On Tue, Sep 12, 2006 at 09:56:56PM -0400, Jeremy Muhlich wrote: > http://duplicity.nongnu.org/ > > >From the site: > > Duplicity backs directories by producing encrypted tar-format volumes > and uploading them to a remote or local file server. Because duplicity > uses librsync, the incremental archives are space efficient and only > record the parts of files that have changed since the last backup. > Because duplicity uses GnuPG to encrypt and/or sign these archives, > they will be safe from spying and/or modification by the server. > > In theory many protocols for connecting to a file server could be > supported; so far ssh/scp, local file access, rsync, ftp, and Amazon > S3 have been written. Currently duplicity supports deleted files, full > unix permissions, directories, and symbolic links, fifos, and device > files, but not hard links.
I must be missing something - I see it *says* it supports S3, but neither the current CentOS RPM (0.4.1) or the source on the site (0.4.2) don't seem to actually support it? Is there a bleeding-edge version? -- Dan Boger [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ Boston-pm mailing list [email protected] http://mail.pm.org/mailman/listinfo/boston-pm

