M.Lewis wrote:
>
> On 07/27/2010 09:15 AM, Ron Bergin wrote:
[snip]
>>
>> If you don't want to use the original UID's, then the
>> first thing that
>> I can think of is to:
>>
>> 1) use useradd to create the new account
>>
>> 2) scp or rsync the original home directory to the new
>> server
>>
>>
On 07/27/2010 09:15 AM, Ron Bergin wrote:
On Jul 26, 5:58 pm, ca...@cajuninc.com ("M.Lewis") wrote:
I'm migrating an old RedHat server to a new Debian server. In migrating
the data there's a problem in that on the RH server the UID starts at
500, on the Debian server the UID starts at 1000. Res
From: M.Lewis
> On 07/27/2010 01:11 AM, Shlomi Fish wrote:
>> On Tuesday 27 Jul 2010 03:58:06 M.Lewis wrote:
>>> I'm migrating an old RedHat server to a new Debian server. In
migrating
>>> the data there's a problem in that on the RH server the UID starts
at
>>> 500, on the Debian server the UID s
On Jul 26, 5:58 pm, ca...@cajuninc.com ("M.Lewis") wrote:
> I'm migrating an old RedHat server to a new Debian server. In migrating
> the data there's a problem in that on the RH server the UID starts at
> 500, on the Debian server the UID starts at 1000. Resulting in something
> like this:
>
> Old
On 07/27/2010 01:11 AM, Shlomi Fish wrote:
On Tuesday 27 Jul 2010 03:58:06 M.Lewis wrote:
I'm migrating an old RedHat server to a new Debian server. In migrating
the data there's a problem in that on the RH server the UID starts at
500, on the Debian server the UID starts at 1000. Resulting in
On Tuesday 27 Jul 2010 03:58:06 M.Lewis wrote:
> I'm migrating an old RedHat server to a new Debian server. In migrating
> the data there's a problem in that on the RH server the UID starts at
> 500, on the Debian server the UID starts at 1000. Resulting in something
> like this:
>
> Old User