On Tue, Sep 25, 2012 at 09:00:13AM +1200, Claudio Contin wrote:
> I found out that csync persists ownership of the files; the problem the
> UUID on the 2 servers is not the same.
> I can get around that.

There is the "ignore" statement.

ignore uid gid;

May be what you are looking for.

If you look for some textual matching on the "name",
csync2 does not have that (yet).
It basically always does the "numeric-ids" mode.

You'd need to enhance the "SETOWN" command in the csync2 protocol.

        Lars

> Thanks
> 
> On Tue, Sep 25, 2012 at 8:50 AM, Claudio Contin <
> claudio.con...@sharesight.co.nz> wrote:
> 
> > Hi,
> > I'm new with csync2.
> >
> > I'm setting up for a small cluster (at the moment only 2 nodes).
> >
> > My configuration on both nodes is the following:
> >
> > group cluster
> > {
> >          host server1;
> >          host server2;
> >          key /etc/csync2.key;
> >          include /var/apps/sync;
> > }
> > nossl * *;
> >
> >
> > When I run csync2 -x everything works fine, but the ownership of the files
> > is not root on the other node.
> > I was thinking to change the ownership after each csync2, but the
> > ownership change triggers the file as modified, and this ends up in a loop.
> >
> > How do I specify file permission for csync2? I can't find any
> > configuration option about.


-- 
: Lars Ellenberg
: LINBIT | Your Way to High Availability
: DRBD/HA support and consulting http://www.linbit.com

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