Warning of size discrepancy during test phase
Posted: Sat Aug 25, 2018 6:07 pm
I have been testing FBackup in Hyper-V Windows 8.1 virtual machine (machine name HV-Win81). I am doing a mirror backup with fast mirror, removal of excluded and deleted files, copying of NTFS security permissions, test after backup, backup empty folders, and smart file scanning mode.
My user name is David, and I am backing up the entire C:\Users folder to the destination C:\Backup\HV-Win81 (this is just a test, remember).
During the testing phase I get the warning:
"[8/25/2018 7:15:41 AM] Warning: Size of file "C:\Backup\HV-Win81\C\Users\David\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Indexed DB\Internet.edb" in destination (8454144) is different than the size stored in catalog (0)"
This always happens with just this one file, both on the initial backup and subsequent fast mirror backups. This file has not been changed since 8/18/2018 (probably the last time I used Internet Explorer), so I am sure it is not open during the backup.
The size of the file "Internet.edb" in both the source and the destination is indeed 8454144 bytes, so it seems that this file has been backed up correctly, but why does the catalog say it is 0 bytes?
My user name is David, and I am backing up the entire C:\Users folder to the destination C:\Backup\HV-Win81 (this is just a test, remember).
During the testing phase I get the warning:
"[8/25/2018 7:15:41 AM] Warning: Size of file "C:\Backup\HV-Win81\C\Users\David\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Indexed DB\Internet.edb" in destination (8454144) is different than the size stored in catalog (0)"
This always happens with just this one file, both on the initial backup and subsequent fast mirror backups. This file has not been changed since 8/18/2018 (probably the last time I used Internet Explorer), so I am sure it is not open during the backup.
The size of the file "Internet.edb" in both the source and the destination is indeed 8454144 bytes, so it seems that this file has been backed up correctly, but why does the catalog say it is 0 bytes?