On 23 January 2010, at 22:42, John wrote:

> On Sun, Jan 24, 2010 at 10:55:14AM +0800, Erich Dollansky wrote:
>> Hi,
>> 
>> On 24 January 2010 am 01:08:27 John wrote:
>>> doing this on a new machine!  And I don't need any "migration"
>>> storage, because, well, gosh - it's tcp, people!  ;)  I just
>>> did the first transfer of home, and it went swell:
>>> 
>> how did you handle the strange group IDs?
> 
> Have not done that yet.  My current best plan (which I'm not really
> crazy about, but haven't come up with anything better) is to do
> 121 "find /home -uid ... -exec chown {} +" and 37
> "find /home -gid ... -exec chgrp {} +" commands.  This is also called
> "Let's modify every inode in the filesystem.  Twice."  Oh, well, the
> ctimes are blown up by the migration anyway (as they really should be).
> I have to be careful, if there are any IDs that are used on both
> systems, but with different associations, to do the change in 
> the right order (sigh).  I could try to get really fancy and just
> find the distinct combinations of "uid:gid" and do only one
> "chown uid:gid" for each file, but, getting it done will be more
> important than being pretty at some point.

You might check out tar.  At one time it had the option to use user and group 
names and not ids.  Hence the ids could change between the 2 systems.  It seems 
like it was on FreeBSD 3 or 4 that I last did that.

I just tried it with FreeBSD 7.2 creating a tar file.  Digging through the file 
it shows the ascii names for owner and group - not uid/gid.  I un-tar'd it on a 
Mac and sure enough it used the names and the uids are quite different for the 
two systems._______________________________________________
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"

Reply via email to