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I hate to say it but I agree with you to an extent. Since rsync
doesn't upload and download it is ridiculous to differentiate between
the two. Also, since rsync allows either the source or target to be
remote it could be doing either uploading or downloading but will
never do both.
Therefore rsync should never output both a > and a < within the same
outpout. Therefore, it is really using a symbol for "I transmitted a
file". The fact that it uses an arrow-looking symbol for that is not
really important. The fact that it can use 2 different chars for that
notation is also not really relevant since it would never use both of
them in the same session.
So, The < and > chars mean "I uploaded" or "I
downloaded" but if you
replaced them both with the same "I transferred" char the output
wouldn't change much.
On 04/15/13 23:10, Plato wrote:> Hello,
>
> In the rsync manpage I read: A < means that a file is being
> transferred to the remote host (sent). and A > means that a file is
> being transferred to the local host (received). In my experience it
> is just the other way around: A ">" means form source, the
local
> host, to destination, the remote host. Also being transferred to
> the remote host / ohter harddisk / destination field DEST or am I
> missing something?
>
- --
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Kevin Korb Phone: (407) 252-6853
Systems Administrator Internet:
FutureQuest, Inc. Kevin at FutureQuest.net (work)
Orlando, Florida kmk at sanitarium.net (personal)
Web page: http://www.sanitarium.net/
PGP public key available on web site.
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