Uwe Thiem wrote:
On 25 January 2006 06:46, Tom Smith wrote:
I read something some time ago that suggested if you transfer a
compressed file over a compressed SFTP connection, for example, that it
would take longer to transfer the data versus if only the data or the
connection was compressed.
Trenton Adams wrote:
Not possible
on a windows machine. :P
Wrong.
Alexander Skwar
--
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gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
I read something some time ago that suggested if you transfer a
compressed file over a compressed SFTP connection, for example,
that it
would take longer to transfer the data versus if only the data or the
connection was compressed. The reason, as I recall, had to do with
compressing already
It brings me great joy to know that my original post has spawned such
madness.
:-)
John Jolet wrote:
I read something some time ago that suggested if you transfer a
compressed file over a compressed SFTP connection, for example, that it
would take longer to transfer the data versus if only
Hey guys.
I've got this big fat backup server with no space left on the hard drive
to store a tar file. I'd like to pipe a tar through ssh, but not sure
what the command would be. Something to the effect of:
# cat /var/backup | ssh backup.homelan.com 'tar data.info.gz'
So that, the data is
On Jan 24, 2006, at 10:57 AM, Jeff wrote:
Hey guys.
I've got this big fat backup server with no space left on the hard
drive
to store a tar file. I'd like to pipe a tar through ssh, but not sure
what the command would be. Something to the effect of:
# cat /var/backup | ssh
Jeff wrote:
Hey guys.
I've got this big fat backup server with no space left on the hard drive
to store a tar file. I'd like to pipe a tar through ssh, but not sure
what the command would be. Something to the effect of:
# cat /var/backup | ssh backup.homelan.com 'tar data.info.gz'
So that, the
Jeff wrote:
Hey guys.
I've got this big fat backup server with no space left on the hard drive
to store a tar file. I'd like to pipe a tar through ssh, but not sure
what the command would be. Something to the effect of:
# cat /var/backup | ssh backup.homelan.com 'tar data.info.gz'
So
Not possible.
Wrong, we are unix sysadmins, the thing that more nearly resemble that
is : I've not time to do that ;-)
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Jan 24, 2006, at 11:20 AM, Tom Smith wrote:
Jeff wrote:
Hey guys.
I've got this big fat backup server with no space left on the hard
drive
to store a tar file. I'd like to pipe a tar through ssh, but not sure
what the command would be. Something to the effect of:
# cat /var/backup |
John Jolet wrote:
On Jan 24, 2006, at 11:20 AM, Tom Smith wrote:
Jeff wrote:
Hey guys.
I've got this big fat backup server with no space left on the hard
drive
to store a tar file. I'd like to pipe a tar through ssh, but not sure
what the command would be. Something to the effect of:
Tom you big jerk. LOL! jk man...
Well, I would call it, piping through a tunnel? Tunneling through a
pipe? The concept seems very *nix-like to me.
*shrug*
Thanks to all... wish me luck!
Tom Smith wrote:
John Jolet wrote:
On Jan 24, 2006, at 11:20 AM, Tom Smith wrote:
Jeff wrote:
Hey
On Jan 24, 2006, at 11:46 AM, Tom Smith wrote:
John Jolet wrote:
On Jan 24, 2006, at 11:20 AM, Tom Smith wrote:
Jeff wrote:
Hey guys.
I've got this big fat backup server with no space left on the hard
drive
to store a tar file. I'd like to pipe a tar through ssh, but not
sure
what
On Tue, 24 Jan 2006 10:20:10 -0700, Tom Smith wrote:
Not possible.
Why, is he using Windows?
I don't know how != not possible.
--
Neil Bothwick
Voting Democrat or Republican is like choosing a cabin in the Titanic.
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John Jolet wrote:
On Jan 24, 2006, at 11:46 AM, Tom Smith wrote:
John Jolet wrote:
On Jan 24, 2006, at 11:20 AM, Tom Smith wrote:
Jeff wrote:
Hey guys.
I've got this big fat backup server with no space left on the hard
drive
to store a tar file. I'd like to pipe a tar through ssh,
Well, perhaps old school has different meanings to different people.
:-) I was referring to the UNIX tools philosophy in which each
program
has a very specific use, similar to qmail (the original, unmodified
qmail, that is). And this is usually the direction I take when looking
for tools to
This example that Francesco illustrates seems to work pretty well. I
guess my main concern was with tar - would it be able to handle a
filesystem this large? Myself, I haven't seen or heard any scary stories
thus far. Anyone shed light on tar limitations?
Thanks for all the colorful replies.
:-)
DUH ME! Open mouth, insert face...
Ok, what I *meant* to say from post #1, is, the filesystem I'm
tarballing is quite large - 25g. The tar command should be able to
digest this, yes? Should I be worried?
Thanks again all.
Jeff wrote:
This example that Francesco illustrates seems to work pretty
On Jan 24, 2006, at 2:22 PM, Jeff wrote:
This example that Francesco illustrates seems to work pretty well. I
guess my main concern was with tar - would it be able to handle a
filesystem this large? Myself, I haven't seen or heard any scary
stories
thus far. Anyone shed light on tar
On Tuesday 24 January 2006 21:40, Jeff wrote:
DUH ME! Open mouth, insert face...
Ok, what I *meant* to say from post #1, is, the filesystem I'm
tarballing is quite large - 25g. The tar command should be able to
digest this, yes? Should I be worried?
Last week i back'ed up a machine with 4
Not possible
on a windows machine. :P
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Ernst Herzberg wrote:
On Tuesday 24 January 2006 21:40, Jeff wrote:
DUH ME! Open mouth, insert face...
Ok, what I *meant* to say from post #1, is, the filesystem I'm
tarballing is quite large - 25g. The tar command should be able to
digest this, yes? Should I be worried?
Last week i
On Jan 24, 2006, at 5:25 PM, Iain Buchanan wrote:
On Tue, 2006-01-24 at 17:23 +, Francesco Riosa wrote:
Jeff wrote:
Hey guys.
I've got this big fat backup server with no space left on the
hard drive
to store a tar file. I'd like to pipe a tar through ssh, but not
sure
what the
On Tuesday 24 January 2006 03:45 pm, John Jolet wrote:
(now, if only I'd backed up yesterday, before I did an accidental
`rm *`
instead of `rm *~`)
good thing none of US has ever done that...as root from the / on
a running production serverin the middle of month-end
--
On Tue, 2006-01-24 at 17:23 +, Francesco Riosa wrote:
Jeff wrote:
Hey guys.
I've got this big fat backup server with no space left on the hard drive
to store a tar file. I'd like to pipe a tar through ssh, but not sure
what the command would be. Something to the effect of:
# cat
On Jan 24, 2006, at 9:10 PM, Ow Mun Heng wrote:
On Tue, 2006-01-24 at 17:23 +, Francesco Riosa wrote:
Jeff wrote:
Hey guys.
I've got this big fat backup server with no space left on the
hard drive
to store a tar file. I'd like to pipe a tar through ssh, but not
sure
what the
On Tue, 2006-01-24 at 21:19 -0600, John Jolet wrote:
On Jan 24, 2006, at 9:10 PM, Ow Mun Heng wrote:
There's another way. This assumes your originating server's CPU is
slow/precious and you have a 16 way node on a backup server (HAHA!!)
tar cf - /var/backup | ssh backup.homelan.com gzip
John Jolet wrote:
On Jan 24, 2006, at 9:10 PM, Ow Mun Heng wrote:
On Tue, 2006-01-24 at 17:23 +, Francesco Riosa wrote:
Jeff wrote:
Hey guys.
I've got this big fat backup server with no space left on the hard
drive
to store a tar file. I'd like to pipe a tar through ssh, but not
On 25 January 2006 06:46, Tom Smith wrote:
I read something some time ago that suggested if you transfer a
compressed file over a compressed SFTP connection, for example, that it
would take longer to transfer the data versus if only the data or the
connection was compressed. The reason, as I
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