On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 03:18:40PM -0600, Max Kipness wrote: > > > > I have a tree structure on one server similar to the following: > > > > > > > > /Current > > > > /01-04-2003 > > > > /01-03-2003 > > > > > > > > etc... > > > > > > > > /Current holds the most recent rsynced data, and the date > > > > directories are created with cp -al on a daily basis so they are > > > > hard-linked. I'm going back 60 days. > > > > > > > > The question is how can I move this entire structure to a > > new server > > > > and preserve the links from the date directories to the /Current > > > > directory? > > > > > > Well, I ended up rsyncing the root directory to the new server with > > > the -H option and it seemed to work. I have 30 directories > > for 30 days > > > of rotating backups. > > > > > > However, I had a dir called /Current that had 12Gbs and > > then all the > > > /date directories had 120mb, 60mb, etc...the daily changes that > > > occurred. Well now the directory called /01-01-2004 has 12Gb and > > > /Current has like 100mb. I guess /01-01-2004 went first do > > to sorting. > > > > It has to do with the tool you are using to measure them. > > > > > Anyway to change /Current back as the real directory? Or > > does it even > > > matter? > > > > What do you man "real". With hardlinks all links for an > > inode are equal. > > I'm using du --max-depth=1 -h on the root dir. > > The actual file(s) has to be stored in some directory, right? And then > the hard links point to this directory. Well they are all pointing to > /01-01-2004 instead of /Current.
Only symlinks point to another directory entry. All hardlinks are equal. The way you are using it du is simply using the directory order to pick which paths to descend first. ls -f should list the directory in the same order that du does. On the source system the directory order will be semi-random if you have been creating and deleting entries for awhile. On the destination they will be in lexical order because that was the creation order by rsync and you haven't mixed that up yet. Try this, mv 01-01-2004 01-01-2004-a-long-name mv 01-01-2004-a-long-name 01-01-2004 Now 01-01-2004 will likely not be the first on the list from ls -f and another direcotory will likely be held responsible for the space by du. -- ________________________________________________________________ J.W. Schultz Pegasystems Technologies email address: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Remember Cernan and Schmitt -- To unsubscribe or change options: http://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/rsync Before posting, read: http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html