On 5/2/16, Steve Schow wrote:
> scratch that, I didn’t read you instructions carefully enough. Not sure
> what the -R is…but it works if I copy and paste your line.
>
> the resulting file, is that an actual atomically sound repo file, or some
> other kind of file that would
scratch that, I didn’t read you instructions carefully enough. Not sure what
the -R is…but it works if I copy and paste your line.
the resulting file, is that an actual atomically sound repo file, or some other
kind of file that would need to be used for an import restore of some kind?
On
On 5/2/16, Steve Schow wrote:
> On May 2, 2016, at 3:21 PM, Richard Hipp wrote:
>
>> If you want to make a guaranteed-consistent backup copy of a
>> repository fail named "x.fossil" you can run the following command:
>>
>>fossil sql -R x.fossil ".backup
On May 2, 2016, at 3:21 PM, Richard Hipp wrote:
> If you want to make a guaranteed-consistent backup copy of a
> repository fail named "x.fossil" you can run the following command:
>
>fossil sql -R x.fossil ".backup x.bu"
When I try that I get -R unknown option. ??
>
On 5/2/16, Steve Schow wrote:
> I wish to include my fossil repos in backup to cloud backup service.
>
> what is the best approach for doing this?
I run my own private cloud :-)
I lease cheap server slices from Linode and Hurricane Electric (at
geographically distributed data
On 02/05/16 22:17, Steve Schow wrote:
> I wish to include my fossil repos in backup to cloud backup service.
>
> what is the best approach for doing this? if a fossil operation is in the
> middle of trying to do something when the automated cloud backup daemon
> decides to backup the repo
I wish to include my fossil repos in backup to cloud backup service.
what is the best approach for doing this? if a fossil operation is in the
middle of trying to do something when the automated cloud backup daemon decides
to backup the repo file, I am presuming the backed up file could be in
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