Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Re: [BLUG] scp -p preserving ownership through root user

On Wed, 2008-07-02 at 11:57 -0400, Shei, Shing-Shong wrote:
> This is because the files on machine A is created by root, the user who
> is running the scp. If you want to preserve all information, you need
> to use tar:
>
> ssh machineB -n tar cCf /path/to/file - . | tar xf -
>
> (Or you have to 'su X' on machine A before you do the scp.)
>

True, but you have to make sure that the passwd/group file is in sync
for all of the files or there'll be weirdness unless you use
--numeric-owner.

That one bit me when I was using a rescue disk and copying one machine
to another...

Brian


> Shing-Shong
>
> Mark Krenz wrote:
> > I have some files that are owned on machine A by user X. As the root
> > user on machine A, I run
> >
> > scp -p files root@machineB
> >
> > The mode and modification times are preserved, but the ownership is
> > not. I know that with rsync -a the ownership is preserved, but
> > according ot the scp man page, ownership isn't preserved with -p. I
> > just got burned by this. Tell me if I'm insane or not but I could swear
> > that this worked before. It might have had this in a much older version
> > of scp, like the old non-openssh version of ssh.
> >
> > Know your options.
> >
> >
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