10-10-2012
Awesome. And there shouldn't be a significant (given the scale of what's happening already) time lost from rsync having to rebuild the file list initially? That took quite a while the first time, and I assume now it'll have to redo that and also do the comparison against what's already been transferred.
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I guess I posted in wrong forum before. How do I pause another process and then restart it on linux? The other process doesn't listen for anything.
Thanks for any help you can offer.
Dane :confused: (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: daneensign
1 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
well is gets stuck and i dont know why.......
pid=fork();
if(pid==0)
{
pause();
write(1,"child",5);
exit(0);
}
else
{
sleep(1);
kill(pid,SIGCONT);
write(1,"parent",5);
wait(0);
}
all=1; (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: IdleProc
1 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
All,
I have one script which gives me the O/P of "percentage of filesystems utilization". we have four filesystem for which i want to check and get the mail when utilization is more than 40%. below are the filesystems.
/AB/Filesy1
/AB/Filesy2
/AB/Filesy3
/AB/Filesy4
Below script is working... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: anshu ranjan
14 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I have searched this forum for related posts but could not find one that fits mine. I have a shell script which removes all the XML tags including the text inside the tags from some 4 million XML files.
The shell script looks like this (MODIFIED):
find . "*.xml" -print | while read... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: shoaibjameel123
6 Replies
5. Red Hat
Hi,
I've some directory that I used as working directory for a program. At the end of the procedure, the content is deleted. This directory, when I do a ls -l, appears to still take up some space. After a little research, I've seen on a another board of this forum that it's not really taking... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: bdx
5 Replies
6. Red Hat
Hi. My "/usr" folder is running out of space. My "/home" folder is quite large and has a lot of free space. As follows:
Filesystem Type Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
...
/dev/sda5 ext3 9.7G 2.6G 6.7G 28% /
/dev/sda7 ext3 152G 16G 128G 11% /home
/dev/sda3 ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: pkiula
7 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I need a script to delete a large set of files from a directory under / based on an input file and want to redirect errors into separate file.
I have already prepared a list of files in the input file.
Kndly help me.
Thanks,
Prash (36 Replies)
Discussion started by: prash358
36 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have constant trouble with XCOPY/s for multi-gigabyte transfers.
I need a utility like XCOPY/S that remembers where it left off if I reboot. Is there such a utility? How about a free utility (free as in free beer)?
How about an md5sum sanity check too?
I posted the above query in another... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: siegfried
3 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi.
I found many scripts in the web of achieving this.
But I like to use this one
find /EDWH-DMT03 -xdev -size +10000 -exec ls -la {} \;|sort -n -k 5 > LARGE.rst
But the problem is, why it still list out files with 89 bytes as the output? Is there anything wrong with the command?
My... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: aimy
7 Replies
rdiff(1) General Commands Manual rdiff(1)
NAME
rdiff - compute and apply signature-based file differences
SYNOPSYS
rdiff [options] signature old-file signature-file
rdiff [options] delta signature-file new-file delta-file
rdiff [options] patch basis-file delta-file new-file
USAGE
You can use rdiff to update files, much like rsync does. However, unlike rsync, rdiff puts you in control. There are three steps to
updating a file: signature, delta, and patch.
DESCRIPTION
In every case where a filename must be specified, - may be used instead to mean either standard input or standard output as appropriate.
Be aware that if you do this, you'll need to terminate your options with -- or rdiff will think you are passing it an empty option.
RETURN VALUE
0 for successful completion, 1 for environmental problems (file not found, invalid options, IO error, etc), 2 for a corrupt file and 3 for
an internal error or unhandled situation in librsync or rdiff.
SEE ALSO
librsync(3)
AUTHOR
Martin Pool <mbp@samba.org>
The original rsync algorithm was discovered by Andrew Tridgell.
rdiff development has been supported by Linuxcare, Inc and VA Linux Systems.
$Date: 2002/01/25 21:25:34 $ rdiff(1)