>> On Mon, 26 Sep 2005 09:28:12, Chris Devers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> There's a canned retort in here about those who fail to learn from
> rsync will end up reinventing it, badly, but I can't quite find the
> witty version I'm looking for (and, for that matter, I can't quite
>
On Mon, 26 Sep 2005, Tolkin, Steve wrote:
> No. I actually use the freeware version program syncback at
> http://www.2brightsparks.com/downloads.html to do backup, and I think
> it uses rsync (or similar) internally. But I do not just want to do a
> full restore. I want to see what will be
Message-
From: Ben Tilly [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, September 23, 2005 5:52 PM
To: Tolkin, Steve
Cc: Jeremy Muhlich; boston-pm@mail.pm.org
Subject: Re: [Boston.pm] script to "normalize" output of Windows dir
command
On 9/23/05, Tolkin, Steve <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wr
On 9/23/05, Tolkin, Steve <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I do have a port of Unix find on my current Windows machine.
> But I do not have that on the machine I back up to (my wife's), so I
> would need to install that, and its dependencies, which makes me
> reluctant to take that approach.
Are you
Dear Steve,
> Also date and time are combined into three fields, but the third is
> either time or year. This makes it harder to process. I would actually
> prefer time in seconds since the start of the Unix eon.
IMHO, File::Find and stat() should solve your problems.
The following is a
Jeremy Muhlich wrote:
> Also, diff -r might be helpful. ...
I'd strongly second that recommendation. I often use diff on Windows to
verify file systems, such as burned CDs. (And prior to a diff port being
available, I had a home brew script written in Perl that compared the
checksum of files
On Fri, 23 Sep 2005, Tolkin, Steve wrote:
> Here are a few lines from the output of
> \bin\find -print -ls
>
> 945730 drwxr-xr-x 6 a071046 Administ0 Sep 21 15:05 ./ant
> ./ant/bin
> 951240 drwxr-xr-x 2 a071046 Administ0 Sep 21 15:05
> ./ant/bin
> ./ant/bin/ant
>
alf Of Jeremy Muhlich
Sent: Friday, September 23, 2005 12:19 PM
To: boston-pm@mail.pm.org
Subject: Re: [Boston.pm] script to "normalize" output of Windows dir
command
How about the unix "find" command, with the -printf option? You can get
it through cygwin. Taking find's outpu
How about the unix "find" command, with the -printf option? You can get
it through cygwin. Taking find's output (even without -printf) from two
directories and diffing it has gotten me through most of these sorts of
problems.
Also, diff -r might be helpful. (possibly with the --brief option as
Summary:
I would like a perl script that converts the output of the Windows dir
command so that each line has the same format, including the directory
it is in, and its extension. The date and time should use a format that
can be sorted as a string, e.g. -mm-dd and a 24 hour clock
I think
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