rdiff-backup-users
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: cross-platform backup tool Is anybody actively testing the beta vers


From: EricZolf
Subject: Re: cross-platform backup tool Is anybody actively testing the beta version?
Date: Sun, 6 Nov 2022 07:37:05 +0100
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:102.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/102.4.1

Hi,

On 06/11/2022 06:52, Frank Crawford wrote:
On Sun, 2022-11-06 at 06:37 +0100, EricZolf wrote:
Hi,
...

There is only one minor issue I still have outstanding, which
relates
to permissions in the repo, and I haven't really sorted out what
the
difference is yet.  However, I wouldn't wait for this, as it is a
minor item.
Are we talking about
https://github.com/rdiff-backup/rdiff-backup/issues/765 or do you
have
something more?

It is the comment I made towards the end that mentioned about a file
not being backed up in a read-only directory.

I'm yet to find time to follow up if it is a real issue, or rather an
issue due to previous backup versions, failures, repairs, etc.

Also, I've been meaning to ask, previously (rdiff-backup 1.x) the
permissions of all the files in the repo seemed to match the source,
although I don't think it had to.  I know the actual permissions are
stored separately.

Is that the case in the current version, or are they just approximately
correct, i.e. things like read-only directories get write permission
added?

The file system permissions are approximately correct, the file permissions are nevertheless stored 100% correctly as metadata (in rdiff-backup-data/mirror_metadata.DATEANDTIME.snapshot.gz), so that they can be 100% restored, if possible. Both file system permissions (backup and restored) are mainly dependent on the capabilities of the user doing the backup resp. restore.

E.g. as a normal user can't change the owner of a file, all files they create will belong to them; on the other hand, doing backup and restore as root should guarantee 100% the same access rights (assuming things like SELinux don't stand in the way).

I don't think this behaviour changed between 2.0 and 2.1+

Hope this explains it,
Eric

KR, Eric

Regards
Frank






reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]