Ok, I follow you right, you want to mirror all the files from remote to local (not sure if changes to local need to go remote though). After you rsync you want to (do something) to all the files individually that had been changed (lets say perhaps you want to dos2unix them). Well obviously after you dos2unix them, and you run rsync again your going to mirror all those files again since you changed them which is a problem.
Assuming you know this and are copying the files elsewhere after being proicessed, rather that using rsync's --out-format or --log-format and then grinding on that you can simply something akin to this, as long as the timestamps aren't being copied over and your just using size/crc to do the mirror.
Last edited by Yogesh Sawant; 12-10-2010 at 05:16 AM..
Reason: added code tags
I'm moving a list of files of some extension and I wish to output the moved filenames into a text file, I tried using the command below, but after all the files are moved, I got a blank file.
find /abc/temp -type f -mtime +365 \( -name "*.bak" -o -name "*.log" \) -exec mv -f {} /junk \; >>... (3 Replies)
Hi everyone,
In a directory I have files with various extensions. I would like to move all the files ending in .L2 into a directory: ~/test. But I would also like to show which files are being moved. Of course I could type:
$ ls *.L2
$ mv *.L2 ~/test
Is there a way I can combine these two... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I want to know the user ID who moved a file from one directory to another Directory.
Example: File1 created by user A is present in dirA
then some one has moved it to dirB using "mv" command
I want to know the user ID who moved the file to dirB.
As far as i know "ls -lrt" command... (1 Reply)
Hi.
I am actually doing all of this on OSX, but using unix apps and script.
I have built my own transparent rsync/open directory/mobility/etc set of scripts for the firm I work at, and it is all almost complete except for ONE THING.
I have the classic problem with rsync where if a user... (0 Replies)
Hi
This is my situation
I have files on the left which I want to copy to the right. Once the files are copied to the right, they are processed and then deleted. The next time rsync runs I dont want it to copy the same files again, it should only copy any new files to the right.
I have been... (4 Replies)
Hi ULF,
Good day! I'm working on a LINUX Suse server and I have an entry in CRON which looks like this below:
0 5 * * * /usr/bin/find /opt/nsfw/var/partition-all/ -name "RCV_SASN*" -exec mv '{}' /opt/nsfw/var/rcv-archive/ \;
This tool runs everyday at 5am and it will just move the files... (7 Replies)
I'm writing a script for searching substring in file content and then moving found files. So far I've wrote script shown below
grep -lir 'stringtofind' $1 | xargs mv -t $2
How can i count number of files moved? (4 Replies)
I Have a requirement where i have to sync two directories one on source location server A and other on destination location server B
as i do not have ssh access from server A----------->B I am doing rsync from server B,
The Requirement is as follows
Two directories on the source and... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: James0806
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
rsync_selinux
rsync_selinux(8) rsync Selinux Policy documentation rsync_selinux(8)NAME
rsync_selinux - Security Enhanced Linux Policy for the rsync daemon
DESCRIPTION
Security-Enhanced Linux secures the rsync server via flexible mandatory access control.
FILE_CONTEXTS
SELinux requires files to have an extended attribute to define the file type. Policy governs the access daemons have to these files. If
you want to share files using the rsync daemon, you must label the files and directories public_content_t. So if you created a special
directory /var/rsync, you would need to label the directory with the chcon tool.
chcon -t public_content_t /var/rsync
To make this change permanent (survive a relabel), use the semanage command to add the change to file context configuration:
semanage fcontext -a -t public_content_t "/var/rsync(/.*)?"
This command adds the following entry to /etc/selinux/POLICYTYPE/contexts/files/file_contexts.local:
/var/rsync(/.*)? system_u:object_r:publix_content_t:s0
Run the restorecon command to apply the changes:
restorecon -R -v /var/rsync/
SHARING FILES
If you want to share files with multiple domains (Apache, FTP, rsync, Samba), you can set a file context of public_content_t and pub-
lic_content_rw_t. These context allow any of the above domains to read the content. If you want a particular domain to write to the pub-
lic_content_rw_t domain, you must set the appropriate boolean. allow_DOMAIN_anon_write. So for rsync you would execute:
setsebool -P allow_rsync_anon_write=1
BOOLEANS
system-config-selinux is a GUI tool available to customize SELinux policy settings.
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Dan Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>.
SEE ALSO selinux(8), rsync(1), chcon(1), setsebool(8), semanage(8)dwalsh@redhat.com 17 Jan 2005 rsync_selinux(8)