Gionata Boccalini
2015-Jun-08 22:14 UTC
Question on folder sync with "directory name translation"
OK , but then the solution with symlinks is equivalent, just with the right options for rsync. Make the link. Sync + exclude. Remove the link. Don't have to live with the folder on the source. *_______________Gionata Boccalini* 2015-06-08 22:49 GMT+02:00 Michael Johnson - MJ <mj at revmj.com>:> Oh, actually, I just thought of a couple other another options that don't > require any multiplexing or ssh keys, but it would require that your source > machine is linux. > > The first option would be: > > mkdir /A/FolderB > mount --bind /A/FolderA /A/FolderB > > Then just exclude /A/FolderA from the rsync and you are done. This does > mean that you have to be ok with /A/FolderB existing on the source. > > > The second option would be to use somthing like aufs or overlayfs to > create a new mountpoint that contains everything you want and perhaps with > a little bit of mount --bind thrown in. > > > I just saw your response, and and what you describe makes sense. Sounds > like the mount bind option + exclude might be the most elegant option for > this case. Just make sure to add the bind mount into your fstab so it > comes back after a reboot. :) > > On Mon, Jun 8, 2015 at 1:18 PM, Michael Johnson - MJ <mj at revmj.com> wrote: > >> Thought I would chime in here. To the best of my knowledge what you are >> trying to do cannot be done in a single run. I supposed --fuzzy might work >> for you but I've never used that option and it sounds scary to me. Perhaps >> if I spent some time and learned the methodology it uses I would be less >> concerned. If a feature like this were to be added, it seems like it would >> make sense to add it as a new "filter" type. >> >> But mainly you've piqued my curiosity. The requirement that it be able >> to happen in a single rsync run seems very odd. Is this just a desire, or >> is there really something that bad that would happen if you did one pass >> syncing A to B excluding FolderA and FolderB and then a second pass syncing >> FolderA to FolderB? >> >> The most likely scenario I imagine is that you are running this by hand >> and manually enter the SSH password. Given the process take a long time, >> you don't want to enter the password again mid stream. If this is the >> case, you could set up SSH keys to allow this to happen without a manually >> typed password. You can find how to set that up here: >> >> http://www.chainsawonatireswing.com/2012/01/15/ssh-into-your-synology-diskstation-with-ssh-keys/ >> >> If you don't want to do ssh keys w/o a password, you could use ssh agent >> with keys. >> >> Finally you could also utilize ssh multiplexing (it looks like that >> should work with the synology nass). You can find information about this >> option here: >> http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/OpenSSH/Cookbook/Multiplexing >> >> The other (very unlikely) scenario I can imagine is that there is >> something that prevents you from logging in more than once every X >> hours/days like a time lock safe. multiplexing would help here as well. >> But this scenario seems unlikely, it was probably silly to even mention it. >> >> If there is another case I have not considered I would be very interested >> to know where this requirement comes from. >> >> Thanks! Hope there was something useful for you in all this. :) >> >> On Sun, Jun 7, 2015 at 9:38 AM, Gionata Boccalini < >> gionata.boccalini at gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> Hello everyone, >>> >>> I'm new to this mailing list but I have been using rsync for some years >>> up to now. >>> I'm trying to synchronize two directory trees, but I want a special >>> behavior that I didn't find on the net nor in the manual (or maybe there is >>> a combination of options to get what I want but I couldn't find it). >>> >>> Tree A is like: >>> >>> A >>> * >>> * >>> FolderA >>> * >>> * >>> >>> And tree B (on a remote filesystem) is like: >>> >>> B >>> * >>> * >>> * >>> FolderB >>> * >>> * >>> >>> >>> I have to synchronize everything in one rsync run, like >>> rysnc -arv A/ B/ >>> >>> but I want FolderA to be synchronized with FolderB. >>> They must contain the same files but have a different name! I want >>> something like a "directory name translation" in the rsync run... >>> Is it possible? Do you see any another way of doing this? (A part of >>> using two rsync runs....) >>> Please let me know if I didn't explain the problem correctly or you need >>> further information. >>> Thank you for your attention and time. >>> Best regards. >>> >>> >>> *_______________Gionata Boccalini* >>> >>> -- >>> Please use reply-all for most replies to avoid omitting the mailing list. >>> To unsubscribe or change options: >>> https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/rsync >>> Before posting, read: http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> Michael Johnson - MJ >> > > > > -- > Michael Johnson - MJ >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.samba.org/pipermail/rsync/attachments/20150609/49bbc483/attachment.html>
Michael Johnson - MJ
2015-Jun-09 11:25 UTC
Question on folder sync with "directory name translation"
Should be as long as you don't have other symlinks in the tree. On Mon, Jun 8, 2015, 15:14 Gionata Boccalini <gionata.boccalini at gmail.com> wrote:> OK , but then the solution with symlinks is equivalent, just with the > right options for rsync. > > Make the link. > Sync + exclude. > Remove the link. > > Don't have to live with the folder on the source. > > *_______________* > > > *Gionata Boccalini* > > 2015-06-08 22:49 GMT+02:00 Michael Johnson - MJ <mj at revmj.com>: > >> Oh, actually, I just thought of a couple other another options that don't >> require any multiplexing or ssh keys, but it would require that your source >> machine is linux. >> >> The first option would be: >> >> mkdir /A/FolderB >> mount --bind /A/FolderA /A/FolderB >> >> Then just exclude /A/FolderA from the rsync and you are done. This does >> mean that you have to be ok with /A/FolderB existing on the source. >> >> >> The second option would be to use somthing like aufs or overlayfs to >> create a new mountpoint that contains everything you want and perhaps with >> a little bit of mount --bind thrown in. >> >> >> I just saw your response, and and what you describe makes sense. Sounds >> like the mount bind option + exclude might be the most elegant option for >> this case. Just make sure to add the bind mount into your fstab so it >> comes back after a reboot. :) >> >> On Mon, Jun 8, 2015 at 1:18 PM, Michael Johnson - MJ <mj at revmj.com> >> wrote: >> >>> Thought I would chime in here. To the best of my knowledge what you are >>> trying to do cannot be done in a single run. I supposed --fuzzy might work >>> for you but I've never used that option and it sounds scary to me. Perhaps >>> if I spent some time and learned the methodology it uses I would be less >>> concerned. If a feature like this were to be added, it seems like it would >>> make sense to add it as a new "filter" type. >>> >>> But mainly you've piqued my curiosity. The requirement that it be able >>> to happen in a single rsync run seems very odd. Is this just a desire, or >>> is there really something that bad that would happen if you did one pass >>> syncing A to B excluding FolderA and FolderB and then a second pass syncing >>> FolderA to FolderB? >>> >>> The most likely scenario I imagine is that you are running this by hand >>> and manually enter the SSH password. Given the process take a long time, >>> you don't want to enter the password again mid stream. If this is the >>> case, you could set up SSH keys to allow this to happen without a manually >>> typed password. You can find how to set that up here: >>> >>> http://www.chainsawonatireswing.com/2012/01/15/ssh-into-your-synology-diskstation-with-ssh-keys/ >>> >>> If you don't want to do ssh keys w/o a password, you could use ssh agent >>> with keys. >>> >>> Finally you could also utilize ssh multiplexing (it looks like that >>> should work with the synology nass). You can find information about this >>> option here: >>> http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/OpenSSH/Cookbook/Multiplexing >>> >>> The other (very unlikely) scenario I can imagine is that there is >>> something that prevents you from logging in more than once every X >>> hours/days like a time lock safe. multiplexing would help here as well. >>> But this scenario seems unlikely, it was probably silly to even mention it. >>> >>> If there is another case I have not considered I would be very >>> interested to know where this requirement comes from. >>> >>> Thanks! Hope there was something useful for you in all this. :) >>> >>> On Sun, Jun 7, 2015 at 9:38 AM, Gionata Boccalini < >>> gionata.boccalini at gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>>> Hello everyone, >>>> >>>> I'm new to this mailing list but I have been using rsync for some years >>>> up to now. >>>> I'm trying to synchronize two directory trees, but I want a special >>>> behavior that I didn't find on the net nor in the manual (or maybe there is >>>> a combination of options to get what I want but I couldn't find it). >>>> >>>> Tree A is like: >>>> >>>> A >>>> * >>>> * >>>> FolderA >>>> * >>>> * >>>> >>>> And tree B (on a remote filesystem) is like: >>>> >>>> B >>>> * >>>> * >>>> * >>>> FolderB >>>> * >>>> * >>>> >>>> >>>> I have to synchronize everything in one rsync run, like >>>> rysnc -arv A/ B/ >>>> >>>> but I want FolderA to be synchronized with FolderB. >>>> They must contain the same files but have a different name! I want >>>> something like a "directory name translation" in the rsync run... >>>> Is it possible? Do you see any another way of doing this? (A part of >>>> using two rsync runs....) >>>> Please let me know if I didn't explain the problem correctly or you >>>> need further information. >>>> Thank you for your attention and time. >>>> Best regards. >>>> >>>> >>>> *_______________Gionata Boccalini* >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Please use reply-all for most replies to avoid omitting the mailing >>>> list. >>>> To unsubscribe or change options: >>>> https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/rsync >>>> Before posting, read: >>>> http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html >>>> >>> >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Michael Johnson - MJ >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> Michael Johnson - MJ >> > >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.samba.org/pipermail/rsync/attachments/20150609/eba9ac70/attachment.html>
Gionata Boccalini
2015-Jun-10 20:08 UTC
Question on folder sync with "directory name translation"
Yeah, I don't have other symlink. But I'm thinking of changing my folder structure to reflect the data I really need on the NAS. So, as a side effect, the special rsync is not needed any more :) Anyway, thanks for the answers! Bye *_______________Gionata Boccalini* 2015-06-09 13:25 GMT+02:00 Michael Johnson - MJ <mj at revmj.com>:> Should be as long as you don't have other symlinks in the tree. > > On Mon, Jun 8, 2015, 15:14 Gionata Boccalini <gionata.boccalini at gmail.com> > wrote: > >> OK , but then the solution with symlinks is equivalent, just with the >> right options for rsync. >> >> Make the link. >> Sync + exclude. >> Remove the link. >> >> Don't have to live with the folder on the source. >> >> *_______________* >> >> >> *Gionata Boccalini* >> >> 2015-06-08 22:49 GMT+02:00 Michael Johnson - MJ <mj at revmj.com>: >> >>> Oh, actually, I just thought of a couple other another options that >>> don't require any multiplexing or ssh keys, but it would require that your >>> source machine is linux. >>> >>> The first option would be: >>> >>> mkdir /A/FolderB >>> mount --bind /A/FolderA /A/FolderB >>> >>> Then just exclude /A/FolderA from the rsync and you are done. This does >>> mean that you have to be ok with /A/FolderB existing on the source. >>> >>> >>> The second option would be to use somthing like aufs or overlayfs to >>> create a new mountpoint that contains everything you want and perhaps with >>> a little bit of mount --bind thrown in. >>> >>> >>> I just saw your response, and and what you describe makes sense. Sounds >>> like the mount bind option + exclude might be the most elegant option for >>> this case. Just make sure to add the bind mount into your fstab so it >>> comes back after a reboot. :) >>> >>> On Mon, Jun 8, 2015 at 1:18 PM, Michael Johnson - MJ <mj at revmj.com> >>> wrote: >>> >>>> Thought I would chime in here. To the best of my knowledge what you >>>> are trying to do cannot be done in a single run. I supposed --fuzzy might >>>> work for you but I've never used that option and it sounds scary to me. >>>> Perhaps if I spent some time and learned the methodology it uses I would be >>>> less concerned. If a feature like this were to be added, it seems like it >>>> would make sense to add it as a new "filter" type. >>>> >>>> But mainly you've piqued my curiosity. The requirement that it be able >>>> to happen in a single rsync run seems very odd. Is this just a desire, or >>>> is there really something that bad that would happen if you did one pass >>>> syncing A to B excluding FolderA and FolderB and then a second pass syncing >>>> FolderA to FolderB? >>>> >>>> The most likely scenario I imagine is that you are running this by hand >>>> and manually enter the SSH password. Given the process take a long time, >>>> you don't want to enter the password again mid stream. If this is the >>>> case, you could set up SSH keys to allow this to happen without a manually >>>> typed password. You can find how to set that up here: >>>> >>>> http://www.chainsawonatireswing.com/2012/01/15/ssh-into-your-synology-diskstation-with-ssh-keys/ >>>> >>>> If you don't want to do ssh keys w/o a password, you could use ssh >>>> agent with keys. >>>> >>>> Finally you could also utilize ssh multiplexing (it looks like that >>>> should work with the synology nass). You can find information about this >>>> option here: >>>> http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/OpenSSH/Cookbook/Multiplexing >>>> >>>> The other (very unlikely) scenario I can imagine is that there is >>>> something that prevents you from logging in more than once every X >>>> hours/days like a time lock safe. multiplexing would help here as well. >>>> But this scenario seems unlikely, it was probably silly to even mention it. >>>> >>>> If there is another case I have not considered I would be very >>>> interested to know where this requirement comes from. >>>> >>>> Thanks! Hope there was something useful for you in all this. :) >>>> >>>> On Sun, Jun 7, 2015 at 9:38 AM, Gionata Boccalini < >>>> gionata.boccalini at gmail.com> wrote: >>>> >>>>> Hello everyone, >>>>> >>>>> I'm new to this mailing list but I have been using rsync for some >>>>> years up to now. >>>>> I'm trying to synchronize two directory trees, but I want a special >>>>> behavior that I didn't find on the net nor in the manual (or maybe there is >>>>> a combination of options to get what I want but I couldn't find it). >>>>> >>>>> Tree A is like: >>>>> >>>>> A >>>>> * >>>>> * >>>>> FolderA >>>>> * >>>>> * >>>>> >>>>> And tree B (on a remote filesystem) is like: >>>>> >>>>> B >>>>> * >>>>> * >>>>> * >>>>> FolderB >>>>> * >>>>> * >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I have to synchronize everything in one rsync run, like >>>>> rysnc -arv A/ B/ >>>>> >>>>> but I want FolderA to be synchronized with FolderB. >>>>> They must contain the same files but have a different name! I want >>>>> something like a "directory name translation" in the rsync run... >>>>> Is it possible? Do you see any another way of doing this? (A part of >>>>> using two rsync runs....) >>>>> Please let me know if I didn't explain the problem correctly or you >>>>> need further information. >>>>> Thank you for your attention and time. >>>>> Best regards. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> *_______________Gionata Boccalini* >>>>> >>>>> -- >>>>> Please use reply-all for most replies to avoid omitting the mailing >>>>> list. >>>>> To unsubscribe or change options: >>>>> https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/rsync >>>>> Before posting, read: >>>>> http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html >>>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Michael Johnson - MJ >>>> >>> >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Michael Johnson - MJ >>> >> >>-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.samba.org/pipermail/rsync/attachments/20150610/408d2b59/attachment.html>
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