What is the procedure and syntax to 'rsync' all of a specific set of
directories and files from one computer to another that are on the same
network?
I have been burning DVDs on one computer and copying those files onto my
other computer(s), but when I download all those files, the permissions
Here is a fairly good example that syncs everything in the /newdrive
directory from one computer to an other preserving permissions and ownership
and deleting files on the target that don't exist anymore on the source.
It excludes anything that looks like 'Norton Ghost Backup' and the
lost+found
j...@actionline.com wrote:
What is the procedure and syntax to 'rsync' all of a specific set of
directories and files from one computer to another that are on the same
network?
I have been burning DVDs on one computer and copying those files onto my
other computer(s), but when I download
Instead of writing all of the files to the disk make a tar ball and write
that to the disk.
tar zcpvf tarball.tar.gz /sourcedir
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 1:55 PM, Eric Shubert e...@shubes.net wrote:
j...@actionline.com wrote:
What is the procedure and syntax to 'rsync' all of a specific set of
I think the objective here is to copy the files directly from one drive
to the other. No intermediate files or tarball required. ;)
You could use tar on both sides w/out ever having the tarball directly
on a disk by piping it through ssh. I think rsync's the best solution
though, given that he
As far as I know you cannot preserve write permissions writing to a DVD
unless you pack those permissions within an archive format that can store
them. It's not a writable media.
Unless you're transferring terabytes of changes rsync works well across the
internet to keep files in sync. Get them
JD Austin wrote:
As far as I know you cannot preserve write permissions writing to a DVD
unless you pack those permissions within an archive format that can
store them. It's not a writable media.
Write, I mean correct. :)
So why use a DVD at all? Seems like a waste to me.
Unless you're
We violently agree :)
That was my point originally (grin).
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 2:54 PM, Eric Shubert e...@shubes.net wrote:
JD Austin wrote:
As far as I know you cannot preserve write permissions writing to a DVD
unless you pack those permissions within an archive format that can
You can use scp, tar or rsync.
Rsync is a low level copy process that actually takes a great load on
the system. Developers often learn it and don't realize that scp will
work just as well, and maintain all the permissions and ownership.
You can also use NFS to mount a shared directory and have
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 7:11 PM, Lisa Kachold lisakach...@obnosis.com wrote:
You can use scp, tar or rsync.
Rsync is a low level copy process that actually takes a great load on
the system. Developers often learn it and don't realize that scp will
work just as well, and maintain all the
I don't think anyone has mentioned yet that rsync is handy if you need to
transfer securely over an insecure channel. I think I recall you saying its
intranet, so this may not apply...
Eric
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 10:11 PM, Ed p...@0x1b.com wrote:
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 7:11 PM, Lisa Kachold
Very true.
In the example I pasted out of one of my rsync scripts it uses ssh to do the
transfer.
I don't think I've had a machine with rsh (not secure) enabled for about 10
years :)
sync -avz --delete --rsh=ssh --stats --progress --bwlimit=500
--exclude='*Norton\ Ghost\ Backup*'
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