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Roger Oberholtzer shocked and awed us all by speaking:
> I thought (possibly incorrectly): rsync uses rsh on the client side to
> do the actual talking to the server. Try running rsync without rsh
> installed. And it expects rshd on the server side. You 'could' also run
> an rsyncd instead of a rshd on the server side, but us clients would be
> connecting on a different port (873). As we are not doing do, we are
> talking to your rshd. All rather Berkeley.

It can do that. But we don't have any of the 'r' commands installed on the 
mothership. rsyncd runs on 873. works awesome (usually)
- -- 
Douglas J Hunley (doug at hunley.homeip.net) - Linux User #174778
http://doug.hunley.homeip.net && http://www.linux-sxs.org

I used to sniff coke, but the ice cubes kept getting stuck in my nose...
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