Martin Koistinen
2005-Aug-30 14:34 UTC
Problems on Mac OS X with owners and groups? For solution, read on...
All, This message is placed here for the aid of others in the future. I have search the archives for this solution, but sadly, only found a couple of (rather old) messages from people exhibiting having the same problems, but without any replies for this solution. Please forgive me as I seem to ramble on here, I do so with the intent of making this solution more findable by others having this issue but don't exactly know what they are searching for. The problem is characterized by copies made by rsync have reset owner and group information -- in my case to root : unknown -- regardless of the switch settings for rsync. So, for example: # rsync -aog source dest will copy all files from source to dest, but will not preserve the owner and group settings of the source files, even though the (redundant) flags for -a , -o and -g are all set. To make matters worse, because of the problem, the whole --link-dest functionality doesn't save space in a backup/snapshot scheme for unchange files, since rsync will find that the dest files in the previous backup will have different ownership than the source files (unless the source files also happen to have root:unknown ownership, that is) This problem is most likely to occur with those of us who have added extra disks to the system (probably) via firewire or USB. The issues is not rsync, but rather a setting in the OS. OS X has newly formatted disks marked with a flag to "ignore ownership details on this volume" by default. To fix this, select the volume you wish to check/change in the finder. File -> Get Info (Apple-I), in the multi-panel, info-window for your disk, open the section "Ownership & Permissions:", and verify/uncheck the checkbox for "Ignore ownership on this volume". Voila, the "rsync" issue is now gone. I suspect that this ownership flag is set by default to emulate disk insertion behavoir prior to OS X on the Mac (where it was ignorant of ownership and/or permissions). It would be great if rsync could verify that ownership settings actually took when they are set and report in the verbose output and/or logs if there is a discrepancy. This would help to aid those of us in setting up rsync-based backups and will forewarn us of related problems during full recovery of a backup. I hope this helps someone and/or aids the future development of rsync. -- MKoistinen -------------- next part -------------- HTML attachment scrubbed and removed
Lee Cullens
2005-Aug-30 15:23 UTC
Problems on Mac OS X with owners and groups? For solution, read on...
Martin Koistinen wrote:> All, > > This message is placed here for the aid of others in the future. I > have search the archives for this solution, but sadly, only found a > couple of (rather old) messages from people exhibiting having the same > problems, but without any replies for this solution. > > Please forgive me as I seem to ramble on here, I do so with the intent > of making this solution more findable by others having this issue but > don't exactly know what they are searching for. > > The problem is characterized by copies made by rsync have reset owner > and group information -- in my case to root : unknown -- regardless of > the switch settings for rsync. So, for example: > > # rsync -aog source dest > > will copy all files from source to dest, but will not preserve the > owner and group settings of the source files, even though the > (redundant) flags for -a , -o and -g are all set. > > To make matters worse, because of the problem, the whole --link-dest > functionality doesn't save space in a backup/snapshot scheme for > unchange files, since rsync will find that the dest files in the > previous backup will have different ownership than the source files > (unless the source files also happen to have root:unknown ownership, > that is) > > This problem is most likely to occur with those of us who have added > extra disks to the system (probably) via firewire or USB. > > The issues is not rsync, but rather a setting in the OS. OS X has > newly formatted disks marked with a flag to "ignore ownership details > on this volume" by default. To fix this, select the volume you wish > to check/change in the finder. File -> Get Info (Apple-I), in the > multi-panel, info-window for your disk, open the section "Ownership & > Permissions:", and verify/uncheck the checkbox for "Ignore ownership > on this volume". > > Voila, the "rsync" issue is now gone. > > I suspect that this ownership flag is set by default to emulate disk > insertion behavoir prior to OS X on the Mac (where it was ignorant of > ownership and/or permissions). > > It would be great if rsync could verify that ownership settings > actually took when they are set and report in the verbose output > and/or logs if there is a discrepancy. This would help to aid those > of us in setting up rsync-based backups and will forewarn us of > related problems during full recovery of a backup. > > I hope this helps someone and/or aids the future development of rsync. > > -- MKoistinenYou would see that and more in my article <a href="http://homepage.mac.com/lee_cullens/Bx3.html">Backup::Restore</a>.
Possibly Parallel Threads
- mirror combined with 7 day incremental backup
- Question about best practices for custom facts in puppet
- EU Linux migration document. -- German Gvt. "Migration Guide"
- [LLVMdev] Different behavoir when writing to stdout with 2 raw_fd_ostreams with or w/o redirection
- Odd asterisk behavoir