Todd Cary wrote: > Mark - > > Thanks! That did it. > > > /usr/bin/rsync -av --exclude=".*" -e ssh /home/ 192.168.0.22:/home/ > My next step will be to brush the dust off of my Perl book and write > a crontab script to backup nightly. > > Question: I may not be using the term "backup" absolutely correctly. > The destination server is a "standby" server. This is if the source > server fails, all I have to do is change the router to point to the > standby server. These are in a home office and I do not consider > myself a system administrator; just someone who knows enough to keep > the server running (it's main task is FTPing). Do you have any > suggestions about using rsync as I am doing? > Todd, If all you want to do is mirror the main server to the backup server, your command is almost correct. You'll want to add --delete on the commandline. This will cause rsync to remove any files from the destination before sending them from the source. This will create a mirror of your main server to your backup server. You don't need to go to all the overhead of running Perl to crontab this up. Just drop your rsync command into a file, make it executable then add it to root's crontab file. It'll run just fine after that. One other thing nonrsync related - top posting, and sending HTML to the list. Makes it hard to respond to your questions. Just remember to use text only, and post responses at the bottom of your emails. Things just tread much easier from top to bottom. Thanks! Mark Schoonover IS Manager American Geotechnical - California, Nevada and Arizona V-> 858.450.4040 F-> 714.685.3909 C-> 858.472.3816 * software development * systems administration * networking * security * _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos