Hi, first of all, could we perhaps agree on one thread? They're all about the same issue, and it's getting confusing.
Adam Goryachev wrote on 2009-04-11 00:34:38 +1000 [Re: [BackupPC-users] How do the files look like when transferred?]: > Boniforti Flavio wrote: > > I'm about to import data from the actual filesystem, which in my case is > > on /mnt/remote/Omv ... > > > > [cut] > > > >> appears at /mnt/cdrom/import/dir/file). Let's try adding > >> this to remote.pl: > > > > When you say *adding*, do you actually mean to add following lines at > > the end of the config.pl? Or would it be better so *substitute* > > (temporarily) the defined parameters? as Adam explained, it makes no difference. I had intentionally said "adding", because it's easier to clean up afterwards. Put a line like # temporary modifications for initial import start here in front of your modifications, add the modifications behind that, and when the import backup is done, just remove everything from that line to the end of the file again. Sure, modifying values is cleaner and more readable. You can also copy the file first, then modify it, and later move the copy back to the original name. Whatever fits your taste. > [...] > > And tell me also if you already tried this, > > because otherwise I would do it and report back (with your support and > > "guidance", of course!). No, I haven't tried it yet. Feel free to ask if there are any problems. > [...] > Please read the FAQ/Documentation, a lot of the above is explained > better and in more detail there. This part is important. I think it would have saved you a lot of time already, and it may still give you a much clearer idea of what BackupPC can do for you. Boniforti Flavio wrote on 2009-04-10 17:02:57 +0200 [Re: [BackupPC-users] How do the files look like when transferred?]: > > Oh, OK: didn't know that if the same parameter is being set more than > once in a "host.pl" file, only the *last* occurence will be considered. It's a normal Perl source file. If you assign the value 5 to variable $a and then assign the value 10 to $a in the next line, at the end of the script, $a will contain the value 10, though it will intermediately have contained the value 5. For BackupPC, it only matters what the configuration variables contain at the end. Similarly, you can set "$Conf {FooBar} = time;" (as long as it's valid Perl code). BackupPC won't use a configuration variable FooBar, but it's no syntax error. Unfortunately, this implies that typos will *not* be detected ("$Conf {Backupfilesonly} = ..."? Syntactically fine, but useless, because the variable names are case sensitive. Disclaimer: this is a random example, totally unrelated to <1239250237.31177.4.ca...@universe> ;-). > [...] > What happens if a file instead gets *changed*? Will I have 2 different > files (say the one from yesterday and the one from today)? Well, obviously, because you can access both yesterday's version and today's version. Regards, Holger ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This SF.net email is sponsored by: High Quality Requirements in a Collaborative Environment. Download a free trial of Rational Requirements Composer Now! http://p.sf.net/sfu/www-ibm-com _______________________________________________ BackupPC-users mailing list BackupPC-users@lists.sourceforge.net List: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users Wiki: http://backuppc.wiki.sourceforge.net Project: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/