ioannes wrote:
OK but I could execute the script on the target server, which is also
mine. So the jpg on the source is actually the remote server, I would
be reading a remote file and writing it to the server which is executing
the script.
OK I guess i completely misunderstood what you were
On Feb 5, 2008 2:57 PM, ioannes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Am I right in thinking that exec() executes a string as a call to a
> program which executes in a shell? So am I to write:
>
> $callthis="the contents of my rsynch file";
> exec($callthis);
Filtered :-\
--
Daniel P. Brown
Se
Am I right in thinking that exec() executes a string as a call to a
program which executes in a shell? So am I to write:
$callthis="the contents of my rsynch file";
exec($callthis);
?
John
ioannes wrote:
OK, so how would I hand over the list of files from php to the
script? And am I right
OK, so how would I hand over the list of files from php to the script?
And am I right that I would write the rsynch code in a text file called
anything.txt and the
rsync
at the start of the line is what calls up the rsynch program, unlike php
where you need to call it something.php - though
: Re: [PHP-DB] Copying an image from one server to another
I am and have been reading http://samba.org/ftp/rsync/rsync.html, which
is one web page but 44 real pages. I see that FILE is a term used the
rsynch script. Is this something output from the php script, and if so
how is it channelled
On Feb 5, 2008 9:49 AM, ioannes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> OK but I could execute the script on the target server, which is also
> mine. So the jpg on the source is actually the remote server, I would
> be reading a remote file and writing it to the server which is executing
> the script.
T
rom the database and get those
files into the new site.
John
|
Mr Webber wrote:
FILE is there reference from the man page. It contains the files to include
in the sync.
Have you read the man page for rsync?
-Original Message-----
From: ioannes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday,
OK but I could execute the script on the target server, which is also
mine. So the jpg on the source is actually the remote server, I would
be reading a remote file and writing it to the server which is executing
the script.
Chris wrote:
ioannes wrote:
This is too advanced for me and having
m: ioannes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, February 04, 2008 12:59 PM
To: php-db@lists.php.net
Subject: Re: [PHP-DB] Copying an image from one server to another
Initially I could not find much on SCP and rsynch is about synchronising
folders, but that is only part of the problem. I don't
ioannes wrote:
This is too advanced for me and having spent several hours reading I am
no wiser. Given that I understand cURL and uploading files is possible
- http://us3.php.net/features.file-upload - it should be just a matter
of referencing a .jpg using a URL into a variable and uploading i
This is too advanced for me and having spent several hours reading I am
no wiser. Given that I understand cURL and uploading files is possible
- http://us3.php.net/features.file-upload - it should be just a matter
of referencing a .jpg using a URL into a variable and uploading it to
the target
Aleksandar Vojnovic wrote:
How about sending the file via SCP? (it would be a much more safer to
transfer files)
SFTP will work nicely though I don't know if there's a native SCP type
function in php. I know there is the pecl library but that's not going
to be available in most places (but ag
Subject: Re: [PHP-DB] Copying an image from one server to another
Initially I could not find much on SCP and rsynch is about synchronising
folders, but that is only part of the problem. I don't want files in
the target location that are not referenced from the target database. I
hold r
Initially I could not find much on SCP and rsynch is about synchronising
folders, but that is only part of the problem. I don't want files in
the target location that are not referenced from the target database. I
hold references like this
img[]=pic1.jpg&img[]=pic2.jpg
then I parse it out i
On Feb 4, 2008 11:03 AM, Daniel Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Feb 3, 2008 11:03 PM, Chris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > FTP.
> >
> > There's no way fopen is going to be able to write to a remote url,
> > that'd just be such a huge security issue it's not funny.
>
> I must've missed whe
On Feb 3, 2008 11:03 PM, Chris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> FTP.
>
> There's no way fopen is going to be able to write to a remote url,
> that'd just be such a huge security issue it's not funny.
I must've missed when the W3C and IETF forced a disable on POST. ;-P
--
Daniel P. Brown
Senio
How about sending the file via SCP? (it would be a much more safer to
transfer files)
-Aleksander
Chris wrote:
ioannes wrote:
I am trying to:
- check whether an image file exists on a server,
- check whether it does not exist on another server, and if not exists
- to copy from the first loca
ioannes wrote:
I am trying to:
- check whether an image file exists on a server,
- check whether it does not exist on another server, and if not exists
- to copy from the first location to the second.
I am using cURL. First step to capture the image from the first
server. When I return this
I am trying to:
- check whether an image file exists on a server,
- check whether it does not exist on another server, and if not exists
- to copy from the first location to the second.
I am using cURL. First step to capture the image from the first
server. When I return this image to the bro
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