Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2008 08:55:48 -0500 From: "The MadDaemon" <maddaemon@gmail.com> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: tar backup script Message-ID: <6c1774c50802140555y2ee5fb26qdddebcf59c943650@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <20080214051047.GC31520@phoenix.nasreddine.info> References: <5c99941f0802131957t3fa8f7bo66c30cebfa54d7b6@mail.gmail.com> <20080214051047.GC31520@phoenix.nasreddine.info>
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I believe the -T switch in tar is for "include the files in {file}" tar cvf myfile.tar -T path/to/include On 2/14/08, Wael Nasreddine <mla@nasreddine.com> wrote: > This One Time, at Band Camp, Steel City Phantom <scphantm@yahoo.com> said, > On Wed, Feb 13, 2008 at 10:57:22PM -0500: > > this isn't really bsd specific but i still need help with it. im writing > a > > backup script a clip from that script is this: > > > find /usr/local/www/data-dist/ -name config.php > > > /usr/local/backupScript/include > > find /usr/local/www/data-dist/ -name ClientFiles >> > > /usr/local/backupScript/include > > > tar cvf /usr/local/backupScript/files/www-client-files.tar -I > > /usr/local/backupScript/include /usr/local/www/data-dist > > > obviously im creating an include file from a directory. when the tar > runs, > > it correctly adds all the files in the include file. but once that is > > finished, for some reason tar then goes back and adds all the files that > are > > in the /usr/local/www/data-dist directory, even the ones in the include > > file. i was under the impression that the -I command would add ONLY the > > files that are listed in the include. why is it adding those and then > after > > finishing that, adding all the others? > > Why won't you just do it this way?? > > $ tar cvf /usr/local/backupScript/files/www-client-files.tar $( cat > /usr/local/backupScript/include ) > > -- > Wael Nasreddine > http://wael.nasreddine.com > PGP: 1024D/C8DD18A2 06F6 1622 4BC8 4CEB D724 DE12 5565 3945 C8DD 18A2 > > .: An infinite number of monkeys typing into GNU emacs, > would never make a good program. (L. Torvalds 1995) :. > -- It said "use Linux 2.4 kernel or better" so I installed FreeBSD. Now everything runs better. Why didn't they just tell me to do that to begin with?
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