Jeffrey J. Kosowsky wrote at about 05:56:30 -0500 on Monday, November 3, 2008:
 > Craig Barratt wrote at about 18:06:43 -0700 on Friday, October 31, 2008:
 >  > Jeff writes:
 >  > 
 >  > > Is there a (reasonably easy) way of identifying which ones have the
 >  > > rsync checksum seed and which ones don't???
 >  > 
 >  > I'm relucant to even say, because you are heading in an unproductive
 >  > direction.  But here goes: a compressed file without checksums starts
 >  > with 0x78 and a compressed file with checksums starts with 0xd6 or 0xd7.
 >  > See lib/BackupPC/FileZIO.pm.
 >  > 
 >  > The file sizes in the example you cite suggests the first has checksums
 >  > and the second does not.
 >  > 
 > Thanks I am learning a lot (and trust me it is productive because it
 > has all forced me to go through the code at a line-by-line level.
 > 
 > I am noticing that some of the potentially improperly backed up files
 > have either a "0x00" or "0x04" as there code?
 > How would that happen? (or are these somehow error codes that got
 > stuck back in the first byte?)
 > 
 > Thanks!
 > 
Never mind it was just a mistake in my code... It all makes sense now...

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
This SF.Net email is sponsored by the Moblin Your Move Developer's challenge
Build the coolest Linux based applications with Moblin SDK & win great prizes
Grand prize is a trip for two to an Open Source event anywhere in the world
http://moblin-contest.org/redirect.php?banner_id=100&url=/
_______________________________________________
BackupPC-users mailing list
[email protected]
List:    https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users
Wiki:    http://backuppc.wiki.sourceforge.net
Project: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/

Reply via email to