> "JS" == jw schultz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote the following on Sat, 27 Jul 2002 23:05:50 -0700
JS> As a poor example let us suppose that a filename contained a
JS> "/". A UNIX system using translation might turn this into "_".
JS> Escapement might turn it into "=2F" and "=" into
On Sat, Jul 27, 2002 at 02:50:52PM -0400, John E. Malmberg wrote:
> Lenny Foner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >jw schultz wrote:
> > I find the use of funny chars (including space) in filenames
> > offensive but we need to deal with internationalizations and
> > sheer stupidity.
> >
> >Regardles
Martin Pool wrote:
> On 27 Jul 2002, "John E. Malmberg" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>A program serving source files for distribution does not need to be that
>>concerned with preserving exact file attributes, but may need to track
>>suggested file attributes for for the various client platfor
Martin Pool wrote:
>
> On 22 Jul 2002, "John E. Malmberg" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>>A clean design allows optimization to be done by the compiler, and tight
>>optimization should be driven by profiling tools.
>
>
> Right. So, for example, glib has a very smart assembly ntohl() and
>
I'm inclined to agree with jw that truthfully representing time and
leap seconds is a problem for the operating system, not for us. We
just need to be able to accurately represent whatever it tells us,
without thinking very much about the meaning.
Somebody previously pointed out that timestamp p
On 27 Jul 2002, "John E. Malmberg" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> A program serving source files for distribution does not need to be that
> concerned with preserving exact file attributes, but may need to track
> suggested file attributes for for the various client platforms.
>
> A program that
On Sun, 21 Jul 2002, jw schultz wrote:
> What i am seeing is a Multi-stage pipeline.
This is quite an interesting design idea. Let me comment on a few
things that I've been mulling over since first reading it:
One thing you don't discuss in your data flow is auxiliary data flow.
For instance, e
Hello,
I am a first time user of Rsync. I am having problems configuring an Rsync
server on a Solaris server on which I have *no* root previliges. I have
searched the archives and the web,but none of the articles/documents have
proved helpful beyond an extent.
Since I cannot be root, I have
I must be missing something, but not sure what. I've configured the
rsyncd.conf and rsyncd.secrets files per the examples I've seen and my
authentication fails everytime. Any ideas on where I should start
looking?
@ERROR: auth failed on module test
rsync: connection unexpectedly closed (88 bytes
On Thu, 11 Jul 2002, Jos Backus wrote:
> http://www.catnook.com/patches/rsync-popt-1.6.4.patch
I went ahead and tested this and then checked it in (since we might as
well include the newest popt if we're going to include popt with rsync).
> The configure script had to be regenerated (with au
Lenny Foner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> jw schultz wrote:
> I find the use of funny chars (including space) in filenames
> offensive but we need to deal with internationalizations and
> sheer stupidity.
>
> Regardless of what you think about them, MacOS comes with pathnames
> containing sp
> From: jw schultz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> On Fri, Jul 26, 2002 at 09:03:32AM -0400, Bennett Todd wrote:
>
>>2002-07-26-03:37:51 jw schultz:
>>
>>>All that matters is that we can represent the timestamps in
>>>a way that allows consistent comparison, restoration and
>>>transfer.
>>
>>A very good
On Mon, 22 Jul 2002, Edward Farrar wrote:
> Rsync 2.5.5 is producing this error message and a core file when executing the
> command "/usr/local/bin/rsync -av --delete --force /net/OSCM/OS_ATLAS2/CONFIG/.
> /net/OSCM/OS_TITAN1/2.6/CONFIG/. /OS/2.6/CONFIG"
>
> building file list ... done
> rsync:
SPAM: Start SpamAssassin results --
SPAM: This mail is probably spam. The original message has been altered
SPAM: so you can recognise or block similar unwanted mail in future.
SPAM: See http://spamassassin.org/tag/ for more details.
SPAM:
SPAM: Content a
14 matches
Mail list logo