Skip Navigation Links | |
Exit Print View | |
![]() |
Sun Storage Archive Manager 5.3 Configuration and Administration Guide Sun QFS and Sun Storage Archive Manager 5.3 Information Library |
2. Configuring Storage Devices for Archiving
3. Performing Additional SAM-QFS Configuration
4. Creating Parameters Files for Network-Attached Automated Libraries
5. Checking the Drive Order in Libraries
7. Managing Automated Libraries and Manually Loaded Drives
8. Managing Vendor-Specific Libraries
11. Archive Directives (archiver.cmd)
archivemeta Directive: Controlling Whether Metadata Is Archived
archmax Directive: Controlling the Size of Archive Files
bufsize Directive: Setting the Archiver Buffer Size
drives Directive: Controlling the Number of Drives Used for Archiving
examine Directive: Controlling Archive Scans
interval Directive: Specifying an Archive Interval
logfile Directive: Specifying an Archiver Log File
notify Directive: Renaming the Event Notification Script
ovflmin Directive: Controlling Volume Overflow
scanlist_squash Directive: Controlling Scanlist Consolidation
setarchdone Directive: Controlling the Setting of the archdone Flag
wait Directive: Delaying Archiver Startup
-release Directive: Releasing Disk Space After Archiving
-norelease Directive: Delaying Disk Space Release
Using -release and -norelease Together
Specifying More Than One Copy for Metadata
12. Archive Set Directives (archiver.cmd)
Archiving controls apply to all file systems. However, you can confine some controls to an individual file system. When the archiver encounters an fs= directive in the archiver.cmd file, all subsequent directives are applied to that specific file system. Therefore, place any fs= directives after the general directives.
You can specify fs= directives either by editing the archiver.cmd file as described in the following sections, or by using the SAM-QFS Manager software. See the SAM-QFS Manager online help for more information.
Use the fs= directive to specify actions for a particular file system.
For instance, you can use this directive to create a different log file for each file system. This directive has the following format:
fs=fsname
For fsname, specify the file system name as defined in the mcf file.
The general directives and archive set association directives that occur after a fs= directive apply only to the specified file system until another fs= directive is encountered.
Several directives can be specified both as global directives for all file systems and as directives specific to only one file system. These directives are described in the following sections: