On Wed, Oct 15, 2003 at 12:49:41PM -0500, King, Daniel wrote:
Hi, folks.
As a logical next step, I'm looking for information on synchronization of
raw volumes - as for Sybase or DB2 raw volumes. A search on the list
archive for raw volumes reveals much about network and Samba-type raw
Hi list,
I am still having troubles with rsync, as on large areas in our setup, it
keeps dying unexpectedly. See my previous post two days ago for the
initial tries. I realize it is a somewhat broad question, but how do I
troubleshoot these disconnects?
Im no great programmer, although we have a
Hello,
I started monitoring lan traffic with RRDTool on a linux box the other day that runs
rsync, and I've found what I would consider a strange traffic pattern. This linux box
rsync about 2Gb of data to a local samba share that is connected to a Windows 2003
server. Based on the literal
On Thu, Oct 16, 2003 at 04:49:23PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi list,
I am still having troubles with rsync, as on large areas in our setup, it
keeps dying unexpectedly. See my previous post two days ago for the
initial tries. I realize it is a somewhat broad question, but how do I
On Thu, Oct 16, 2003 at 01:44:46PM -0500, Max Kipness wrote:
[reformatted, please use shorter lines next time]
Hello,
I started monitoring lan traffic with RRDTool on a linux
box the other day that runs rsync, and I've found what I
would consider a strange traffic pattern. This linux box
I started monitoring lan traffic with RRDTool on a linux
box the other day that runs rsync, and I've found what I would
consider a strange traffic pattern. This linux box rsync
about 2Gb of
data to a local samba share that is connected to a Windows 2003
server. Based on the literal
On Thu, Oct 16, 2003 at 09:38:32PM -0500, Max Kipness wrote:
I started monitoring lan traffic with RRDTool on a linux
box the other day that runs rsync, and I've found what I would
consider a strange traffic pattern. This linux box rsync
about 2Gb of
data to a local samba share
What is the general recommendation for compression when using ssh?
Is it a wasteful performance hit to have both ssh and rsync do compression
(when using rsync over ssh)?
If so, is there a clear prefference which is more efficient, rsync or ssh?
Brian K. White -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] --