Hello all,
I was wondering if there was a way to automatically copy files from an SD card to a DVD burner. I would prefer a differential copy as well.
Any ideas?
I'm running Xubuntu and it was a challenge just getting Copy.com on there. (I installed the desktop app on both of my computers.) Now that I have it though, I don't really know how to use it.
I know this is kind of more a Copy.com question, but I don't know anything about Copy.com (besides having it--lol) and besides, I like you LQ guys.
So yeah, I installed the desktop app for Copy.com on both of my computers. I know that if I put something in the Copy folder that will be available to both computers.
But how Copy does the backing up I don't know.
When I change a file or folder do I have to plop that into the Copy folder every time or does Copy somehow update the file or folder in the Copy folder automatically? (It doesn't seem to.)
Okay, when I, say, take the Documents folder from one computer and plop it into the Copy folder that's that. Then I take the Documents folder from the other computer and plop that into the Copy folder, then all the files from both folders will be in the Copy folder (and the Copy cloud), right?
Now I just removed a couple of files from a folder and copied and pasted the folder into the Copy folder. But then when I looked at the Copy folder the files I'd deleted were still there. What's the process? How does it work?
I mean, how does this work as a way of backing things up AND organizing things? To me it seems like a decent way of throwing stuff into the Copy folder (and cloud), but how is that different than Google Drive? I mean, that's not really a backup, is it? It's like a flash drive in the cloud.
And when I combined the same folders (with the same titles anyway, but they each had different files within them) from the two computers I'd expected each folder on each computer to have all the same files that were cumulatively on both. Instead, they're the same. And the cumulative is only on the Copy folder.
I like the notion of just throwing the folders and files into the Copy folder. It's much quicker than Google Drive. But the backing up feature eludes me and the syncing feature makes me fearful that I'll lose data or that the files will become hopelessly less organized.
Thanks.
Hello every one,
I need to copy many files in to many folders in once, for example I have files result_1 result_2 result_3 and want to copy them to directories 1 2 3 respectively, how can I do that, I have tried cp, echo and find syntax but did not work out.
Any idea?
Hello, I have a system that uses a compact flash with a windows os and some other files on it, also somewhere is some sort of encrypted licensing information. I have several of these machines and can use the cf from the others just fine in this machine. But when I take one of those cards and try to copy it with dd, somehow the machine can tell the difference. It's nothing illegal, it's just too old to buy the replacement. Someone has told me they copied successfully in linux with the dd command, but mine aren't working. I also can't tell the brand or type of cf since all the labels have been removed. All i know is that it's a 256mb card. So is there any other options besides dd, or is there a deeper level of dd that i can use to copy this info. I'm using something like:
sudo dd if=/dev/sde of=/home/folder/cfcard
then to copy from my hard drive to the blank cf:
sudo dd if=/home/folder/cfcard of=/dev/sde
I'm using a usb cf reader, and when i have my finished cf everything looks good. Even the machine can read it, it just gives me an error that the cf card isn't a licensed or corrupted.
Does anyone know a way to copy two files to multiple computers? I'm thinking of scp as the flavor of linux we're using does not include rdist.
I've read that scp can't copy multiple files, however maybe some scripting genius has figured out a way. Running two scripts (one for each file), is perfectly ok!
If anyone care to post very clear examples (i'm definitely not a programmer...) of scripts, etc, that would be great.
Thanks in advance to all those who can help!
Hi all
I got two questions about rsync:
1. I am copying a huge dir with lots of files, how do I see the overall progress? I put in the progress flag but now it show the progress each individual files.
2. Is rsync slower than cp? I used CP to copy over a NFS mount and that took about an hour. I am using rsync to copy over the same mount over the same NFS and so far it has taken 10 minutes to copy 7G. I got over 150G of stuff.
I just used rsync -avh --progress ...
Thanks
Davy
Hi all,
I've knowledge about timestamp and i'm trying to use it in a particular scenario. I've multiple folders inside which are different files. Now I'm trying to copy one file (say xyz) which is present in all the folders but has variation in it's content and time of creation into a let's say foldernew.
I'm trying to do this by copying the file xyz from each folders with the new name xyz_(it's orginal timestamp) into folder new.
Can this be done with a single command or do what should I write in a script to execute this?
Note: I want to add the timestamp of xyz when it is created not of the time of copy.
I want to copy a folder and have the same permission as a existing folder , I tried cp -r -p may copy permission but it also copy everything includes sub-directory and files to new folder , would advise the way how to create a folder with copying all files to new created folder ? thanks
I created a persistent USB thumb drive boot with LUKS for drive encryption (250 MB /boot and then 7.5 GB ext3 root). There's no swap partition because this is just to store some private files.
I want to make two or three copies of this thumb drive to store apart in case one gets destroyed/lost.
When I am booted from that thumb drive, can I plug in a same sized drive and just do a
Code:
dd if=/dev/sdb of=/dev/sdc
command to make a copy of itself to another thumb drive without booting to another host OS? This way when I make changes to one (such as to update the OS, apps, or data), I could then just copy the entire thumb drive over to the other two while still booted in the original USB.
Or would I effectively have to shut down, boot to my normal host OS (or other), and then copy the thumb drives when not booted into them.
Hi, all, I am new to the forum and quite new to Linux, I am running Mint and Kali from a USB drive, all is going well with with the software and I am starting to find my way around it.
So, now to my question, I have 15 machines which all run from a CF card and the card has multiple partitions and is a Windows Embedded XP, not that the operating system makes any difference, I need to upgrade all the CF cards from 2gb to 4gb, so unfortunately Windows isn't an option to use to copy the drives as it doesn't recognise multiple partitions on a removable drive, so I cant just remove the drive, clone it and fit the new one.
What I need is a method of cloning the drive completely with both partitions, I have read about dd but cant seem to see anything about doing this with multiple partitions, as Linux sees it as two drives when I plug it in, how can I use dd or anything else to clone the drive which is bootable and has two partitions?
At some point I would like to automate the process as I could have many of these machines/drives to upgrade, is there a way to write a program that will automatically back up the drives from a USB drive and then reinstall it, I have seen this done before but I am not sure if this method did the whole drive, just the main drive or all partitions?
Hi friends,
I am trying to copy a file from Linux to windows...using mREmoteNg.can someone help me with the format..i used the cp command.
Thanks in advance.