I need to sync a few folders between a mac laptop and a mac desktop. What should I use?
I have a lot of storage available on my web hosting site. I am willing to shell out for .mac or mobileme or whatever the latest such thing is, if it's easy.
rsync has already been suggested. I could do it that way, but after looking at the man page, I decided I don't want to think that hard.
I have a lot of storage available on my web hosting site. I am willing to shell out for .mac or mobileme or whatever the latest such thing is, if it's easy.
rsync has already been suggested. I could do it that way, but after looking at the man page, I decided I don't want to think that hard.
no subject
Date: 15 Jul 2009 01:23 am (UTC)If it's big, and you want to have some control over the process, rsync really is the best. The man page is intimidating, but skip down to where the examples are and there's some useful stuff there. Most often I use it like this:
rsync -e ssh /home/gconnor/whatever/ gconnor@hostname:/home/gconnor/whatever/
which basically means to sync from the local folder to the remote folder on "hostname" using ssh to connect and using gconnor as the username. The only thing that really trips me up sometimes and I have to be cautious of, is the / on the end... just be consistent on the source and destination so they both have the slash, otherwise you might end up with a folder-within-a-folder.
The upside to rsync is that you have more control, and you aren't trusting a third party like DropBox to carry and hold your data.
I have to admit that I haven't tried .mac/mobileme for its folder sync features... I use it for contacts, calendar, everything else but actual files. I am actually not sure if it has a feature to sync folders, or if it just offers some storage that's available from multiple locations. I'll be interested to see if someone else chimes in with more info about that.
no subject
Date: 15 Jul 2009 01:36 am (UTC)That said, I haven't really done anything with it, so I don't know how well it works!