On 8/6/06, Jeffrey Ellis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi--
Ok. I've now run into the next thing I can't find in man, and this time, I
googled as well:
--exclude /afs/\*
I thought you could just say:
--exclude /afs/* or even --exclude /afs/
To exclude the entire afs directory. Can you ex
Title: Escape character for --exclude?
Hi--
Ok. I’ve now run into the next thing I can’t find in man, and this time, I googled as well:
--exclude /afs/\*
I thought you could just say:
--exclude /afs/* or even --exclude /afs/
To exclude the entire afs directory. Can you explain what the purp
Title: Re: Newbie: What does -e do?
on 8/6/06 5:00 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > rsync can be used in conjunction with several transport protocols. In
> > one incarnation, you can tell rsync about a command (supplied with the
> > -e command line option) that'll execut
I've been running
some tests on files created by rsync and noticing fragmentation issues. I
started the testing because our 5TB array started performing very slowly and it
appears fragmentation was the culprit. The test I conducted was straighforward:
1. Copy over a 49GB file. Analyzed wit
https://bugzilla.samba.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1890
[EMAIL PROTECTED] changed:
What|Removed |Added
CC||[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--- Comment #2
https://bugzilla.samba.org/show_bug.cgi?id=4001
--- Comment #2 from [EMAIL PROTECTED] 2006-08-06 02:06 MST ---
Allright. I would only mention '--server' and '--sender' briefly as internal
commands, and will find a section in which I'll describe the mechanism used by
rsync to do zero-s