From ce678a065aaca11ebb79aa2195ee67e5f49815d6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jo Simoens Date: Sat, 14 May 2005 23:30:13 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] minor typo fixing, added a word here and there --- docs/manual/disk.tex | 8 ++++---- docs/manual/pools.tex | 6 +++--- 2 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/manual/disk.tex b/docs/manual/disk.tex index 0ed8149a..f5a7728b 100644 --- a/docs/manual/disk.tex +++ b/docs/manual/disk.tex @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ This chapter presents most all the features needed to do Volume management. Most of the concepts apply equally well to both tape and disk Volumes. However, the chapter was originally written to explain backing up to disk, so -you will see it is slanted in that direction, but that all the directives +you will see it is slanted in that direction, but all the directives presented here apply equally well whether your volume is disk or tape. If you have a lot of hard disk storage or you absolutely must have your @@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ Bacula. This is because each archive has the filename as part of the internal label, and the internal label must agree with the system filename before Bacula will use it. -Although this is quite simple, there are a number of problems, the first is +Although this is quite simple, there are a number of problems. The first is that unless you specify otherwise, Bacula will always write to the same volume until you run out of disk space. This problem is addressed below. @@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ limiting the time Bacula will use a particular Volume (be it tape or disk). For example, the above directives can allow you to ensure that you rotate through a set of daily Volumes if you wish. -As mentioned above, each of those directives are specified in the Pool or +As mentioned above, each of those directives is specified in the Pool or Pools that you use for your Volumes. In the case of {\bf Maximum Volume Job}, {\bf Maximum Volume Bytes}, and {\bf Volume Use Duration}, you can actually specify the desired value on a Volume by Volume basis. The value specified in @@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ Pool { \normalsize then if you run a backup once a day (every 24 hours), Bacula will use a new -Volume each backup because each Volume it writes can only be used for 23 hours +Volume for each backup, because each Volume it writes can only be used for 23 hours after the first write. Note, setting the use duration to 23 hours is not a very good solution for tapes unless you have someone on-site during the weekends, because Bacula will want a new Volume and no one will be present to mount it, diff --git a/docs/manual/pools.tex b/docs/manual/pools.tex index 2a63ca17..987c95dc 100644 --- a/docs/manual/pools.tex +++ b/docs/manual/pools.tex @@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ can be applied to a shop that has multiple tape drives, or that wants to mount various different Volumes to meet their needs. The rest of this chapter will give an example involving backup to disk -Volumes, but most of the information applies equally well for tape Volumes. +Volumes, but most of the information applies equally well to tape Volumes. \label{TheProblem} \subsection*{The Problem} @@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ necessary cassettes was more expensive than their budget could handle. They want to maintain 6 months of backup data, and be able to access the old files on a daily basis for a week, a weekly basis for a month, then monthly -for 6 months. In addition, and offsite capability was not needed (well perhaps +for 6 months. In addition, offsite capability was not needed (well perhaps it really is, but it was never used). Their daily changes amount to about 300MB on the average, or about 2GB per week. @@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ Pool { \normalsize As you can see, the Differential Pool can grow to a maximum of six volumes, -and the Volumes are retained 40 days and there after can be recycled. Finally +and the Volumes are retained 40 days and thereafter they can be recycled. Finally there is one job per volume. This, of course, could be tightened up a lot, but the expense here is a few GB which is not too serious. \label{IncPool} -- 2.39.5