On Mon, Sep 12, 2005 at 11:31:47PM -0600, Bob Proulx wrote:
> Ric Otte wrote:
> > One thing I notice is that while copying the files (using either cp or
> > rsync (and also tar, although I didn't pay as much attention), is that
> > according to top, Xfree86 is often using up to 78-99% of the cpu, a
Ric Otte wrote:
> One thing I notice is that while copying the files (using either cp or
> rsync (and also tar, although I didn't pay as much attention), is that
> according to top, Xfree86 is often using up to 78-99% of the cpu, and
> things are very sluggish for a few seconds after the copying is
On Mon, Sep 12, 2005 at 04:13:24PM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
> What if you pipe stdout to a text file?
>
Ron,
I reformatted the drive, and began rsync with the errors piped to a
file (rsync -av --exclude-from=.rsync.all /home/ric /bkup/
2>xxx.rsync)
Things went fine for a long time, but eventually
On Mon, 2005-09-12 at 08:49 -0700, Ric Otte wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 12, 2005 at 03:07:41AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
> > Does tar succeed as well?
> >
> Yes, I believe so. I just copied several directories using tar, and
> fsck says everything is fine.
>
> One thing I notice is that while copying t
On Mon, Sep 12, 2005 at 03:07:41AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
> Does tar succeed as well?
>
Yes, I believe so. I just copied several directories using tar, and
fsck says everything is fine.
One thing I notice is that while copying the files (using either cp or
rsync (and also tar, although I didn
On Sun, 2005-09-11 at 21:53 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I have a SATA hard disk in my machine, and recently installed a 200gb Seagate
> IDE hard drive in it to use as backup. I want to use rsync to backup my home
> directory to this machine. I used mkfs.ext3 to format the drive as ext3, and
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