one more thing.... how would I figure out the  user@host name of a windows computer?
with that I'll be able to backup my brothers computer!

On Thu, Feb 16, 2012 at 11:42 PM, Michael Havens <bmike1@gmail.com> wrote:
so wait a second.... could I put fsarchiver on the server and then:

tar --ignore-failed-read [/mnt/sda1] -czf - | ssh remoteuser@remote.system "tar -xzf - "| "<fsarchiver command>"

so the tar command will create a tarball and the the pipe will transfer the tarball to the server and extract it wich the second pipe will feed into fsarchiver. Is that correct? I have a question: what does the minus sign in front of the pipes represent?  Well... I know it represents the name of the tar ball but.... is it the name? Could I put anything in that place?

and then Enriques command  (tar jcf - /path/to/backup|ssh user@otherbox 'tar xf -') would compress a tarball and then create a non compressed archive on the server.

You know... I wondered if I could use scp for this. Investigating the man page reveals that this is the program I want to use. The text of the command that I should issue I think would be (I want to do this from a third computer):

scp -Cr user1@host1:mnt/sda1 user2@host2:desired/directory/file/name

I don't know if I assigned a user1 or a host1 name. How can I find this out? If I didn't how would I assign one or change it to a more appropriate name?

This is fun!



--
:-)~MIKE~(-: