Leopard Server : Not performing scheduled backups after restart
I'm managing a small 10.5 server with about 5 clients.
The 5 client computers all have superduper and are cloning fine to their local external drives. The server however, is having issues, so I'm hoping to find out what's wrong. I opened superduper on the server and none of the schudeled backups had been performed since the last time I was there (15 days ago). All the schedules are setup and the "next backup" shows the correct time (tomorrow early am). I tried running all 3 scheduled backups using "copy now" from the scheduled copies window. worked fine. I tried scheduling for 5 minutes in the future, quit superduper, worked fine. But then I tried scheduling for 10 minutes in the future, restarted the computer, and it didn't automatically start the schedule. The Console shows nothing different for the last attempt than it did on the first successful ones. No error messages as far as I can see. Please tell me you know what's going on. Thanks! Brian |
Were you logged in after the restart?
|
yes, i was logged in, everything was loaded up, two minutes before the scheduled time.
on a side note, i thought with leopard i didn't need to be logged in? i thought the need to schedule with "root" was only for pre-10.5 (?). |
No: you need to be logged in.
|
ok, i was logged in.
i checked the server today and the backup worked as scheduled (the computer hadn't been restarted since I left yesterday). but again, when I restart, the scheduled backups still exists in superduper, they just don't run. |
I really don't know why that would be; the system scheduler should run regardless of a restart...
|
The same thing is happening to me. On Server 10.5.2, running the latest SD!, after a reboot I have to recreate the schedule item. Then, SD! works fine until the next reboot.
Dave, you gave me the hint in email about recreating the schedule item, and it does work to fix it, but, it should not be necessary, no? Regards, Rick Cogley Tokyo |
Thanks, Rick. As I said: I don't know why this would be, since the 'crontab' is written to disk and should run regardless of restart.
|
Oh! Crontab!
Quote:
Code:
bash-3.2# crontab -u admin -l |
Good 'ol macosxhints
Interesting comment on this URL:
http://www.macosxhints.com/article.p...01020700163714 Perhaps this is needed at the end?: Code:
>& /dev/null |
I don't *think* that'll make a difference, but you can give it a try and see...
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:26 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.9
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.