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Full Discussion: list of files
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users list of files Post 302131705 by bkan77 on Monday 13th of August 2007 09:42:16 AM
Old 08-13-2007
list of files

Quote:
Originally Posted by porter
You could use "ssh ... find ..." to get the list of the files on both machines and use "diff" to give you the list of what the differences are.
thnks for the reply
but what i wanted was ,that i dont watn to login onto the remote server manually,i want my script to do that and it must automatically detect find out the list of files and delete the old one's on the remote server to make the list look identical on both the source and the target

thnk you,its urgent so pls any kind of idea is appreciated
 

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RCP(1C) 																   RCP(1C)

NAME
rcp - remote file copy SYNOPSIS
rcp [ -p ] file1 file2 rcp [ -p ] [ -r ] file ... directory DESCRIPTION
Rcp copies files between machines. Each file or directory argument is either a remote file name of the form ``rhost:path'', or a local file name (containing no `:' characters, or a `/' before any `:'s). If the -r option is specified and any of the source files are directories, rcp copies each subtree rooted at that name; in this case the destination must be a directory. By default, the mode and owner of file2 are preserved if it already existed; otherwise the mode of the source file modified by the umask(2) on the destination host is used. The -p option causes rcp to attempt to preserve (duplicate) in its copies the modification times and modes of the source files, ignoring the umask. If path is not a full path name, it is interpreted relative to your login directory on rhost. A path on a remote host may be quoted (using , ", or ') so that the metacharacters are interpreted remotely. Rcp does not prompt for passwords; your current local user name must exist on rhost and allow remote command execution via rsh(1C). Rcp handles third party copies, where neither source nor target files are on the current machine. Hostnames may also take the form ``rname@rhost'' to use rname rather than the current user name on the remote host. The destination hostname may also take the form ``rhost.rname'' to support destination machines that are running 4.2BSD versions of rcp. SEE ALSO
cp(1), ftp(1C), rsh(1C), rlogin(1C) BUGS
Doesn't detect all cases where the target of a copy might be a file in cases where only a directory should be legal. Is confused by any output generated by commands in a .login, .profile, or .cshrc file on the remote host. 4.2 Berkeley Distribution May 12, 1986 RCP(1C)
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