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Date:      Mon, 22 Mar 1999 08:42:35 -0800 (PST)
From:      Beau James <bjames@cisco.com>
To:        oa@razorfish.fi
Cc:        aic7xxx@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: SOFTWARE-RAID-TIPS (was: Adaptec 7890 and RAID portIII RAID   controller Linux Support)
Message-ID:  <199903221642.IAA01524@frogger.cisco.com>

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--> It's true that separate partitions help when you're using dump/restore 
--> for backups, but unfortunately dump/restore are a problematic pair for 
--> backups (especially on Linux).

Would you mind elaborating on both those points (why separate partitions
help backups, and why you consider dump/restore problematic)?

The only reason I can see that separate partitions help is that one might
choose to do incremental backups of slowly changing partitions (e.g. /usr)
more often, before doing a full backup.

With most reasonable-capacity tape drives these days, that seems like a
small win.

As to dump/restore: I've been using them for years with no problems,
but if there's a gotcha lurking out there, I'd like to know about it
before it bites me.

The only real complaint I have is that dump doesn't keep and restore
doesn't use a tape catalog that would enable rapid positioning to the
desired tape content, on a restore.  Since restores are relatively
infrequent events, I haven't found that too much of an issue, just a
minor inconvenience.

Beau


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