I have a client with a seagate 500 gig windows7 source disk and need to create a backup clone drive. I purchased an identical drive for this but I ran into a problem.
When selecting the source and destination drives its very difficult to tell them apart. The information in the dialog for source and destination lists the drive size and model.
I need to prevent the acl subtitution during folder copy and I don't know how to do.
I have two repositories, the source and the destination with different acl. Users have to copy (with windows's file explorer) some folders from source to destination but I want that the copied folder inherit the destination acl.
hi,i am using ubuntu and generally use VI editor to write shell scripts. i am required to write a shell script to copy the text of one file(a text file) into another file.While the script executes, the shell shall ask the user to input the source filename and destination filename (both these files have been initially created by using "cat" command in the terminal).
I need a script in which Files of One server will be copied to other folder of another server ONLY AND ONLY IF the file on SOURCE SERVER file doesn't exist on DESTINATION SERVER.
I'd like to have different backup jobs scheduled at different times and frequencies (for instance, backup my Documents folder daily, but my music folder only on weekends), or backup daily to my local disk, and weekly to my remote server. I can see only how to set up a single backup job for a specified set of folders to a specified destination in DejaDup.
I have a RHEL 4.8 box that is showing signs of imminent hardware failure, so my boss wanted to backup the file system and restore it on another RHEL 4.8 that was just built.
we currently have 2 old Linux servers running iptables that we're switching to a Cisco 2901 router. Since iptables and NAT on a Cisco device work differently, I'm not sure how to set up NAT on the Cisco device.
We have a rule in iptables that translates and forwards a packet based on its source and destination address.