try a service that allows ssh and private, non-internet accessible, folders
/usr/bin/rsync -az --password-file=/path/to/password/file --delete user@ip:/path/to/remote/folder/ /path/to/local/folder/
" --password-file This option allows you to provide a password in a file for accessing a remote rsync daemon. Note that this option is only useful when accessing an rsync daemon using the built in transâ port, not when using a remote shell as the transport. The file must not be world readable. It should contain just the password as a single line."
password:user
-- Philip Dorr
On Fri, Mar 28, 2008 at 3:59 PM, Arthur Pemberton [email protected] wrote:
Are you guys aware of any trusted remote solution, something I can setup a throttled rsync to with cron, that allows high end-to-end high encryption. I guess the only sensible place to do encryption at would be on my end. I've ready stories of people loosing their domain names due to having done business with Cuba (even people outside the USA) and my country of origin does business regularly in Cuba, so I'm also concerned about that aspect... although i guess that makes the criteria too tough.
I'd settle for encryption and reliability.
I'm guessing i can use fuse-encfs and just rsync it's dir
-- Fedora 7 : sipping some of that moonshine ( www.pembo13.com ) _______________________________________________ Kclug mailing list [email protected] http://kclug.org/mailman/listinfo/kclug