The requirements are that system must work on-line all the time. Yes - but if you just wanted to know the state. A think it takes more than 30 min. I would use Ola Hollengren's maintenance suite which provides you just about everything you need out of the box and all you need to do is build your schedules. The one that you posted was probably not up to date as evidenced by the reported error.
A Progress tech was kind enough to bail us out by extending the schema. I thought Progress Explorer was going to allow me to do that, but now my understanding is that it just manages all the different Progress products. If the backup is a full backup then the prorest will restore a full copy of the database. As for training, it may be advisable. I have read the and understand I may unsubscribe at any time.
The default on Windows is 4096, but it needs to be identical to the original. If you want to know more about backups and restore operations and working with Sql Server , you could do much worse than have a look at the book by by Shawn McGehee,. I can not stress enough the fact that you really should use it. The Partial Verify or Full Verify parameters do not restore or alter the database. You will need to add it to your path- or run the commands using literal directory. Thanks for your prompt response.
Note: your email address is not published. If it were linux you could install on the same server and easily switch between the 2 versions. With Data Protector for Progress, the below steps will the describe the same: 1. I'm hoping this isn't the block size of the drive which would mean I need to reformat my disk. References to Other Documentation: Progress Article s : 000063434, For detailed information on the command and optional parameters, consult the being used. It takes about 30 min and some other tasks takes 1h. The error code is -2403.
Properly configured and managed after-imaging will also copy the ai logs to an external system. If in doubt you can read up on the recovery models. After that you have to restore T-log backups, so that a point-in-time recovery can be performed. I don't expect to spend much time in OpenEdge though at least not at the moment. I've got a full database backup that I need to restore as a new database on a fresh install of OpenEdge version 10.
So, the second time it errors out because it is already running. Finally, I've also tried starting the database using proserve. How much data would be different between each full backup in progress? There can be only one single backup job running against a given database irrespective of whether the backups are done with the Store Writer or the Replication Writer. They had some for very old versions, and had a bundle I tried installing, which didn't seem to have the ones I needed. To understand this situation we need to understand the different phases that a restore goes through. Log truncation also proceeds if possible. After creating the instance in Progress Explorer, what errors did you get when attempting to start the database? I tried it the way you suggested - that I get the params and create an.
However, they just responded with error messages when I tried to set up a data source. This allows you to do a complete backup of your database as well as differential, file, etc. Do I need the Results product for this, or is there something built in? I really appreciate your help. Most of us haven't used v9 in a while so the memory begins to fade. We get an error trying to dismount the databases and the Event Viewer indicates that a backup is still in progress so we cannot get option 1 done. That way you do not lose a days worth of transactions. Thanks again for your help.
You cannot pause a backup - either running using Tsql or using sql agent job. I was simply using the 'wizard' to backup the db, by right-clicking the db and backup, and it did show progress and a stop option, which I fortunately did not have to use because it ran rather quickly, but the rollback is definitely a consideration. Prorest will perform a block by block copy of the data in the backup file and restore the blocks to the areas defined in the backup file. Imagine someone deleting files, etc. The active copy refuse it since the flag is at true, but doesn't send back the info to the passive copy. . Typing any key after that returns me to the command prompt.