On Thu, 13 Sep 2001, Andy Goth wrote:
> On Thursday, September 13, 2001 10:28, you wrote:
> > On Thu, 13 Sep 2001, Andy Goth wrote:
> > > Can rsync be made to merge files? For instance, could I synchronize
> > > mboxes between multiple computers, even though they're all changing?
> >
> > Not if
On 13 Sep 2001, Andy Goth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'll avoid simultaneous changes, then, by remembering (or automating) updates
> before switching computers. I could probably do this pretty easily as some
> sort of an eth0-up script.
>
> > On the other hand, if only one system changes at
On 13 Sep 2001, Britton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Thu, 13 Sep 2001, Andy Goth wrote:
>
> > Can rsync be made to merge files? For instance, could I synchronize mboxes
> > between multiple computers, even though they're all changing?
>
> Not if they are changing simultaneously. You can'
On Thursday, September 13, 2001 10:28, you wrote:
> On Thu, 13 Sep 2001, Andy Goth wrote:
> > Can rsync be made to merge files? For instance, could I synchronize
> > mboxes between multiple computers, even though they're all changing?
>
> Not if they are changing simultaneously. You can't do tha
On Thu, 13 Sep 2001, Andy Goth wrote:
> Can rsync be made to merge files? For instance, could I synchronize mboxes
> between multiple computers, even though they're all changing?
Not if they are changing simultaneously. You can't do that at all,
without a distributed filesystem with locking.
Can rsync be made to merge files? For instance, could I synchronize mboxes
between multiple computers, even though they're all changing?
I have _serious_ doubts, because I think it would take a diff3, but a friend
mentioned it, so I had to ask.
--
Andy Goth | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://n
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
librsync 0.9.5 is released from rproxy.samba.org. This release
contains small but important bug fixes.
Changes in 0.9.5:
* Bugfix patch from Shirish Hemant Phatak
MD5 checksum:
df1c35520e4b0bf9d6d7ac813ba86a14 *librsync-0.9.5.tar.gz
- --
Marti
I'm finding even less on rsync and SSL. I would have imagined someone
would have done something with this already, but apparently not. So
I guess I need to ask and see for sure: has anyone worked on issues of
using rsync via SSL, such as with stunnel? I want to have encrypted
access, either ano
On 12 Sep 2001, Michelene Chon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> We are using rsync and have noticed that it fails to copy hidden
> directories.
My guess is that you're using a wildcard and your shell isn't expanding
that wildcard to include dot dirs. For instance:
rsync -av /home/user/* remote:
Are there any clients and/or servers for Windows (clients only
for Win98/ME) which can use the rsync protocol, or especially
rsync over SSL (e.g. like stunnel, not ssh), which would allow
setting up some well controlled and secure bulk file exchanging
between Windows an Unix? SMB is not going to
On 12 Sep 2001, Michelene Chon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> We are using rsync and have noticed that it fails to copy hidden
> directories. I looked through the doc and it doesn't look like there's a
> flag to get rsync to not skip hidden (dot) directories. Am I missing
> something or is this B
Hi,
I have managed to test this same transfer reliably with the
Linux boxes and open-ssh, but I am in trouble with the
OSF1 4.0 (Digital Unix) being the server sending files from a single
directory to the HP/UX 11 - being the client
The 'sshd2' (and ssh2) in both ends is installed as ro
Michelene,
We use rsync (2.4.6) a lot and it copies dot-directories for us. I
suspect you've
got a problem with the command line you're using, the following is an
example
of what we use:-
rsync -ae "ssh -C -x" --delete machine_a:/home/ /backups/machine_a/home/
all the usual dot-directories i
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