[K12OSN] Simple RSYNC question

Rich McCue rmccue at law.uvic.ca
Thu Oct 6 18:46:42 UTC 2005


Perfect!  That did the trick.  I was using the --perms (or permissions) flag, but it didn't do the trick like the --archive flag.

Thanks.

Rich

-----Original Message-----
From: k12osn-bounces at redhat.com [mailto:k12osn-bounces at redhat.com] On Behalf Of Rob Owens
Sent: Thursday, October 06, 2005 9:53 AM
To: Support list for opensource software in schools.
Subject: RE: [K12OSN] Simple RSYNC question

Are you using the -a option?  That is supposed to
preserve permissions, among other things.  If you
don't want to use -a for some reason, you can specify
-p to preserve permissions.  But generally I think -a
is used because it preserves time stamps, group,
owner, permissions, links, etc., as well as recursing
down into the directory structure.

-Rob

--- Rich McCue <rmccue at law.uvic.ca> wrote:

> I'm sure I'm just missing a setting or something,
> but when I rsync data from one server to another all
> the files on the destination server are owned by the
> user that ran rsync.
>
> For example I have a server with a backup tape
> attached to it, and I run rsync from that machine to
> two other servers to get their data to the backup
> server. This works great, except for the file
> ownership thing... everything is owned by root after
> it gets to the backup server.
>
> Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.
>
> Rich
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: k12osn-bounces at redhat.com
> [mailto:k12osn-bounces at redhat.com] On Behalf Of Jim
> Kronebusch
> Sent: Thursday, October 06, 2005 6:29 AM
> To: Support list for opensource software in schools.
> Subject: RE: [K12OSN] Simple RSYNC question
>
> > One trick is to add -n to the options which will
> make rsync
> > not really do anything, but if you are also using
> -v it will show
> > you what would happen in a real run.   If
> everything looks
> > reasonable, then run it again without the -n to
> really do it.
> > When I build new servers I usually set the new one
> up with a
> > different name/ip address and rsync most stuff
> over ahead of
> > the switch and check that things generally work.
> Then at the
> > last minute I shut down services on the old
> server, do a
> > final rsync of user data like /home and
> /var/spool/mail with
> > the --delete option on.  This goes quickly unless
> there are a
> > lot of changes. Then I change the names and IP
> numbers on
> > both servers and reboot so in a few minutes more
> than a
> > reboot, the new box takes over.
>
> Thanks for the extra tips Les.  I might give it a go
> close of business
> today.  Keeping my fingers crossed :-)
>
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