Time Machine will enable ownership on the drive the first time it starts up.
The first thing it does when it creates the backup directory is to enable
ownership on the drive. I've seen this happen repeatedly (it's actually the
easiest way I know of to enable ownership on drive).
On 2018-04-03,
For anybody trying to build a static binary:
Glibc static binaries are not backwards compatible: to get really
static binaries you'd have to compile them with musl libc.
The easiest way for me was to set up a VM with alpine linux. Then I
configured and build rsync and at the end ran these comma
On 20/03/18 05:44, Andre Althoff via rsync wrote:
> That doesn’t work too. :-(
>
> Last login: Mon Mar 19 19:18:16 on console
> iMac:~ andre$ mount
> /dev/disk0s2 on / (hfs, local, journaled)
> devfs on /dev (devfs, local, nobrowse)
> map -hosts on /net (autofs, nosuid, automounted, nobrowse)
> ma
On 25/03/18 15:32, Morgan Read via rsync wrote:
> On 19/03/18 14:01, Morgan Read wrote:
>> Hello list
>>
>> I've been running the following command, first in fc20 and then now
>> (since the beginning of March) in fc26:
>> now=$(date +"%Y%m%d-%H%M"); sudo rsync -ahuAESX -vi /home/
>> /run/media/read