$Conf{XferLogLevel} = 3;
$Conf{BackupZeroFilesIsFatal} = '0';
*$Conf{BackupFilesExclude} = undef;*
I tried this, but the same results.
But I think Holger nailed it with the --one-file-system arg. And you got
it ... backing up a NAS where each sharepoint is also a separate mountpoint.
Thanks,
Hi,
Kris Lou via BackupPC-users wrote on 2018-09-27 15:22:20 -0700
[[BackupPC-users] 4.2.1 Rsync and BackupFilesOnly]:
> [...]
> Need More Eyes!
8-)
> $Conf{BackupFilesOnly} = {
> '*' => [
> '/SysData'
> ]
> };
This is translated by BackupPC to what you see below - --include=/SysData
On 28/09/18 08:22, Kris Lou via BackupPC-users wrote:
Hey guys,
This is driving me nuts. I just installed a new instance of 4.2.1,
and for whatever reason, I can't get the
BackupFilesOnly/BackupFilesExclude to work correctly. Need More Eyes!
$Conf{BackupFilesOnly} = {
'*' => [
Hey guys,
This is driving me nuts. I just installed a new instance of 4.2.1, and for
whatever reason, I can't get the BackupFilesOnly/BackupFilesExclude to work
correctly. Need More Eyes!
$Conf{BackupFilesOnly} = {
'*' => [
'/SysData'
]
};
$Conf{RsyncShareName} = [
'/sharedfolders'
Typically how I do this is to restore to a different directory than the
original. This solves the problem of wanting to have the old and new
file available, so that they can be compared for forensics.
During the restore process you are presented with this dialog:
Option 1: Direct RestoreYou
Hello, this is my first time using this software for backup, and as such, I
need help.
Sometimes users request me to restore some sheets from older days, and they
need to maintain the new and the old sheet when I restore it. Is there any
way I can add a prefix or sufix to a restored file? i.e.