sneakernet is a bit of a kludge in the first place if you have to do it in sections. Personally, I'd just use the mechanical drive every trip instead of trying to be 'clever' about it. Ideally you could just run gigabit ethernet and be done with it...
Here are two matching scripts which are a bit of a kludge themselves, creating 50 gigabyte portions of a tar file individually and extracting them individually, using pipes and fifos so it doesn't need to create more than one at once. Technically the data being fed into tar never breaks at the end of a file -- just stalls until the next file is read. It sees EOF by when the input file's actually missing.
Hi
I am trying to create tar files of a whole bunch of files and want to limit them to 50Mb each.
I have tried using the -k option but cannot get it to work.
Has anyone out there had success creating these?
Cheers
Ian (1 Reply)
I would like to limit the size of syslog log files. Is there a setting I can enter in syslog.conf that does this for me. Ideally I would like something along the lines of a circular buffer of N bytes.
P.S. I'm a new user, and this site is awesome. I wish I found it earlier.
Thanks,
David (1 Reply)
Is there a way to set the size of the home directory for every single user in a specific group, in more details:
I have a group & i will have to add about 20 users to it to be their home directories. i want each of the home directories for this group to be limited to 50 MB
Help? (11 Replies)
Hi,
I have searched the web and have come back with nothing that is satisfactory for what I require. SFTP is my corporations new file transfer standard. What I require is a method to lock down SFTP users to their directory (they may go to sub directories) while not restricting regular users. ... (2 Replies)
Hi
I have been using rsync for the past few days and would vouch for it anytime.However i am unable to find the total size of files being transferred.
The output of rsync looks something like this:
sent 2.92M bytes received 90.75K bytes 6.78K bytes/sec
total size is 6.27G speedup... (2 Replies)
Hi guys,
I want to know if there is a way to check the current size of the file that I output "stuff" to. For example, if I run a command that outputs data (like another shell script or C program) and i do something like
`./a.out &> tempfile.txt` within the script,
I want to be constantly... (2 Replies)
I'm using rsync to transfer data from one system (nfs01) to another (nfs02) but I'm seeing 28GB more data on the target than what's on the source. The source and target filesystems are both 138 GB. The source shows 100GB used and after running rsync the target shows 128 GB used. Shouldn't they be... (5 Replies)
#!/bin/bash
PH=(AD QD QC 5H 6C 8C 7D JH 3H 3S)
echo ${PH}
In the above array, how can I print to screen just the first 8 elements of ${PH} and have the last 2 elements print just below the first line starting underneath AD?
I need to do this in order to save terminal window spacing... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: cogiz
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
slack.conf
slack.conf(5) File Formats Manual slack.conf(5)NAME
slack.conf - configuration file for slack
DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/slack.conf contains configuration information for slack(8) and its backends. It should contain one keyword-value pair per
line, separated by an '=' sign. Keywords must consist solely of capital letters and underscores. Values may take any appropriate format,
but must not begin with a space. Comments start with '#', and all text from the '#' to the end of a line is ignored. Trailing whitespace
on lines is ignored. Empty lines or lines consisting of only whitespace and comments are ignored.
Valid keywords are:
SOURCE The master source for slack roles. It can be in one of four forms:
o /path/to/dir
Use a local directory.
o somehost:/path/to/dir
Use given directory on a remote host via rsync over SSH.
o rsync://somehost/module
Use module on a remote rsyncd server (directly over the network).
o somehost::module
Use the rsync daemon protocol over SSH to the given host. See "USING RSYNC-DAEMON FEATURES VIA A REMOTE-SHELL CONNECTION" in
rsync(1)
All forms of SOURCE are passed directly to rsync, so you can do things like add "user@" before the host on any remote forms. For
more about what rsync can do, see its manual page, of course.
For the last form, however, we do a little magic. rsync treats the last two forms equivalently, so we overload the last form by
automatically passing "-e ssh" to rsync when we see it. This hack lets us tell slack to use this nice feature of rsync just using
the SOURCE config option.
ROOT The root filesystem into which to install slack roles. Usually '/'.
ROLE_LIST
The location of the role list, which lists the roles to be installed by default on each host.
This can be a path relative to the source, or can be an entirely separate location if it starts with a slash or a hostname (option-
ally preceeded by user@).
CACHE A local cache directory, used as a local mirror of the SOURCE.
STAGE A local staging directory, used as an intermediate stage when installing files.
BACKUP_DIR
A directory in which to keep dated backups for rollbacks.
EXAMPLE
A typical file might look like this:
# slack.conf configuration file
SOURCE=slack-master:/slack # source is on a remote
# host named "slack-master"
ROLE_LIST=slack-master:/roles.conf
ROOT=/
CACHE=/var/cache/slack
STAGE=/var/lib/slack/stage
BACKUP_DIR=/var/lib/slack/backups
FILES
/etc/slack.conf
SEE ALSO slack(8), rsync(1)File formats 2005-05-23 slack.conf(5)