Hi Richard,
Richard Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Try adding -e ssh to your rsync command.
Search for -e in the rsync man page for an example.
===
This is the crontab entry (in rmason's crontab):
0,15,30,45 * * * * rmason /usr/bin/rsync -av /home/rmason
Am Samstag, 3. November 2007 schrieb Roger Mason:
Hello,
I'm trying to use rsync to back up my home directory on mymachine to
another machine (backup_machine) using a cron job.
Which cron?
This is the crontab entry (in rmason's crontab):
0,15,30,45 * * * * rmason /usr/bin/rsync -av
Grant emailgrant at gmail.com writes:
I'm looking for an easy way to encode the video files I acquire into a
single format and level of quality. It would also be nice to be able
to easily burn a DVD of the resultant file that will play on a home
DVD player. I'm sure there are at least
On 11/4/07, James [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Here's a article that may help you make video's quickly:
http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/9005
On the articles note, check this Wiki entry [1].
[1] http://gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_DVD_to_Matroska
Regards,
Liviu
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On Sunday 04 November 2007, Roger Mason wrote:
Thanks for the reply. Unfortunately that did not work, the same error
ocurs.
This may not be applicable, but I run rdiff-backup from cron on many machine
with no problems at all. It uses librsync, so may be of interest to you.
I have done a similar thing at work, except what I do is first create an
ssh tunnel, then rsync to the locally listening port. Works perfectly.
In my setup the remote server is running an SSH server which is not
accessible directly. Maybe this will help you.
#!/bin/bash
SSL_COMMAND=ssh -p
Hi Dirk,
Dirk Heinrichs [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Am Samstag, 3. November 2007 schrieb Roger Mason:
Hello,
I'm trying to use rsync to back up my home directory on mymachine to
another machine (backup_machine) using a cron job.
Which cron?
vixie-cron
This is the crontab entry (in
Hi Steve,
Steve Dommett [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Sunday 04 November 2007, Roger Mason wrote:
Thanks for the reply. Unfortunately that did not work, the same error
ocurs.
This may not be applicable, but I run rdiff-backup from cron on many machine
with no problems at all. It uses
Hi Ralph,
Ralph Slooten [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I have done a similar thing at work, except what I do is first create
an ssh tunnel, then rsync to the locally listening port. Works
perfectly. In my setup the remote server is running an SSH server
which is not accessible directly. Maybe
On Sunday 04 November 2007, Roger Mason wrote:
Did you have to do anything special to make it work from cron?
No, but then the crontab entry is simply:
47 4 * * * /root/backup.sh
The backup.sh is essentially:
rdiff-backup \
--print-statistics \
--exclude /mnt \
--exclude /dev \
Please, please, please do not top-post. :(
Be lucky,
Neil
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Roger Mason wrote:
I have passwordless ssh between mymachine and backup_machine and the
rsync command in the crontab runs perfectly from the command line.
Does someone know what else needs to be done to get this (seemingly
simple!) task to work?
How have you setup the passwordless ssh? If
On Sunday 04 November 2007, Shawn Haggett wrote:
Roger Mason wrote:
How have you setup the passwordless ssh? If your using keys with the ssh
keyagent, then when the command is run in cron it wouldn't know where to
find your ssh-agent...
Shawn
I use a use a key with no password without
After a recent update, dhcpcd won't stay dead. I've got it
configured to time out in 7 seconds:
/etc/conf.d/net
config_eth0=( dhcp )
dhcpcd_eth0=-t 7
That sort of works, dhcpcd dies and returns 0 after 7 seconds
if there is no server. The startup script gives up on that
interface and goes on
How does the kernel (2.6.22) determine the order of SATA drives (sda,
sdb, etc.) when it boots up?
Tony
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Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.
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On 2007-11-05, Grant Edwards [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
However, after a recent update, it now appears that a second
instance of dhcpcd is getting started immediately, and it runs
forever, filling my system log with a never-ending stream of
useless spew like this:
[...]
The second instance of
Anthony E. Caudel wrote:
How does the kernel (2.6.22) determine the order of SATA drives (sda,
sdb, etc.) when it boots up?
I just checked my computer, and sda is the drive plugged in
the first sata-port, and sdb the one in the second port
(according to the info in motherboard manual).
Maybe
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