Still no luck. I removed the sudo and am now trying a backup of a directory containing only a single file that belongs to the backuppc user on the client. I can see the rsync --server process running on the client, but it looks like nothing is being backed up. On the backuppc server, the file NewFileList for this client has a size 0.
In comparison, I ran a full backup of another host, also running RHEL 6 and using the same ssh command with sudo, in 17 minutes. Shang-Lin On 04/09/2012 07:19 PM, Les Mikesell wrote: > On Mon, Apr 9, 2012 at 8:22 PM, Shang-Lin Chen<sc...@gps.caltech.edu> wrote: >> On 04/09/2012 01:20 PM, Pedro M. S. Oliveira wrote: >> >> Check out selinux, use audit2allow to enable ssh root access. >> >> selinux is disabled on this host, and the user on the backup server is >> logging into the backuppc account on the host and running sudo, so I don't >> think it needs ssh access to root. >> > Does it work if you ssh rsync directly instead of using sudo? If you > can't ssh as root, you could try a test backing up a directory another > user could read. > -- Shang-Lin Chen Southern California Earthquake Data Center (SCEDC) System administrator/Programmer http://www.data.scec.org ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Better than sec? Nothing is better than sec when it comes to monitoring Big Data applications. Try Boundary one-second resolution app monitoring today. Free. http://p.sf.net/sfu/Boundary-dev2dev _______________________________________________ BackupPC-users mailing list BackupPC-users@lists.sourceforge.net List: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users Wiki: http://backuppc.wiki.sourceforge.net Project: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/