amanda 1:3.3.9-5build2 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

amanda (1:3.3.9-5build2) bionic; urgency=medium

  * No-change rebuild against perlapi-5.26.1

 -- Steve Langasek <email address hidden>  Thu, 02 Nov 2017 05:31:30 +0000

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Steve Langasek
Uploaded to:
Bionic
Original maintainer:
Ubuntu Developers
Architectures:
any
Section:
utils
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
amanda_3.3.9.orig.tar.gz 4.4 MiB 7cd570d85ecdd22a59d31531d28dcd7594bb3188cec0a856ff249ee1389a8483
amanda_3.3.9-5build2.debian.tar.xz 43.4 KiB 7513b95a9cd5b89251f41540d5c51ea939bc39cf580031f9cb2343f4e70db0fe
amanda_3.3.9-5build2.dsc 2.3 KiB a25e1eaca2b36eebaeffb2cbf2d36f361fad4c64a1dc6693b0dbcbbe17a3b34c

Available diffs

View changes file

Binary packages built by this source

amanda-client: Advanced Maryland Automatic Network Disk Archiver (Client)

 Amanda is a backup system designed to archive many computers on a
 network to a single large-capacity tape drive. This package is
 suitable for large amounts of data to backup. For smaller solutions
 take a look at afbackup, tob, ...
 .
  Features:
   * will back up multiple machines in parallel to a holding disk, blasting
     finished dumps one by one to tape as fast as they can be can written to
     tape. For example, a ~2 Gb 8mm tape on a ~240K/s interface to a host
     with a large holding disk can be filled by Amanda in under 4 hours.
   * built on top of standard backup software: Unix dump/restore, and
     later GNU Tar and others.
   * does simple tape management: will not overwrite the wrong tape.
   * supports tape changers via a generic interface. Easily customizable
     to any type of tape carousel, robot, or stacker that can be controlled
     via the unix command line.
   * for a restore, tells you what tapes you need, and finds the proper
     backup image on the tape for you.
   * recovers gracefully from errors, including down or hung machines.
   * reports results, including all errors in detail, in email to operators.
   * will dynamically adjust backup schedule to keep within constraints:
     no more juggling by hand when adding disks and computers to network.
   * includes a pre-run checker program, that conducts sanity checks on both
     the tape server host and all the client hosts (in parallel), and will
     send an e-mail report of any problems that could cause the backups to
     fail.
   * can compress dumps before sending or after sending over the net, with
     either compress or gzip.
   * can optionally synchronize with external backups, for those large
     timesharing computers where you want to do full dumps when the system
     is down in single-user mode (since BSD dump is not reliable on active
     filesystems): Amanda will still do your daily dumps.
   * lots of other options; Amanda is very configurable.
 .
 THIS PACKAGE RELIES ON A RUNNING AMANDA SERVER IN YOUR NETWORK.
 .
 For important notes, see /usr/share/doc/amanda-client/README.Debian.
 .
 Explanation of suggested programs:
  - gnuplot is needed for plotting statistics of backups

amanda-client-dbgsym: debug symbols for amanda-client
amanda-common: Advanced Maryland Automatic Network Disk Archiver (Libs)

 This package contains libraries required by the amanda client and
 server packages and includes the documentation.

amanda-common-dbgsym: debug symbols for amanda-common
amanda-server: Advanced Maryland Automatic Network Disk Archiver (Server)

 Amanda is a backup system designed to archive many computers on a
 network to a single large-capacity tape drive. This package is
 suitable for large amounts of data to backup. For smaller solutions
 take a look at afbackup, tob, ...
 .
  Features:
   * will back up multiple machines in parallel to a holding disk, blasting
     finished dumps one by one to tape as fast as they can be written to
     tape. For example, a ~2 Gb 8mm tape on a ~240K/s interface to a host
     with a large holding disk can be filled by Amanda in under 4 hours.
   * built on top of standard backup software: Unix dump/restore, and
     later GNU Tar and others.
   * does simple tape management: will not overwrite the wrong tape.
   * supports tape changers via a generic interface. Easily customizable
     to any type of tape carousel, robot, or stacker that can be controlled
     via the unix command line.
   * for a restore, tells you what tapes you need, and finds the proper
     backup image on the tape for you.
   * recovers gracefully from errors, including down or hung machines.
   * reports results, including all errors in detail, in email to operators.
   * will dynamically adjust backup schedule to keep within constraints:
     no more juggling by hand when adding disks and computers to network.
   * includes a pre-run checker program, that conducts sanity checks on both
     the tape server host and all the client hosts (in parallel), and will
     send an e-mail report of any problems that could cause the backups to
     fail.
   * can compress dumps before sending or after sending over the net, with
     either compress or gzip.
   * can optionally synchronize with external backups, for those large
     timesharing computers where you want to do full dumps when the system
     is down in single-user mode (since BSD dump is not reliable on active
     filesystems): Amanda will still do your daily dumps.
   * lots of other options; Amanda is very configurable.
 .
 For important notes, see /usr/share/doc/amanda-server/README.Debian.
 .
 Explanation of suggested programs:
  - perl is needed for some non essential server utilities
  - gnuplot is needed for plotting statistics of backups
  - to backup the tape server, you need to install the client too

amanda-server-dbgsym: debug symbols for amanda-server