Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers recursive copy into a directory and all its subdirectories... Post 302606084 by EinsteinMcfly on Friday 9th of March 2012 01:37:40 PM
Old 03-09-2012
Thanks very much guys! That works perfectly.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

recursive copy of hidden files

I need to know how to copy hidden files recursively? cp -r sourceDir/* targetDir/. ignores the hidden files. Thank you!! (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: usfrog
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

copy certain files from subdirectories

Hi all, I'd very grateful for some help with the following. I have a variable number of subdirectories each of which contain a uniquely names results file of the form Results*.dat. I would like to search through all subdirectories and copy out these results file to another directory so that... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: iomaire
3 Replies

3. Programming

recursive copy of the directory

I want to copy a directory recursively ( it again has directories) and the directory is on windows and is nfsmounted in vxWorks, i am using unix to develop the code for this, can any one suggest me how to copy the directories recursively. (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: deepthi.s
7 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Recursive copy to a RANDOM name

Dear Group, after trying numerous suggestions and racking my brain I cannot manage something which seems so simple. Essentiallly, I would like to perform a recursive copy to a destination but give it a random name. I assumed (incorrectly) that the following would work: cp -r... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: xerexes
10 Replies

5. AIX

recursive archive directories and subdirectories

Hi everyone, Maybe this is simple question for many of you, but I get confused.:confused: How to archive a parent directory which contains some subdirectories and some files? I have searched this forum, there are some commands like tar,etc, I tried but can not be implemented in my system.... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: wilsonSurya
6 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

help with recursive copy command

Hi Guys, I am experiencing a problem right now while copying a directory as well as its subdirectories to my target directory. I know this is a very simple UNIX command using cp -R source directory target directory. but unfortunatley while doing this an error comes up on the command line saying... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Knowledge_Xfer
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Copying subdirectories of a directory to some other directory and renaming them

Hi, I am a newbie in shell scripting. I have to copy a particular sub-directory (data) from a large no. of directories (all in the same folder) and paste them to another directory ( /home/hubble/data ) and then rename all the subdirectories (data) as the name of its parent directory. please... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: sholay
8 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

recursive search and copy

Hello again. Well, I need help again sooner as I thought. Now I want to search for files with a known name within all subdirs, and copy the to differently named files in the same directory. For example if I had only one file to copy, I would just usecp fileName newFileNamebut to do this... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cabaciucia
1 Replies

9. HP-UX

Recursive copy of Folders with files

Dear All, I will appreciate any help received. Our system is running on hpux v1 My problem is as follows: We have many customer folders with name fd000100, fd000101 and so on e.g. (Testrun)(testsqa):/>ll /TESTrun/fd000100 total 48 drwxrwx--- 2 fq000100 test 96 Jun 27 2004... (17 Replies)
Discussion started by: mhbd
17 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Recursive (Into subdirectories) ffmpeg generate jpg from video

My question is how to modify my existing script to generate from videos (mp4,avi,mkv etc...) jpegs via ffmpeg and keep folder name of generated jpg file? So if i have video in /home/videos/MyParty2009/SOmeDirR/VideoSomeTitle.mp4 and it will generate jpg with name of MyParty2009.jpg so the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ZerO13
2 Replies
DSYNC(1)							      Dovecot								  DSYNC(1)

NAME
dsync - Dovecot's mailbox synchronization utility SYNOPSIS
dsync [options] mirror location2 dsync [options] backup location2 DESCRIPTION
dsync is Dovecot's mailbox synchronization utility. It can be used for several different use cases: Two-way synchronization of mailboxes in different servers (via ssh(1)), creating backups of mails to a remote server, and convert mailboxes from/to different mailbox formats. The syncing is done as perfectly as possible: an IMAP or a POP3 client shouldn't be able to notice any differences between the two mail- boxes. Two-way syncing means that it's safe to do any kind of modifications in both sides, and dsync will merge the changes without losing any changes done on either side. This is possible because dsync can access Dovecot's index logs that keep track of changes. It's of course possible to have conflicts during merging, these are resolved in a safe way. See the dsync design document for more information. dsync uses the same configuration files as the rest of Dovecot (via doveconf binary). The entire configuration can be changed by giving -c parameter to another configuration file, or using -o parameter to override specific settings. When executing a remote dsync program it works the same way: it uses its own local configuration. dsync can be run completely standalone. It doesn't require any Dovecot server processes to be running, except when using -u parameter to do a userdb lookup from auth process. dsync can currently sync only one user at a time. If you want to dsync all users, you'll need to get a list of all users and execute dsync separately for each one. Any errors are written to stderr. OPTIONS
dsync recognizes the following command line options: -c config-file read configuration from the given config-file. By default /etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf will be used. -C alt_char Specifies an alter- native mailbox name character. If source and destination mailbox formats are different, it's possible that on one side there exists a mailbox name that isn't valid for the other side. These invalid mailbox names are fixed by replacing such invalid characters with the given alt_char. The default is '_'. -D Activates debug messages and makes dsync more verbose. -f Makes dsync run in "full sync" mode rather than "fast sync" mode. In fast sync mode dsync might skip syncing a mailbox, if both locations had modified it equally many times (i.e. highest-modseqs were equal), but with different changes. -k Preserve the existing environment variables, useful when using dsync with the SSH agent. -m mailbox Specifies the mailbox that should be synchronized or from which mails should be converted. The default is to synchronize all respectively convert from all mailboxes. -o setting=value Overrides the configuration setting from /etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf and from the userdb with the given value. In order to override multiple settings, the -o option may be specified multiple times. -R Reverse backup direction, so mails in location2 are backed up to default mail location. -u user Specifies that the userdb lookup for the given user should be done and used to set up the environment (uid, gid, home, etc.). By default the system user's current environment will be used. -v Makes dsync more verbose. ARGUMENTS
location2 The first mail location is based on configuration (mail_location or userdb settings). It's also possible to override it by giving -o mail_location=mail_location setting. This parameter defines the other mail location that is used. If the location is on local filesystem, you can use a regular mail_location, such as maildir:/backup/user/Maildir If the location is on a remote server, dsync can ssh to it by giving host or user@host as the parameter. If user is specified, it's given as -u parameter to dsync, not to ssh. The ssh username is always the default. The final way to specify a location is to give a full command line or a path to a script that executes the dsync. For example: ssh mailuser@host dsync -u user COMMANDS
dsync provides the following commands: mirror Does a two-way synchronization between two mail locations. Changes in both locations are synchronized to the other one, without losing any changes made by either of them. Any potential UID conflicts are resolved by giving them new UIDs. backup Backup mails from default mail location to location2 (or vice versa, if -R parameter is given). No changes are ever done to the source location. Any changes done in destination are discarded. EXIT STATUS
dsync will exit with one of the following values: 0 Synchronization was done perfectly. 2 Synchronization was done without errors, but some changes couldn't be done, so the mailboxes aren't perfectly synchronized. Running dsync again usually fixes this. Typically this occurs for message modification sequences with newly created mailboxes. It can also occur if one of the mailboxes change during the syncing. 1, >2 Synchronization failed. EXAMPLE
MIRRORING Mirror mailboxes to a remote server. Any errors are written to stderr. dsync -u username mirror username@example.com If you need more complex parameters to ssh, you can use e.g.: dsync -u username mirror ssh -i id_dsa.dovecot mailuser@example.com dsync -u username CONVERTING Assuming that the mail_location setting in /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-mail.conf is set to: mail_location = mdbox:~/mdbox, a logged in system user may convert her/his mails from its Maildir in her/his home directory to the mdbox mailbox format. The user has to execute the com- mand: dsync mirror maildir:~/Maildir If you want to do this without any downtime, you can do the conversion one user at a time. Initially: o Configuration uses mail_location = maildir:~/Maildir o Set up the possibility of doing per-user mail location using userdb extra fields. Then for each user: 1. Run dsync mirror once to do the initial conversion. 2. Run dsync mirror again, because the initial conversion could have taken a while and new changes could have occurred during it. This second time only applies changes, so it should be fast. 3. Update mail extra field in userdb to mdbox:~/mdbox. If you're using auth cache, you need to flush it. 4. Wait for a few seconds and then kill the user's all existing imap and pop3 sessions (that are still using maildir). 5. Run dsync mirror once more to apply final changes that were possibly done. After this there should be no changes to Maildir, because the user's mail location has been changed and all existing processes using it have been killed. Once all users have been converted, you can set the default mail_location to mdbox and remove the per-user mail locations from userdb. REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs, including doveconf -n output, to the Dovecot Mailing List <dovecot@dovecot.org>. Information about reporting bugs is avail- able at: http://dovecot.org/bugreport.html SEE ALSO
doveadm(1), doveadm-kick(1), doveconf(1), dovecot(1) Additional resources: dsync design http://wiki2.dovecot.org/Design/Dsync Dovecot v2.1 2011-01-16 DSYNC(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:21 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy