Hi everybody,
I'm trying to use my DoK for various things which are sensitive to the
executable (chmod +/-x) bit. As I want to be able to use this DoK on
Windows systems as well, it's formatted to VFAT (NTFS is also an
option, thanks to ntfs-3g). Is there any way to get any form of
"simulated" perm
Looking for a simpler solution (although UMSDOS, upon re-reading,
seems to do exactly what I wanted, but is discontinued), here's an
alternative problem to solve: What I *REALLY* want to do is use my DoK
to synchronize two computers, when one of them has very poor upstream
(otherwise I'd use the ex
Try using gzip in 'rsync' mode ( --rsyncable flag at least in my
ubuntu). This is the best of both worlds - both compression and works
great with rsync.
Be aware that rsync reads the entire file in the destination as well
as the source, so it might be faster to do write like "cp sync.tar.bz2
/medi
Another option (poor man's fakeroot) is to write a script that uses
'find' to create a script that restores the permissions.
Alon
On 2/6/08, Alon Altman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What is the problem using fakeroot either as your own user or as root?
> You can always mount the dok with user p
On Wed, Feb 06, 2008 at 01:55:49PM -0800, Alon Altman wrote:
> Another option (poor man's fakeroot) is to write a script that uses
> 'find' to create a script that restores the permissions.
Poor man's rpm, actually. fakeroot forgets things eventualy.
But what about other archivers? Any archiver t