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Operating Systems Linux Favorite Synchronizers for Win & Linux Post 302746487 by siegfried on Wednesday 19th of December 2012 01:01:59 PM
Old 12-19-2012
Favorite Synchronizers for Win & Linux

I'm looking for a new file/directory synchronizer.
I've been using unison because it works on both windows and linux.

However, it often chokes on the very long directory paths and file names I encounter when backing up eclipse and eclipse workspace directories. I suppose one could argue that I should not be backing up eclipse directories because I could just download a new executable. However, when I get a eclipse implementation properly configured, I'd like to save it.

Can anyone recommend a synchronizer like unison that works for both windows and linux and long file names that can be run from a command line as well as a GUI?

Thanks,
Siegfried
 

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BND(1)							     BND for Debian GNU/Linux							    BND(1)

NAME
bnd - Create and diagnose OSGi R4 bundles. SYNOPSIS
bnd [general-options] [cmd] [cmd-options] bnd [general-options] <file>.jar bnd [general-options] <file>.bnd DESCRIPTION
The bnd tool helps you create and diagnose OSGi R4 bundles. The key functions are: * Show the manifest and JAR contents of a bundle * Wrap a JAR so that it becomes a bundle * Create a Bundle from a specification and a class path * Verify the validity of the manifest entries GENERAL OPTIONS
-failok Same as the property -failok. The current run will create a JAR file even if there were errors. -exceptions Will print the exception when the software has ran into a bad exception and bails out. Normally only a message is printed. For debugging or diagnostic reasons, the exception stack trace can be very helpful. COMMANDS
print ( -verify | -manifest | -list | - all ) * <file>.jar + The print function will take a list of JAR file and print one or more aspect of the JAF riles. The following aspects can be added. * -verify - Verify the JAR for consistency with the specification The print will exit with an error if the verify fails. * -manifest - Show the manifest * -list - List the entries in the JAR file * -all - Do all (this is the default. "bnd print -verify *.jar" buildx ( -classpath LIST | -eclipse <lt>file> | -noeclipse | -output <file> ) * <file>.bnd + The build function will assemble a bundle from the bnd specification. The default name of the output bundle is the name of the bnd file with a .jar extension. * -classpath - A list of JAR files and/or directories that should be placed on the class path before the calculation starts. * -eclipse - Parse the file as an Eclipse .classpath file, use the information to create an Eclipse's project class path. If this option is used, the default .classpath file is not read * -noeclipse - Do not parse the .classpath file of an Eclipse project. * -output - Override the default output name of the bundle or the directory. If the output is a directory, the name will be derived from the bnd file name. "bnd build -classpath bin -noeclipse -output test.jar xyz.bnd" wrap ( -classpath (<lt>file>(','<lt>file>)*)-output <lt>fileE|dir<gt> | -properties <lt>file> ) * -ignoremanifest? <lt>file>.jar * The wrap command takes an existing JAR file and guesses the manifest headers that will make this JAR useful for an OSGi Service Platform. If the output file is not overridden, the name of the input file is used with a .bar extension. The default bnd file for the header calculation is: Export-Package: * Import-Package: <packages inside the target jar> If the target bundle has a manifest, the headers are merged with the properties. The defaults can be overridden with a specific properties file. * -output - Set the output file or directory * -classpath - Sets the classpath as a comma separated list * -properties - Use a special property file for the manifest calculation. * -ignoremanifest - Do not include the manifest headers from the target bundle "bnd wrap -classpath osgi.jar *.jar" SEE ALSO
<http://www.aqute.biz/Code/Bnd> AUTHOR
Ludovic Claude <ludovic.claude@laposte.net> Damien Raude-Morvan <drazzib@debian.org> bnd-1.50.0 2011-10-25 BND(1)
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