Henri Shustak via rsync wrote: > If you are talking about SIP, then at present SSH will have full disk access > (as much as it can) by default. > > Take a look at this LBackup page which discusses this in more detail : > http://www.lbackup.org/developer/dealing_with_sip > > Hope that helps.
I think that that only applies to the sshd binary that comes with macOS. If you install a more recent version of openssh via macports or similar, it doesn't apply to that. It certainly doesn't apply to a macports-installed ssh client. In that case, you need to grant full disk access to Terminal.app or similar, and invoke the ssh client from there. It's not possible to grant full disk access to an arbitrary binary executable via System Preferences. You can only do that for "applications". I'm not sure what aplication you would need to grant full disk access to in order to give a macports-installed sshd daemon full disk access. cheers, raf -- Please use reply-all for most replies to avoid omitting the mailing list. To unsubscribe or change options: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/rsync Before posting, read: http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html