Alternatively, you can just install your freshly compiled version of rsync by issuing the following command :
"sudo make install"

Then when you want to use this version of rsync issue the following command :
"/usr/local/bin/rsync"

This way you will not have any issues with system updates. In addition, if any utilities expect the standard apple version to be installed in the default location they will continue to work as expected.




The following note never went through yesterday for some reason:


You probably know all of this already, but for those not familiar with
  the mysteries of the Unix side of the Mac OS X, allow me to comment
  here:


  Assuming /usr/local/bin is in your $PATH (otherwise you must add it
first), there are at least two solutions to the path problem, in which rsync 2.6.9 (in /usr/bin) is in front of rsync 3.0.5 (in /usr/ local/bin)

  1: rename /usr/bin/rsync to /usr/bin/rsync269, so that if you should
ever want to downgrade, you just have to change the name back to / usr/
  bin/rsync and away you go.

  2: change your $PATH, so that /usr/local/bin comes before /usr/bin.
  Then whatever version of rsync, or anything else, you have in /usr/
local/bin will be the version of that application that your Mac sees. Personally, I feel more comfortable keeping /usr/bin first in the path
  and I just always rename the Mac default versions whenever they get
  reinstalled by an OS update, but there is really nothing wrong with
  this solution, and it certainly is more permanent.

  Under Leopard (MacOS X 10.5.x) rsync version 2.6.9 is installed by
  default in /usr/bin. Whenever Apple updates the system and does
anything that "updates" rsync it will check if rsync 2.6.9 is present
  as "/usr/bin/rsync". If it does not find it it will "helpfully"
  reinstall it for you. Thus, every time Apple "updates" anything with
regard to rsync and reinstalls it you have to rename it again, if you
  use solution 1... which can be a pain in the neck.


  --Rob







On Mon, 2009-02-23 at 20:21 +0100, Kurt wrote:



> is "rsync --version" reporting the wrong version number, or am I to



> stupid to properly install rsync-3-0-5 on a Mac?



>



> Here is what I did:



> download and extract rsync-3-0-5 (btw: why is there an extra patches



> folder?)



> in Terminal I ran: ./configure, make, sudo make install



> There was no error message, and the old /usr/local/bin/rsync was



> replaced.



>



> When I now issue "rsync --version" I get:



> rsync  version 2.6.9  protocol version 29



> Copyright (C) 1996-2006 by Andrew Tridgell, Wayne Davison, and others.



> <http://rsync.samba.org/>



> Capabilities: 64-bit files, socketpairs, hard links, symlinks,



> batchfiles,



> inplace, IPv6, 32-bit system inums, 64-bit internal inums



>



> which is not what I expected.







Make sure your $PATH is set so that the rsync you installed will be



found first.  When you have this right, "which rsync" should



print /usr/local/bin/rsync .







--



Matt







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