What's the difference? I have "My Documents" (or any other directory
with precious files) with all subfolders, which I want to be also
stored somewhere else, so when my drive blows up I can get all that
stuff back. And any changes in any file under My Documents should be
reflected in the copy on re
not to split hairs but I mentioned rsync being more efficient as it only
copies changed bits.
Problem with just using Xcopy is it doesn't support ftp (afaik I could be
proved wrong) I guess you could mount the FTP drive with the old netdrive,
but me I would prefer to do it with as few tools as pos
On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 11:24:43AM +1000, Andre Kolodochka wrote:
> Is there something not necessarily based on rsync? ftp, for example?
>
> Andre.
Well, do you want just to do backups or are you looking for something
fancier?
Your original mail mentioned only backups in the body (as I recall)
b
with xcopy I use /d (only copy files with newer date). Actually I
use: /d /s /y. Maybe these aren't optimal?
No-one has mentioned that rsync is actually VERY CLEVER at minimising
bandwidth and proudly announces at the end of the sync job that it's
done something like 1% of the bandwidth (therefo
I've just this minute finished setting up something very similar at work.
I installed cygwin and now run backup as an rsync/cron job. It might be
overkill, but I've found that there are so many other reasons to have a bash
shell on Windows, and cron/rsync/ssh works a treat.
Morgan Storey wr
Windows has the archive bit built in. You could simply xcopy/robocopy any
files with the archive bit to a staging directory then ftp up that
eg:
*xcopy path:\to\Files\ path:\to\staging /m /e /v /c /y*
Then use your favourite scriptable ftp client to upload it, there are a few
out there, I think you
ftp is the last resort, rsync is obviously a better one. Also, not
aware of good tools that would check the differences in directory
trees and update only the files that are different over ftp.
Andre.
2009/5/26 Dean Hamstead :
> why not use ftp then?
>
>
> Dean
>
> Andre Kolodochka wrote:
>>
>
I have actually used Unison to keep two windows servers in sync over ssh
with plink from putty and Winsshd, pretty nifty little app, but for one way
sync the Rsync for windows is the way to go
FTP can be done as well with a script, but it is messy, and not-secure FTP
is all in plain text and I wou
why not use ftp then?
Dean
Andre Kolodochka wrote:
Is there something not necessarily based on rsync? ftp, for example?
Andre.
2009/5/26 Christopher Vance :
On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 9:55 AM, Alan L Tyree wrote:
I use unison: http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/
It claims to run
Is there something not necessarily based on rsync? ftp, for example?
Andre.
2009/5/26 Christopher Vance :
> On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 9:55 AM, Alan L Tyree wrote:
>> I use unison: http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/
>>
>> It claims to run on Windows, but I have no experience with that.
I have found winscp good. it runs over ssh.
Regards
Phill O'Flynn
--
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On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 9:55 AM, Alan L Tyree wrote:
> I use unison: http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/
>
> It claims to run on Windows, but I have no experience with that.
It does. I've used it on Ubuntu, Windows, OpenBSD, MacOS, and Solaris.
The biggest problem with Unison is that the
On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 10:44 AM, Owen Townend wrote:
>
> One 'Microsoft' way would be to use SyncToy[0]. To use it you would only
> have to mount a samba share from the linux box as a network drive.
>
Another one that just popped into my head is Bacula, although it's a full-on
backup solution an
2009/5/26 Andre Kolodochka :
> Given that my Lacie Ethernet disk just died, I was thinking of solid
> backup solutions for my personal files (20-30Gb). Since I have already
> Linux hosting with way more disk space than I need, I thought it will
> be great if I could sync a folder on my local drive
On Tue, 26 May 2009 09:44:36 +1000
Andre Kolodochka wrote:
> Given that my Lacie Ethernet disk just died, I was thinking of solid
> backup solutions for my personal files (20-30Gb). Since I have already
> Linux hosting with way more disk space than I need, I thought it will
> be great if I could
you can also apply rsync over ssh.
there are a number of OS ssh servers for windows.
Dean
Gonzalo Servat wrote:
On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 9:44 AM, Andre Kolodochka wrote:
Given that my Lacie Ethernet disk just died, I was thinking of solid
backup solutions for my personal files (20-30Gb). Si
On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 9:44 AM, Andre Kolodochka wrote:
> Given that my Lacie Ethernet disk just died, I was thinking of solid
> backup solutions for my personal files (20-30Gb). Since I have already
> Linux hosting with way more disk space than I need, I thought it will
> be great if I could sy
Given that my Lacie Ethernet disk just died, I was thinking of solid
backup solutions for my personal files (20-30Gb). Since I have already
Linux hosting with way more disk space than I need, I thought it will
be great if I could sync a folder on my local drive to a folder on
that Linux box... some
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