HP StorageWorks Storage Mirroring Recover User's Guide (T5437-96008, November 2009)

607 of 739
Source Attributes: Timestamp = 1/12/2008 3:28:20 PM Size = 17 Mask =
[0x20]
Target Attributes: Timestamp = 1/20/2008 5:05:26 PM Size = 2 Mask =
[0x20]
17 BYTES OUT OF SYNC
Completion Time: 1/24/2008 12:37:44 PM for connection 2 (Sales data for
alpha -->
206.31.65.40 : 1100)
Elapsed Time (seconds): 1320.256470
Total Directories Compared: 657
Total Directories Missing: 0
Total Directories Remirrored: 0
Total Files Compared: 120978
Total Files Missing: 0
Total Files Different: 3
Total Files Encrypted: 0
Total Files Remirrored: 1
Total Bytes Skipped: 0
Total Bytes Compared: 18527203678
Total Bytes Missing: 0
Total Bytes Different: 17
Total Bytes Remirrored: 17
Related links and directory attributes have been adjusted.
----- END OF VERIFICATION -----
Timestamp—The last modified date and time of the file
Size—The size, in bytes, of the file
Mask—The attributes associated with the file. See further details below.
Security descriptors—The NTFS file permissions of the file. If the file
permissions are different, the message "Security descriptors are different" will be
logged. If the file permissions are the same, nothing will be logged.
Bytes out of sync—The number of bytes that are not synchronized between the
file on the source and the file on the target. If the data in the file is identical, the
message "0 BYTES OUT OF SYNC" will be logged. If the file is different, the
message will indicate how many bytes were different. This message does not
indicate that the file was remirrored during the verify.
The mask must be converted in order to determine what attributes are assigned to a file.
The mask is a hexadecimal number corresponding to a binary number that indicates
what the attributes are. Using the following steps, you can determine how the mask
corresponds to the attributes of a file.
1. Each mask begins with 0x. Identify the hexadecimal number after the constant 0x.
For example, if the mask is 0x23, then the hexadecimal number you are interested