> I've never seen these before. Any suggestions?
>
>> This clearly has to do with some software that I'm not familiar with, or
>> you've got a mirror site, and there's some issue with the mirror.
>
> On #1. Could any of those things (filesystem file, etc.) cause the system
> not to boot back up when it goes down for backups?
> Forgive my ignorance - is there a system-wide command for running it
> manually?
> I did not setup the backups and am not sure how to do that.

I see a problem here: when we say "the system is down" it means it's
*down*, not running. You're using to mean "some service(s) are down while
we do backups". For example, you might say "the d/b system is down while
we do backups"... but you can't do anything with a brick, sitting there,
which is what a server is when it's down.

Please explain what you mean by "not to boot back up".

      mark





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