Ok, so is the normal usage to choose one user account per system to be able
to use tarsnap with a given tarsnap account? I'm thinking I don't want to
use "root" for this (doesn't seem safe).



On Mon, Jul 15, 2013 at 7:19 PM, Colin Percival <[email protected]>wrote:

> On 07/15/13 07:58, Chris Brooks wrote:
> > I've created a cache directory in the default /usr/local/tarsnap-cache
> location,
> > but I'm getting the "can't sanitize permissions" error message.
> >
> > Looking at the tarsnap source, it looks like tarsnap is trying to set the
> > permissions such that only the owner can use this directory. (Right?)
> Since the
> > user I'm logged in as isn't the owner of this directory, that isn't
> working for me.
> >
> > What is the expectation for how the cache directory will be setup?
> Should I
> > create a cache directory in my home directory and use that instead? But
> what
> > happens if I want to use tarsnap under a different username later? (For
> instance
> > from a cron job.) Does each user need it's own cache directory?
>
> You need one cache directory per tarsnap key file.  Usually this means one
> cache
> directory per system, since most people only have one tarsnap key file
> which is
> used for all the backups from a particular box.
>
> --
> Colin Percival
> Security Officer Emeritus, FreeBSD | The power to serve
> Founder, Tarsnap | www.tarsnap.com | Online backups for the truly paranoid
>

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