On Wed, Feb 24, 2010 at 21:37:05 -0600,
Robert Nichols wrote:
>
> rsync can be used to maintain a mirror of a file system as long as you
> aren't particular about preserving metadata such as access times and
> inode numbers. The drawback is that a mirror is for one point in time
> only. If yo
On Thu, Feb 25, 2010 at 1:26 PM, Roberto Ragusa [via Fedora Users]
wrote:
> Robert Nichols wrote:
>> rsync can be used to maintain a mirror of a file system as long as you
>> aren't particular about preserving metadata such as access times and
>> inode numbers. The drawback is that a mirror is f
On Thu, 2010-02-25 at 14:25 +0100, Roberto Ragusa wrote:
> Robert Nichols wrote:
> > rsync can be used to maintain a mirror of a file system as long as you
> > aren't particular about preserving metadata such as access times and
> > inode numbers. The drawback is that a mirror is for one point in
Robert Nichols wrote:
> rsync can be used to maintain a mirror of a file system as long as you
> aren't particular about preserving metadata such as access times and
> inode numbers. The drawback is that a mirror is for one point in time
> only. If you want multiple backup levels you have to have
On Wed, 24 Feb 2010 21:37:05 -0600
Robert Nichols wrote:
> If you want multiple backup levels you have to have storage for
> several complete mirrors.
Depends on how picky you are about the structure of said backups.
I use the delete option to move the changed files to a deleted
directory rather
On 02/24/2010 08:18 PM, Antonio Olivares wrote:
> Dear fellow Fedora users& list members,
>
> On the kmail thread, sarcasm included :), I noticed the references to rsync
> and partimage respectively. Both are recommended to make backups in order to
> prevent from BAD UPDATES to render your mach
On Wednesday 24 February 2010 22:18:19 Antonio Olivares wrote:
> I have a copy of SystemRescueCD, GpartedLiveCD, in case either of the two
> are handy in this situation. I have run rawhide and have been lucky to
> get back up from those BAD UPDATES once in a while and the test list is
> very ge
I don't have any command line examples to give you, but I once used
PartImage and GParted to successfully migrate a three disk RAID 0 NTFS
filesystem on a Windows Small Business Server 2003 to a RAID 5.
My friend set up the RAID 0 in eager anticipation of blazingly fast
storage I/O, only later to