Hi all,
I have an application that uses Progress 10.2B that I'm running nightly automated regression tests against. There are multiple test projects, and I would like to backup the state of the database after every individual test project using probkup. Our database is tiny - only 2.9GB when probkup is used with the -com switch. When I run probkup manually from cmd, it takes a minute, maybe two. What I'm noticing recently, though, is that if I run one full test project, which can take anywhere from half an hour to two hours depending on which project I'm running, the script that I wrote in at the end that runs probkup takes over half an hour! Like I said, I'm using the -com switch, and I am deleting the previous .bak file created by probkup before probkup runs rather than overwriting it.
This is incredibly inefficient and actually breaks my test run most of the time. Could anyone suggest why this is happening only during the automated test run, not a manual run of probkup, and what I could do to get around it?
Thanks!
I have an application that uses Progress 10.2B that I'm running nightly automated regression tests against. There are multiple test projects, and I would like to backup the state of the database after every individual test project using probkup. Our database is tiny - only 2.9GB when probkup is used with the -com switch. When I run probkup manually from cmd, it takes a minute, maybe two. What I'm noticing recently, though, is that if I run one full test project, which can take anywhere from half an hour to two hours depending on which project I'm running, the script that I wrote in at the end that runs probkup takes over half an hour! Like I said, I'm using the -com switch, and I am deleting the previous .bak file created by probkup before probkup runs rather than overwriting it.
This is incredibly inefficient and actually breaks my test run most of the time. Could anyone suggest why this is happening only during the automated test run, not a manual run of probkup, and what I could do to get around it?
Thanks!