I've been running a vac-based backup on a few unix systems for a while now. A bit over a week ago, one of them started failing with this error: vac: vtcachelocal: asked for block #6289076; only 6288808 blocks Adding -v to the vac invocation, it seems to be failing in the same place each night. The last file listed is 12k, the next is 13k. I'm running vac with -a to get the dump-like hierarchy. While the size of my current backup set is not much larger than the months of successful runs, there were a few days right before the failure when part of a large video archive was being accidentally included. The total backup size for those days was about 10GB, but with low churn. The currently-failing backups have passed the part of the filesystem where that data is stored and have correctly omitted it. The last paragraph of venti-cache(3) (on p9p, although venti-cache(2) reads the same here) includes a few interesting statements. First: If a new cache block must be allocated... but the cache is filled... the library prints the score and reference count of every block in the cache and then aborts. This isn't happening; I get only the above "asked for" line. I don't see in the source anywhere this *ought* to be happening, either. Is the man page simply out of date? Was this pulled at some point? It seems like it'd be helpful. The same paragraph also notes: A full cache indicates either that the cache is too small, or, more commonly, that cache blocks are being leaked. I've had a hard time tracking blocks through their local vs. global states. Any tips for tracking down any potential leaks? To get limping along again, ought it be safe to simply bump up the size of the cache in the vacfsopen call? Anthony Sorace Strand 1