rue at one time, but not any more.
Just my 2¢
- Original Message -
From: "Dave Sherohman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "Paul Tomblin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2001 12:23 PM
Subject: Re: [Mailman-Users] the best
On Thu, Dec 13, 2001 at 12:06:06PM -0500, Paul Tomblin wrote:
> Quoting Dave Sherohman ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> > find . -xdev -print0 | cpio -pvdm0 /export/home2
>
> Or my personal favourite
>
> tar cvfB - . | (cd /export/home2; tar xvBPf -)
I've always stuck with cpio because I've heard that ta
Quoting Dave Sherohman ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> On Thu, Dec 13, 2001 at 09:33:01AM -0600, Alex Sammons wrote:
> >I have a question(a Unix question), what´s the best
> > way to transport the files and directories of the
> > users located in a ufs /export/home to another called
> > /export/home2,
On Thu, Dec 13, 2001 at 09:33:01AM -0600, Alex Sammons wrote:
>I have a question(a Unix question), what´s the best
> way to transport the files and directories of the
> users located in a ufs /export/home to another called
> /export/home2, i mean considering home directories,
> passwords, etc
Hi there!!!
I have a question(a Unix question), what´s the best
way to transport the files and directories of the
users located in a ufs /export/home to another called
/export/home2, i mean considering home directories,
passwords, etc???
Thanks!
On Thu, 26 Apr 2001, Panagiotis Malakoudis wrote:
> A colleague of mine suggested that we add to all the mailing lists an
> imap account as a member and then use third party web based software to
> searchg through each mailbox. That sounds quite nice and you same all
> the time and space that htdi
I need some advice.
What do you think is the best way to search through the archives?
I see a lot of people using htdig but if you want to secure the archives
and use many mailing lists then the additional administration weight is
big.
A colleague of mine suggested that we add to all the mailing