On Fri, 19 Feb 2010, Henri Shustak wrote:
Maybe you are getting an I/O error. By default, rsync skips all
deletion of destination files when it gets an I/O error on the source,
to avoid erroneous deletion of destination files if the I/O error caused
them to be omitted from the file list. (This
On Wed, 17 Feb 2010, Matt McCutchen wrote:
On Sat, 2010-02-13 at 18:56 -0500, Charles Sprickman wrote:
I've been having a bear of a time tracking this down. I'm currently using
rsync to back a bunch of servers up to a ZFS pool on a server. I recently
noticed my deltas between ZFS
Howdy,
I've been having a bear of a time tracking this down. I'm currently using
rsync to back a bunch of servers up to a ZFS pool on a server. I recently
noticed my deltas between ZFS snapshots seemed a bit large, so I started
looking more closely at what was being backed up. Looking at so
Hello,
I've been using rsync to keep two boxes in sync until one replaces the
other. To make things a bit more to my liking and to make apache's
userdir config a bit simpler, I have added a number of symlinks in the new
machine's /home. Both boxes have hashed userdirs, ie: /home/a/auser,
/h
oked like a file had disappeared from
under rsync (deleted after the file list was built). This killed of
rsync. I'll try to repeat to get the full details.
Thanks,
Charles
> eric
>
>
> Charles Sprickman wrote:
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> > I've just st
ing on the very last file on the list.
Any ideas? What other information can I provide to track this down?
Thanks,
Charles
| Charles Sprickman | Internet Channel
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