Ok. In other sentence, the life of the snapshot is the time between the lvcreate -s and the lvremove command. The data must be saved if we need old files. So the snapshot is only a good solution to backup the data update every time ? David Johnston a écrit : > On Fri, 2004-01-02 at 02:15, Jean Marie Ariès wrote: > > Great ! > > > > Your explanation is perfect :o) > > > > So, I understand better the use of a snapshot. > > > > The /data contains files sharing with Samba. So, I think I can do one > > snapshot per day at midnight, and remove it immediatly. If I have to restore > > data for the snapshot, its's alway possible to mount the /dev/OVG/snap_admin > > ? > > Jean Marie, > I'm not sure I understand what you accomplish this way. Do you mean to > say that you would remove yesterday's snapshot and create a new one at > midnight each night? This protects you from accidents ("rm -f /data") > but not from someone who needs last Friday's version of a file. > > If you need the data in the snapshot, you need to put it somewhere safe. > > To summarize: > 1. Unmount /data > 2. Make the snapshot > 3. Remount /data > 4. Mount the snapshot > 5. Back up the snapshot (copy the data to tape, cd, whatever) > 6. Unmount the snapshot > 7. Remove the snapshot > > -David > -- > David Johnston <david@littlebald.com> > Little Bald Consulting, LLC > > _______________________________________________ > linux-lvm mailing list > linux-lvm@sistina.com > http://lists.sistina.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm > read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/ -- Sincèrement, Jean Marie Ariès Imprimeries IPS Responsable Systèmes/Réseaux _______________________________________________ linux-lvm mailing list linux-lvm@sistina.com http://lists.sistina.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/