Push and pull network filesystems with ccgfs


 
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Old 10-01-2008
Push and pull network filesystems with ccgfs

10-01-2008 01:00 AM
The CC Network Filesystem (ccgfs) lets you mount filesystems over the network using either the push or pull model for connections. Most network filesystems use the pull model, where the client mounts a network share and all connections originate from the client. Using the push model for network shares means that all connections originate from the server. The push model has advantages when you want a machine on your network demilitarized zone (DMZ) to access a file server through a firewall.



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smd-push(1)						 Sync Mail Dir (smd) documentation					       smd-push(1)

NAME
smd-push - syncs the remote mail dir letting the local one untouched SYNOPSIS
smd-push [-d|--dry-run] [-v|--verbose] [-s|--show-tags] [-t|--template-only] [-n|--no-delete] [endpoint] DESCRIPTION
smd-push performs in the remote maildir all the changes that were performed on the local one. No changes are made on the local maildir. Use smd-pull(1) for that. Refer to smd-config(5) for the configuration file format. OPTIONS
-v --verbose Verbose output -s --show-tags Machine readable output -d --dry-run Do not perform any action for real -n --no-delete Do not propagate deletions -t --template-only Just create a template configuration file if none endpoint Is the suffix for the name of the configuration file to use. If it is omitted, the configuration file ~/.smd/config.default is used. FILES
~/.smd/config.* ~/.smd/hooks/pre-push.d/ ~/.smd/hooks/post-push.d/ SEE ALSO
mddiff(1), smd-server(1), smd-client(1), smd-pull(1), smd-loop(1), smd-config(5) AUTHOR
Enrico Tassi <gares@fettunta.org> 11 June 2012 smd-push(1)