Greetings, Marc Rechte! > OK, I noticed that. Now it brings me a problem using rsync on cygwin.
> On cygwin: > $ cat /etc/rsyncd.conf > [test] > path = /cygdrive/c/tmp > comment = zone de test > fake super = yes > read only = no > On the Linux box: > # ls -l /home/tunix/ > ... > drwxr-xr-x 3 tunix root 4096 9 mars 12:23 resto_win > -rw-rw-r--+ 1 tunix utilisateurs_du_domaine 82882 9 mars 10:56 tmp.ps > # rsync -avz --acls --delete /home rsync://192.168.0.23/test > .. > # rsync -avz --acls --delete rsync://192.168.0.23/test/home/tunix resto_win/ > ... > # ls -l /home/tunix/resto_win/tunix/ > ... > drwx------ 2 1050005 1049089 4096 9 mars 12:14 resto_win > -rw------- 1 1050005 1049089 82882 9 mars 10:56 tmp.ps > You will notice that owner, group and ACLs are *not* restored properly > Am I demanding too much to cygwin ? No, you're demanding too much of rsync, which wasn't built with sane permission system in mind. Use SSH or direct (cifs) copying. Then the names will match. Your problem is that you expect Cygwin to be *NIX, but in fact, it isn't. It is a Windows application, and it follows Windows permission model. (Which, IMO, is saner, than POSIX one.) -- With best regards, Andrey Repin Thursday, March 10, 2016 00:58:07 Sorry for my terrible english... -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple