I am in a fix.......
I have to write a backup script to backup say Folder A.
Folder A contains n folders 1,2 ,3 .....n.
my script should copy A without folder 2 & 3.
Is there anyway I can do it without writing individual copy commands????
Please help.... (1 Reply)
I am in a fix.......
I have to write a backup script to backup say Folder A.
Folder A contains n folders 1,2 ,3 .....n.
my script should copy A without folder 2 & 3.
Is there anyway I can do it without writing individual copy commands????
Please help.... (5 Replies)
I'm new to shell scripting and I'm having a tough time figuring out how to script something. Can anyone help?
Here is my setup and what I want to do:
A directory contains a list of projects by year (2000, 2001, etc) and customers (01-001) all of which have the same internal directory setup... (3 Replies)
Hi i am new to Unix Shell Programming... i m just a beginner and i m training myself in Unix.... I need a sample code to archive folders in my Windows OS using Unix commands... Can someone Help me? (1 Reply)
This is my first post so ... be gentle:)
Hello I have several folders that are backed up daily in following format:
/back_YY.MM.DD/backup1/*
........................./backup2/*
I looking a script to archive and rename all backup folders bazed on root folder... (8 Replies)
I am trying to make a unix shell script that will make 99 folders 99 deep (counting the first level folders). So far i have made it make the first 99 folders and 99 more in all of the folders. The only problem is the only way i have found is copying and pasting part of the script over and over and... (18 Replies)
Hello again,
A little while back I got help with creating a command to search all directories and sub directories for files from daystart of day x.
I'm wondering if there is a command that I've overlooked that may be able to search for / write folder names to an output file which ideally... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I am creting archive script in which i need to split the source file's to different target folder's based on the input file name first character.
Input1.txt -- will contains file names that are needs to be Archive.
Input1.txt
A1213355
B2255666
C2254555
A6655444
C5566445
... (2 Replies)
I have a folder like this
ls input1
dir1 dir2 dir3 file1 file2 file3
dir1, dir2 and dir3 are sub-folders inside the folder input1
ls input2
dir1 dir2 dir3 file1 file2 file3
My dir1 in input1 folder has files f1, f2, f3 and f4.
My dir1 in input2 folder has file f4 and f5.
... (3 Replies)
Hi,
So i know we use cp -r as a basic to copy folders/files.
I would like this BUT i would like to show the output of the files being copied.
With the amazing knowledge i have i have gone as far as this:
1) find source/* -exec cp -r {} target/ \;
2) for ObjectToBeCopied in `find... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Imre
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
bup-join
bup-join(1) General Commands Manual bup-join(1)NAME
bup-join - concatenate files from a bup repository
SYNOPSIS
bup join [-r host:path] [refs or hashes...]
DESCRIPTION
bup join is roughly the opposite operation to bup-split(1). You can use it to retrieve the contents of a file from a local or remote bup
repository.
The supplied list of refs or hashes can be in any format accepted by git(1), including branch names, commit ids, tree ids, or blob ids.
If no refs or hashes are given on the command line, bup join reads them from stdin instead.
OPTIONS -r, --remote=host:path
Retrieves objects from the given remote repository instead of the local one. path may be blank, in which case the default remote
repository is used. The connection to the remote server is made with SSH. If you'd like to specify which port, user or private key
to use for the SSH connection, we recommend you use the ~/.ssh/config file.
EXAMPLE
# split and then rejoin a file using its tree id
TREE=$(tar -cvf - /etc | bup split -t)
bup join $TREE | tar -tf -
# make two backups, then get the second-most-recent.
# mybackup~1 is git(1) notation for the second most
# recent commit on the branch named mybackup.
tar -cvf - /etc | bup split -n mybackup
tar -cvf - /etc | bup split -n mybackup
bup join mybackup~1 | tar -tf -
SEE ALSO bup-split(1), bup-save(1), ssh_config(5)BUP
Part of the bup(1) suite.
AUTHORS
Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com>.
Bup unknown-bup-join(1)