dumpuser "@CLIENT_LOGIN@" # the user to run dumps under inparallel 4 # maximum dumpers that will run in parallel (max 63) # this maximum can be increased at compile-time, # modifying MAX_DUMPERS in server-src/driverio.h dumporder "sssS" # specify the priority order of each dumper # s -> smallest size # S -> biggest size # t -> smallest time # T -> biggest time # b -> smallest bandwidth # B -> biggest bandwitdh # try "BTBTBTBTBTBT" if you are not holding # disk constrained taperalgo first # The algorithm used to choose which dump image to send # to the taper. # Possible values: [first|firstfit|largest|largestfit|smallest|last] # Default: first. # first First in - first out. # firstfit The first dump image that will fit on the current tape. # largest The largest dump image. # largestfit The largest dump image that will fit on the current tape. # smallest The smallest dump image. # last Last in - first out. displayunit "m" # Possible values: "k|m|g|t" # Default: k. # The unit used to print many numbers. # k=kilo, m=mega, g=giga, t=tera netusage 8000 Kbps # maximum net bandwidth for Amanda, in KB per sec bumpsize 20 Mb # minimum savings (threshold) to bump level 1 -> 2 bumppercent 20 # minimum savings (threshold) to bump level 1 -> 2 bumpdays 1 # minimum days at each level # By default, Amanda can only track at most one run per calendar day. When # the usetimestamps option is enabled, however, Amanda can track as many # runs as you care to make. # WARNING: This option is not backward-compatible. Do not enable it if you # intend to downgrade your server installation to any version # earlier than Amanda 2.5.1 usetimestamps yes device_output_buffer_size 1280k # amount of buffer space to use when writing to devices # If you want Amanda to automatically label any non-Amanda tapes it # encounters, uncomment the line below. Note that this will ERASE any # non-Amanda tapes you may have, and may also ERASE any near-failing tapes. # Use with caution. ## label_new_tapes "DailySet1-%%%" maxdumpsize -1 # Maximum number of bytes the planner will schedule # for a run (default: runtapes * tape_length). amrecover_do_fsf yes # amrecover will call amrestore with the # -f flag for faster positioning of the tape. amrecover_check_label yes # amrecover will call amrestore with the # -l flag to check the label. bumpmult 4 # threshold = bumpsize * bumpmult^(level-1) amrecover_changer "changer" # amrecover will use the changer if you restore # from this device. It could be a string like 'changer' and amrecover will use your # changer if you set your tape to 'changer' with 'setdevice changer' or via # 'tapedev "changer"' in amanda-client.conf # If amanda cannot find a tape on which to store backups, it will run # as many backups as it can to the holding disks. In order to save # space for unattended backups, by default, amanda will only perform # incremental backups in this case, i.e., it will reserve 100% of the # holding disk space for the so-called degraded mode backups. # However, if you specify a different value for the `reserve' # parameter, amanda will not degrade backups if they will fit in the # non-reserved portion of the holding disk. # reserve 30 # percent # This means save at least 30% of the holding disk space for degraded # mode backups. autoflush no # if autoflush is set to yes, then amdump will schedule all dump on # holding disks to be flush to tape during the run. # Amanda needs a few Mb of diskspace for the log and debug files, # as well as a database. This stuff can grow large, so the conf directory # isn't usually appropriate. Some sites use /usr/local/var and some /usr/adm. # Create an amanda directory under there. You need a separate infofile and # logdir for each configuration, so create subdirectories for each conf and # put the files there. Specify the locations below. # Note that, although the keyword below is infofile, it is only so for # historic reasons, since now it is supposed to be a directory (unless # you have selected some database format other than the `text' default) infofile "@CONFIG_DIR@/@DEFAULT_CONFIG@/curinfo" # database DIRECTORY logdir "@CONFIG_DIR@/@DEFAULT_CONFIG@" # log directory indexdir "@CONFIG_DIR@/@DEFAULT_CONFIG@/index" # index directory #tapelist "@CONFIG_DIR/DailySet1/tapelist" # list of used tapes # tapelist is stored, by default, in the directory that contains amanda.conf # Specify holding disks. These are used as a temporary staging area for # dumps before they are written to tape and are recommended for most sites. # The advantages include: tape drive is more likely to operate in streaming # mode (which reduces tape and drive wear, reduces total dump time); multiple # dumps can be done in parallel (which can dramatically reduce total dump time. # The main disadvantage is that dumps on the holding disk need to be flushed # (with amflush) to tape after an operating system crash or a tape failure. # If no holding disks are specified then all dumps will be written directly # to tape. If a dump is too big to fit on the holding disk than it will be # written directly to tape. If more than one holding disk is specified then # they will all be used based on activity and available space. #holdingdisk hd1 { # comment "main holding disk" # directory "/dumps/amanda" # where the holding disk is # use -100 Mb # how much space can we use on it # # a non-positive value means: # # use all space but that value # chunksize 1Gb # size of chunk if you want big dump to be # # dumped on multiple files on holding disks # # N Kb/Mb/Gb split images in chunks of size N # # The maximum value should be # # (MAX_FILE_SIZE - 1Mb) # # 0 same as INT_MAX bytes # } #holdingdisk hd2 { # directory "/dumps2/amanda" # use 1000 Mb # } # network interfaces # # These are referred to by the disklist file. They define the attributes # of the network interface that the remote machine is accessed through. # Notes: - netusage above defines the attributes t # disklist entry doesn't specify otherwise. # - the values below are only samples. # - specifying an interface does not force the traffic to pass # through that interface. Your OS routing tables do that. This # is just a mechanism to stop Amanda trashing your network. # Attributes are: # use - bandwidth above which amanda won't start # backups using this interface. Note that if # a single backup will take more than that, # amanda won't try to make it run slower! define interface local { comment "a local disk" use 8000 kbps } #define interface le0 { # comment "10 Mbps ethernet" # use 400 kbps #}