My final working command to shove the Desktop of my laptop to a remote machine: $ rsync -PEav -delete -exclude '. You can also set rsync up in a way to be a true mirror, so you would not need to run your other command, see the man page for details. You also are not sending in the -delete flag, if your end goal is a mirror of your data, you are not getting that, if your end goal is backups that continually grows, keeping everything that was ever on the source, the lack of -delete is good. I can not help but notice in your example one of your paths is ~/Dropbox so this may all not matter, since DropBox, the app, does not at all support resource forks currently, though I hear there are plans to in the future. The first file on the remote machine did not work, the second transfered file did work. Running without the -E versus with the -E, there is a difference of 152 bytes in xfered data. I ran a new test, moved a Interarchy bookmark to my desktop, I know for a fact these break if they are copied sans resource forks. Requires at least Mac OS X 10.4 or suitably I would strongly suggest adding in the -E flag -E, -extended-attributesĪpple specific option to copy extended attributes, resourceįorks, and ACLs. webloc files made it and appear to work, though I do not trust it. To learn more about what each plugin can do, see the 'Plugins' section of the Quicksilver Manual. Edit images, interact with apps like Chrome, Mail, Microsoft Word and more, or change the look and feel of Quicksilver with a new interface. app on my Desktop, it made it over, surprisingly, it works. Super-charge Quicksilver with the addition of plugins. Since the directory 'rsyc-test' did not exist, it was made for me. It can transfer files via FTP and HTTP, search the Internet to find the files you want, provide a wealth of information about remote servers as well as your local Internet connection and Internet applications, help manage remote servers, let you remotely control and test your Macintosh across the Internet. My test case: $ rsync -Pav ~/Desktop/ that case, all the files within ~/Desktop were copied to the remote host, in my home dir. Interarchy is a powerful and flexible Internet interface for Mac OS. If you do not need resource forks, you are OK, but most of the time you do need them. You do not seem to pass a flag to protect extended attributes, this can yield broken files on OS X.Select the program that contains the bookmarks youd like to import. Select Bookmarks Import Bookmarks and Settings. Run the ssh connection sans the rsync first, you may need to first approve your fingerprint To import bookmarks from most browsers, like Firefox, Internet Explorer, and Safari: On your computer, open Chrome.
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