21.03.2020

I'm interested in perhaps deploying this in my k-8 school, but I have not found a good tutorial of how to install it. Or if it even works right on Mac. Anyone have some insights on this? My idea would be to back about 30 macs to an Ubuntu server.

Sent from my iSomething - - Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users. On 07:33 AM, Eric Dannewitz wrote: quoteI'm interested in perhaps deploying this in my k-8 school, but I have not found a good tutorial of how to install it.

Or if it even works right on Mac. Anyone have some insights on this? My idea would be to back about 30 macs to an Ubuntu server. /quote This would be a good way to setup Bacula. The Director, SD and catalog work well on a Ubuntu server - I recommend Trusty (14.04). For the Mac's someone probably has made the binaries and distributes them on the Internet. Otherwise if you load all the appropriate build tools on the Mac, you can easily build the FD.

Later this year, Bacula Systems will provide free binaries for MacOSX which should also help. If you have the budget, I.strongly. recommend taking the Bacula Systems Admin I training. It will provide you with everything you need to know and if you ask in advance, they can probably help you with the Mac builds. Best regards, Kern quote Thanks! Sent from my iSomething - - Slashdot TV.

Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net /quote - Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters.

Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users. On Sep 7, 2014, at 5:42 AM, Kern Sibbald sibbald.com wrote: quoteOn 07:33 AM, Eric Dannewitz wrote: quoteI'm interested in perhaps deploying this in my k-8 school, but I have not found a good tutorial of how to install it. Or if it even works right on Mac. Anyone have some insights on this? My idea would be to back about 30 macs to an Ubuntu server. /quote This would be a good way to setup Bacula. The Director, SD and catalog work well on a Ubuntu server - I recommend Trusty (14.04).

For the Mac's someone probably has made the binaries and distributes them on the Internet. Otherwise if you load all the appropriate build tools on the Mac, you can easily build the FD. Later this year, Bacula Systems will provide free binaries for MacOSX which should also help. /quote I've not used Bacula on a Mac, but I do notice that Homebrew (has a formula for bacula-fd, which could be used to install the client. Right now, it's only for the 5.x version (5.2.13), though. I hope this helps. Cheers, Paul.

Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users. The Mac OS X client for Bacula should be a standard Mac OS X package - a xxx.dmg file.

Anything that is a tar or other form is not very professional. I am not sure what homebrew supplies, but if they have done it right it is a.dmg. The instructions for building it yourself on a Mac are in the Bacula source distribution in: /platforms/osx/README Once you have the developer tools installed, it is a 'piece of cake'. Best regards, Kern On 04:06 PM, Paul Mather wrote: quoteOn Sep 7, 2014, at 5:42 AM, Kern Sibbald sibbald.com wrote: quoteOn 07:33 AM, Eric Dannewitz wrote: quoteI'm interested in perhaps deploying this in my k-8 school, but I have not found a good tutorial of how to install it.

Or if it even works right on Mac. Anyone have some insights on this? My idea would be to back about 30 macs to an Ubuntu server. /quoteThis would be a good way to setup Bacula. The Director, SD and catalog work well on a Ubuntu server - I recommend Trusty (14.04). For the Mac's someone probably has made the binaries and distributes them on the Internet.

Otherwise if you load all the appropriate build tools on the Mac, you can easily build the FD. Later this year, Bacula Systems will provide free binaries for MacOSX which should also help. /quoteI've not used Bacula on a Mac, but I do notice that Homebrew (has a formula for bacula-fd, which could be used to install the client. Right now, it's only for the 5.x version (5.2.13), though.

I hope this helps. Cheers, Paul. /quote - Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users. Hello, No I am not familiar with homebrew.

Bacula backup

Sorry, I guess I was not very clear, but my comment about 'not very professional' was not at all directed at homebrew. It was directed at people who produce xx.tar files when there are package systems available for a particular platform whether it be.rpm,.deb,.dmg. My point was that it is more professional to use packages (if they exist) than.tar files. The package built by the Bacula script does not itself do automatic package updates, though it is possible that with a mac package manager it all would work. Other than having run the scripts and produced Bacula Mac packages, I am not at all familiar with the details.

Best regards, Kern On 06:03 PM, Paul Mather wrote: quoteOn Sep 7, 2014, at 10:34 AM, Kern Sibbald sibbald.com wrote: quoteThe Mac OS X client for Bacula should be a standard Mac OS X package - a xxx.dmg file. Anything that is a tar or other form is not very professional. I am not sure what homebrew supplies, but if they have done it right it is a.dmg.

/quoteOh, I see you're not familiar with Homebrew. It is a package manager for OS X, sort of in the same vein as Fink and MacPorts. It's popular with a lot of people who want access to lots of Unix open source software and be able to manage it on an ongoing basis. I wouldn't decry it as being 'not very professional' unless you also consider the likes of yum, apt-get, pkg, etc. To be 'not very professional,' too. Sure, it's a different way, but not an unfamiliar metaphor for someone working with an Ubuntu server (as the OP mentioned), which is the only reason I mentioned it.

Bacula

I agree that using.dmg files is more commonplace on OS X. Does the OS X version include an option to check for updates? I've never used it. As you pointed out in your original reply, 'For the Mac's someone probably has made the binaries and distributes them on the Internet.' I did a quick Web search and it seemed that was not the case. I couldn't find any. So, it's great that Bacula Systems will be providing free OS X binaries later this year.

That will be another excellent resource for the Bacula community. In the meantime, folks can build their own from source, or maybe use Homebrew to do the same.;-) quoteThe instructions for building it yourself on a Mac are in the Bacula source distribution in: /platforms/osx/README Once you have the developer tools installed, it is a 'piece of cake'. /quoteIt's pretty easy to install with Homebrew, too: brew install bacula-fd Cheers, Paul.

quoteBest regards, Kern On 04:06 PM, Paul Mather wrote: quoteOn Sep 7, 2014, at 5:42 AM, Kern Sibbald sibbald.com wrote: quoteOn 07:33 AM, Eric Dannewitz wrote: quoteI'm interested in perhaps deploying this in my k-8 school, but I have not found a good tutorial of how to install it. Or if it even works right on Mac. Anyone have some insights on this? My idea would be to back about 30 macs to an Ubuntu server. /quoteThis would be a good way to setup Bacula. The Director, SD and catalog work well on a Ubuntu server - I recommend Trusty (14.04). For the Mac's someone probably has made the binaries and distributes them on the Internet.

Otherwise if you load all the appropriate build tools on the Mac, you can easily build the FD. Later this year, Bacula Systems will provide free binaries for MacOSX which should also help. /quoteI've not used Bacula on a Mac, but I do notice that Homebrew (has a formula for bacula-fd, which could be used to install the client.

Right now, it's only for the 5.x version (5.2.13), though. I hope this helps. Cheers, Paul. /quote/quote/quote - Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds.

Stuff that matters. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users. On Sep 7, 2014, at 1:33 AM, Eric Dannewitz rdschool.org wrote: quoteI'm interested in perhaps deploying this in my k-8 school, but I have not found a good tutorial of how to install it. Or if it even works right on Mac. Anyone have some insights on this? My idea would be to back about 30 macs to an Ubuntu server. /quote I documented my 2011 install procedure: - Slashdot TV.

Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters.

Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users. Unfortunately the cake is rotten now:-) PackageMaker is no longer supported by Apple so the script doesn't work on OSX 10.9. Please encourage Bacula Systems to contribute a fix to this script back to the community version and build its binaries from that, rather than using a secret cake recipe. Martin quotequotequotequotequoteOn Sun, 07 Sep 2014 16:34:00 +0200, Kern Sibbald said: /quote/quote/quote/quote The Mac OS X client for Bacula should be a standard Mac OS X package - a xxx.dmg file. Anything that is a tar or other form is not very professional. I am not sure what homebrew supplies, but if they have done it right it is a.dmg. The instructions for building it yourself on a Mac are in the Bacula source distribution in: /platforms/osx/README Once you have the developer tools installed, it is a 'piece of cake'.

Best regards, Kern On 04:06 PM, Paul Mather wrote: quoteOn Sep 7, 2014, at 5:42 AM, Kern Sibbald sibbald.com wrote: quoteOn 07:33 AM, Eric Dannewitz wrote: quoteI'm interested in perhaps deploying this in my k-8 school, but I have not found a good tutorial of how to install it. Or if it even works right on Mac. Anyone have some insights on this?

My idea would be to back about 30 macs to an Ubuntu server. /quoteThis would be a good way to setup Bacula. The Director, SD and catalog work well on a Ubuntu server - I recommend Trusty (14.04). For the Mac's someone probably has made the binaries and distributes them on the Internet. Otherwise if you load all the appropriate build tools on the Mac, you can easily build the FD.

Later this year, Bacula Systems will provide free binaries for MacOSX which should also help. /quoteI've not used Bacula on a Mac, but I do notice that Homebrew (has a formula for bacula-fd, which could be used to install the client. Right now, it's only for the 5.x version (5.2.13), though. I hope this helps.

Cheers, Paul. /quote - Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net /quote - Want excitement? Manually upgrade your production database.

When you want reliability, choose Perforce Perforce version control. Predictably reliable. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users. Hello Martin, Have you been talking to Dimitri?:-) Bacula Systems has no secret script for building Mac OS. It is done using the scripts in /platforms/osx with only some trivial name changes that I personally made (e.g. Bacula - Bacula Enterprise.).

All Bacula Systems low level scripts (.rpm,.deb.) are published in the community version, with only one exception. The exception is the scripts to build Solaris packages, which were written by Marco van Wieringen. They are not released because his build 'system' is too complicated (at least for me) and is 3GB+ in size the last time I backed it up:-( Some day, when I take a break from writing new features, I will rewrite it in a very simple way that should be smaller than 100KB. I wasn't aware that Apple has changed the package routines.

All Bacula Enterprise binaries are still build using this original script, so I will request the build sysadmin to look into the current way of doing things. If you have any tips, they would be appreciated.

Best regards, Kern On 03:27 PM, Martin Simmons wrote: quoteUnfortunately the cake is rotten now:-) PackageMaker is no longer supported by Apple so the script doesn't work on OSX 10.9. Please encourage Bacula Systems to contribute a fix to this script back to the community version and build its binaries from that, rather than using a secret cake recipe. Martin quotequotequotequotequoteOn Sun, 07 Sep 2014 16:34:00 +0200, Kern Sibbald said: /quote/quote/quote/quoteThe Mac OS X client for Bacula should be a standard Mac OS X package - a xxx.dmg file. Anything that is a tar or other form is not very professional. I am not sure what homebrew supplies, but if they have done it right it is a.dmg. The instructions for building it yourself on a Mac are in the Bacula source distribution in: /platforms/osx/README Once you have the developer tools installed, it is a 'piece of cake'.

Best regards, Kern On 04:06 PM, Paul Mather wrote: quoteOn Sep 7, 2014, at 5:42 AM, Kern Sibbald sibbald.com wrote: quoteOn 07:33 AM, Eric Dannewitz wrote: quoteI'm interested in perhaps deploying this in my k-8 school, but I have not found a good tutorial of how to install it. Or if it even works right on Mac. Anyone have some insights on this? My idea would be to back about 30 macs to an Ubuntu server.

/quoteThis would be a good way to setup Bacula. The Director, SD and catalog work well on a Ubuntu server - I recommend Trusty (14.04). For the Mac's someone probably has made the binaries and distributes them on the Internet. Otherwise if you load all the appropriate build tools on the Mac, you can easily build the FD.

Later this year, Bacula Systems will provide free binaries for MacOSX which should also help. /quoteI've not used Bacula on a Mac, but I do notice that Homebrew (has a formula for bacula-fd, which could be used to install the client.

Right now, it's only for the 5.x version (5.2.13), though. I hope this helps.

Cheers, Paul. /quote - Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters.

Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net /quote/quote - Want excitement? Manually upgrade your production database. When you want reliability, choose Perforce Perforce version control. Predictably reliable.

Go to and download the MacOS Firmware update (Version 1.0.9) 2. Go to and download the RECentral application (Version 1.2.15) 3. Avermedia drivers for windows 10. I had some difficulties so I wanted to share the steps I followed in the hopes of helping anyone else having trouble.

Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users. You can use MacPorts to build Bacula 7.0.4 (client by default, also supports MySQL-, PostgreSQL- and SQLite3 Server variants) Install macports (macports.org), then perform „sudo port install bacula“ This by default installs the client fd. Configure the client in /opt/local/etc/bacula/bacula-fd.conf When configured, perform „sudo port load bacula-fd“ To build a DMG file for standalone installation on other machines (which do not have MacPorts installed), you can perform sudo port mdmg bacula cd `port work bacula`. There you find bacula-7.0.4.dmg which includes all dependencies.

It’s recommended to use a separate MacPorts installation path for standalone dmg files. See Robert Am um 07:33 schrieb Eric Dannewitz rdschool.org: quoteI'm interested in perhaps deploying this in my k-8 school, but I have not found a good tutorial of how to install it. Or if it even works right on Mac. Anyone have some insights on this? My idea would be to back about 30 macs to an Ubuntu server. Sent from my iSomething - - Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds.

Bacula-fd Mac Os X

Stuff that matters. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net /quote - Want excitement? Manually upgrade your production database. When you want reliability, choose Perforce Perforce version control. Predictably reliable.

Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users. Hello Robert, Thanks for the tips. Best regards, Kern On 04:16 PM, Robert Oschwald wrote: quoteYou can use MacPorts to build Bacula 7.0.4 (client by default, also supports MySQL-, PostgreSQL- and SQLite3 Server variants) Install macports (macports.org), then perform „sudo port install bacula“ This by default installs the client fd.

Configure the client in /opt/local/etc/bacula/bacula-fd.conf When configured, perform „sudo port load bacula-fd“ To build a DMG file for standalone installation on other machines (which do not have MacPorts installed), you can perform sudo port mdmg bacula cd `port work bacula`. There you find bacula-7.0.4.dmg which includes all dependencies. It’s recommended to use a separate MacPorts installation path for standalone dmg files. See Robert Am um 07:33 schrieb Eric Dannewitz rdschool.org: quoteI'm interested in perhaps deploying this in my k-8 school, but I have not found a good tutorial of how to install it.

Or if it even works right on Mac. Anyone have some insights on this? My idea would be to back about 30 macs to an Ubuntu server. Sent from my iSomething - - Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net /quote - Want excitement?

Manually upgrade your production database. When you want reliability, choose Perforce Perforce version control.

Predictably reliable. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net /quote - Want excitement? Manually upgrade your production database. When you want reliability, choose Perforce Perforce version control. Predictably reliable. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users.

Thanks, I just didn't want to OSX binaries to go down the path of the Windows binaries. There is a new Xcode command productbuild, but I've not explored how to use it yet. Martin quotequotequotequotequoteOn Mon, 08 Sep 2014 15:46:26 +0200, Kern Sibbald said: /quote/quote/quote/quote Hello Martin, Have you been talking to Dimitri?:-) Bacula Systems has no secret script for building Mac OS. It is done using the scripts in /platforms/osx with only some trivial name changes that I personally made (e.g. Bacula - Bacula Enterprise.). All Bacula Systems low level scripts (.rpm,.deb.) are published in the community version, with only one exception. The exception is the scripts to build Solaris packages, which were written by Marco van Wieringen.

They are not released because his build 'system' is too complicated (at least for me) and is 3GB+ in size the last time I backed it up:-( Some day, when I take a break from writing new features, I will rewrite it in a very simple way that should be smaller than 100KB. I wasn't aware that Apple has changed the package routines. All Bacula Enterprise binaries are still build using this original script, so I will request the build sysadmin to look into the current way of doing things. If you have any tips, they would be appreciated. Best regards, Kern On 03:27 PM, Martin Simmons wrote: quoteUnfortunately the cake is rotten now:-) PackageMaker is no longer supported by Apple so the script doesn't work on OSX 10.9. Please encourage Bacula Systems to contribute a fix to this script back to the community version and build its binaries from that, rather than using a secret cake recipe. Martin quotequotequotequotequoteOn Sun, 07 Sep 2014 16:34:00 +0200, Kern Sibbald said: /quote/quote/quote/quoteThe Mac OS X client for Bacula should be a standard Mac OS X package - a xxx.dmg file.

Anything that is a tar or other form is not very professional. I am not sure what homebrew supplies, but if they have done it right it is a.dmg. The instructions for building it yourself on a Mac are in the Bacula source distribution in: /platforms/osx/README Once you have the developer tools installed, it is a 'piece of cake'. Best regards, Kern On 04:06 PM, Paul Mather wrote: quoteOn Sep 7, 2014, at 5:42 AM, Kern Sibbald sibbald.com wrote: quoteOn 07:33 AM, Eric Dannewitz wrote: I'm interested in perhaps deploying this in my k-8 school, but I have not found a good tutorial of how to install it. Or if it even works right on Mac. Anyone have some insights on this? My idea would be to back about 30 macs to an Ubuntu server.

This would be a good way to setup Bacula. The Director, SD and catalog work well on a Ubuntu server - I recommend Trusty (14.04). For the Mac's someone probably has made the binaries and distributes them on the Internet. Otherwise if you load all the appropriate build tools on the Mac, you can easily build the FD. Later this year, Bacula Systems will provide free binaries for MacOSX which should also help.

/quoteI've not used Bacula on a Mac, but I do notice that Homebrew (has a formula for bacula-fd, which could be used to install the client. Right now, it's only for the 5.x version (5.2.13), though. I hope this helps. Cheers, Paul. /quote - Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds.

Stuff that matters. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net /quote/quote /quote - Want excitement?

Manually upgrade your production database. When you want reliability, choose Perforce Perforce version control. Predictably reliable. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users. Hello Martin, See below. On 06:12 PM, Martin Simmons wrote: quoteThanks, I just didn't want to OSX binaries to go down the path of the Windows binaries.

/quote No, OSX has no particular code written by Bacula Systems that is not in the community version, whereas for Windows Bacula Systems has spent a great deal of time (CHF) working on it and is willing to give out binaries but wants to wait a bit before backporting the new source code. Note, the Windows binaries are now available free to community contributors. Hopefully that will be extended to more people in the next couple of months. Best regards, Kern quote There is a new Xcode command productbuild, but I've not explored how to use it yet. Martin quotequotequotequotequoteOn Mon, 08 Sep 2014 15:46:26 +0200, Kern Sibbald said: /quote/quote/quote/quoteHello Martin, Have you been talking to Dimitri?:-) Bacula Systems has no secret script for building Mac OS.

It is done using the scripts in /platforms/osx with only some trivial name changes that I personally made (e.g. Bacula - Bacula Enterprise.). All Bacula Systems low level scripts (.rpm,.deb.) are published in the community version, with only one exception. The exception is the scripts to build Solaris packages, which were written by Marco van Wieringen. They are not released because his build 'system' is too complicated (at least for me) and is 3GB+ in size the last time I backed it up:-( Some day, when I take a break from writing new features, I will rewrite it in a very simple way that should be smaller than 100KB.

I wasn't aware that Apple has changed the package routines. All Bacula Enterprise binaries are still build using this original script, so I will request the build sysadmin to look into the current way of doing things.

If you have any tips, they would be appreciated. Best regards, Kern On 03:27 PM, Martin Simmons wrote: quoteUnfortunately the cake is rotten now:-) PackageMaker is no longer supported by Apple so the script doesn't work on OSX 10.9. Please encourage Bacula Systems to contribute a fix to this script back to the community version and build its binaries from that, rather than using a secret cake recipe.

Martin quotequotequotequotequoteOn Sun, 07 Sep 2014 16:34:00 +0200, Kern Sibbald said: /quote/quote/quote/quoteThe Mac OS X client for Bacula should be a standard Mac OS X package - a xxx.dmg file. Anything that is a tar or other form is not very professional. I am not sure what homebrew supplies, but if they have done it right it is a.dmg. The instructions for building it yourself on a Mac are in the Bacula source distribution in: /platforms/osx/README Once you have the developer tools installed, it is a 'piece of cake'. Best regards, Kern On 04:06 PM, Paul Mather wrote: quoteOn Sep 7, 2014, at 5:42 AM, Kern Sibbald sibbald.com wrote: quoteOn 07:33 AM, Eric Dannewitz wrote: I'm interested in perhaps deploying this in my k-8 school, but I have not found a good tutorial of how to install it.

Or if it even works right on Mac. Anyone have some insights on this? My idea would be to back about 30 macs to an Ubuntu server. This would be a good way to setup Bacula. The Director, SD and catalog work well on a Ubuntu server - I recommend Trusty (14.04).

For the Mac's someone probably has made the binaries and distributes them on the Internet. Otherwise if you load all the appropriate build tools on the Mac, you can easily build the FD. Later this year, Bacula Systems will provide free binaries for MacOSX which should also help.

/quoteI've not used Bacula on a Mac, but I do notice that Homebrew (has a formula for bacula-fd, which could be used to install the client. Right now, it's only for the 5.x version (5.2.13), though.

I hope this helps. Cheers, Paul.

/quote- Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds.

Stuff that matters. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net /quote/quote/quote/quote - Want excitement? Manually upgrade your production database.

When you want reliability, choose Perforce Perforce version control. Predictably reliable. Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users. I'm posting this wherever i found outdated info about OSX and bacula - I’ve just finished setting up bacula on ubuntu 17 for server and a verity of machines including Apple Sierra.

Download the latest 9.0.3 source from bacula.org and move into the platforms/osx directory and read the readme – it compiled first time and i even managed to change the compile to include a console for OSX/Sierra. I did need to manually change the plist to get it to run at start up and control it due to the org.bacula.bacula-fd.plist.in actually being called com.baculasystems.bacula-fd.plist.in (just link the file names to get it to work).

Bacula For Windows

I DO have mac ports installed and had previously installed the v7.x from there. And then de-installed it as i wanted the facilities in v9.x.

Is available and certified on a broad range of operating systems. Thanks to its modular and compartmented architecture, Bacula Enterprise is also able to support a large catalog of hardware solutions and its compatibility with autochangers is extremely high. Platform Availability Service Level Agreement i32/i64 Server and Client FULL FreeBSD Server and Client FULL Solaris Server and Client FULL i32/i64 Client ONLY FULL MacOS X Client ONLY FULL Other Un.x/BSD Systems Client ONLY Reasonable effort Further help:. Don’t know about Bacula Enterprise Edition’s capabilities?. Want to see our full range of?.

Bacula Enterprise Edition works for physical, and IT infrastructures. is a comprehensive GUI management suite for Bacula Enterprise Edition that provides the data reports, core metrics and analysis that system administrators need to provide to managers. is available in different locations, depending on the Certified Bacula Systems Training Center you choose.