On 2005-02-20 20:09:31 +0200, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
> If, however, you want to make changes to it, you must read and abide by
> the terms of the GPL in order to do that. In essence, you can do
> whatever you like, so long as you:
> 1. Don't change the license. I.e. - it must still be GPL (along
fred wu wrote:
Dear All,
I have searched the email archive but i didn't find a clear
answer(maybe I miss it) ^^
1. Does rsync run on TCP/IP?
Rsync has a server mode. Read the manual, and particularly the
"--daemon" option.
2. Without ssh, then rsync will be transferred in plain text?
If y
fred wu wrote:
Dear All,
I am very new in open source. Please give me some ideas on the
following questions.
What is the liscense of rsync for commerical use? Do I need to pay
for commercial use? Is it still GPL?
A similar case is MySQL. It has commercial liscense for business use.
Any help wil
[Debian sarge/testing; linux-2.6.8; rsync-2.6.3]
Are there any problem using 'rsync' to copy /dev (and /.dev under a
2.6.x linux kernel)?
Should those dirs be copied in a default 'rsync' configuration?
Might there be a *standard* global configuration file that is
excluding /dev and /.dev?
These
Dear All,
I have searched the email archive but i didn't find a clear
answer(maybe I miss it) ^^
1. Does rsync run on TCP/IP?
2. Without ssh, then rsync will be transferred in plain text?
3. Does rsync support Samba? Am I true to say that rsync, which is
mainly on user authetication, is tr
Dear All,
I am very new in open source. Please give me some ideas on the
following questions.
What is the liscense of rsync for commerical use? Do I need to pay
for commercial use? Is it still GPL?
A similar case is MySQL. It has commercial liscense for business use.
Any help will be a