the bootstrap file.
\item If you have the Bootstrap file, you should now be back up and running,
if you do not have a Bootstrap file, continue with the suggestions below.
-\item Using {\bf bscan} scan the last set of backup tapes into your MySQL,
- PostgreSQL or SQLite database.
+\item Using {\bf bscan} scan the last set of backup tapes into your MySQL
+ or PostgreSQL database.
\item Start Bacula, and using the Console {\bf restore} command, restore the
last valid copy of the Bacula database and the Bacula configuration
files.
restores to alternate directories because higher level directories were not
backed up by Bacula, you can correct any problems with the {\bf SetACL}
available under the GPL license at:
-\elink{http://sourceforge.net/projects/setacl/}{http://sourceforge.net/project%
-s/setacl/}.
+\elink{http://sourceforge.net/projects/setacl/}{http://sourceforge.net/projects/setacl/}.
\section{Alternate Disaster Recovery Suggestion for Win32 Systems}
\index[general]{Systems!Alternate Disaster Recovery Suggestion for Win32}
\index[general]{Resources!Additional}
Many thanks to Charles Curley who wrote
-\elink{Linux Complete Backup and Recovery HOWTO}
-{http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Linux-Complete-Backup-and-Recovery-HOWTO/index.html%
-} for the
+\elink{Linux Complete Backup and Recovery HOWTO}{http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Linux-Complete-Backup-and-Recovery-HOWTO/index.html} for the
\elink{The Linux Documentation Project}{http://www.tldp.org/}. This is an
excellent document on how to do Bare Metal Recovery on Linux systems, and it
was this document that made me realize that Bacula could do the same thing.