On Tue, 18 Jan 2005, Mike Todd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Why does this not include? I have tried many variations including > adding an exclude command. > > Includes.txt: > + //aBackup/* > + //apic/* > - /*
As Wayne pointed out, you are not matching anything by those names in the rsync source directory, which is *not necesarily* the root directory. You don't need double slashes, btw. > rsync --verbose --progress --stats -vv --recursive -e "ssh -p 2423" > --include-from=includes.txt rsynchost: Thanks for including the actual command this time. It helps a lot. Your source directory is your home directory on "rsynchost:". This is *not* the root directory on the source system, which is apparently where the aBackup directory is located. Include/exclude paths with leading slashes are still relative to the source/target directories - they are not absolute filesystem paths. So /aBackup/ refers to an aBackup subdirectory in your home directory. Also - you don't specify a target - so rsync will just give you a listing of file information (like ls -l). [ snip ] > excluding directory .kde because of pattern /* > excluding file .emacs because of pattern /* > excluding file .bash_logout because of pattern /* > excluding file .bash_profile because of pattern /* > excluding file .bashrc because of pattern /* > excluding file .gtkrc because of pattern /* > excluding file .bash_history because of pattern /* > excluding file .viminfo because of pattern /* Those are all from your home directory, no? Nothing matches your include-from patterns, so you only get the home directory. > received 1 names > done > drwxr-xr-x 4096 2005/01/16 . That is the "ls -l" output from rsync for the source directory. That is the only output since everything else was excluded. [ snip ] > C:\abackup>Pause > Press any key to continue . . . That is why I think that your aBackup directory is in the root directory on rsyncsource:. If you want to copy /aBackup/, etc. from rsyncsource: to /aBackup/, etc. on your local machine, specify the root directory on the source and the target: rsync --verbose --progress --stats -vv --recursive -e "ssh -p 2423" --include-from=includes.txt rsynchost:/ / ^ ^ But using a root directory for a target can be very dangerous if you later add --delete and don't get things quite right. I strongly suggest always using --dry-run (or -n) to test things out. -- John Van Essen Univ of MN Alumnus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- To unsubscribe or change options: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/rsync Before posting, read: http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html