> >-u will make sure that newer overwrites older, not vice
> >versa (warning- make sure clocks are right!- I don't do this
> >till I'm sure ntpd is running on the machines).
> >
> >and by source-address and destination-address you of course
> >mean path-to-file-or-directory in this context (though of
> >course one of the other can also be prefixed [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
> >which implies ssh transport).
> >
> >rsync won't sync deletions though- unison's probably better
> >if you want that.


> rsync does sync deletions.
> 
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ rsync --help|grep delete
> --del an alias for --delete-during
> --delete delete files that don't exist on the sending side
> --delete-before receiver deletes before transfer (default)
> --delete-during receiver deletes during transfer, not before
> --delete-after receiver deletes after transfer, not before
> --delete-excluded also delete excluded files on the receiving side
> --ignore-errors delete even if there are I/O errors
> --max-delete=NUM don't delete more than NUM files

Indeed, but it's not automatic.  I.e. you have to know that
what you are copying *from* is more authoritative than what
you're copying *to*.   Unison actually tracks deletions on
both sides.


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