LINBIT / csync2

file synchronization tool using librsync and current state databases
GNU General Public License v2.0
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I have not inetd.conf in /etc #21

Closed vvzar closed 4 years ago

vvzar commented 4 years ago

What i do wrong?

vvzar commented 4 years ago

Also if i run this: csync2 stream tcp nowait root \

    /usr/local/sbin/csync2 csync2 -i

in console, I can see only help output. I suspect that if I add this string to startup, Ill have same result: Whats wrong with you?

csync2 2.0 - cluster synchronization tool, 2nd generation Copyright (C) 2004 - 2015 LINBIT Information Technologies GmbH http://www.linbit.com See also: http://git.linbit.com/csync2.git/?a=blob;f=AUTHORS

Version: 2.0

This program is free software under the terms of the GNU GPL.

Usage: csync2 [-v..] [-C config-name] \ [-D database-dir] [-N hostname] [-p port] ..

With file parameters: -h [-r] file.. Add (recursive) hints for check to db -c [-r] file.. Check files and maybe add to dirty db -u [-d] [-r] file.. Updates files if listed in dirty db -o [-r] file.. Create list of files in compare-mode -f [-r] file.. Force files to win next conflict resolution -m file.. Mark files in database as dirty

Simple mode: -x [-d] [[-r] file..] Run checks for all given files and update remote hosts.

Without file parameters: -c Check all hints in db and eventually mark files as dirty -u [-d] Update (transfer dirty files to peers and mark as clear)

    -H      List all pending hints from status db
    -L      List all file-entries from status db
    -M      List all dirty files from status db

    -S myname peername      List file-entries from status db for this
                            synchronization pair.

    -T                      Test if everything is in sync with all peers.

    -T filename             Test if this file is in sync with all peers.

    -T myname peername      Test if this synchronization pair is in sync.

    -T myname peer file     Test only this file in this sync pair.

    -TT     As -T, but print the unified diffs.

    -i      Run in inetd server mode.
    -ii     Run in stand-alone server mode.
    -iii    Run in stand-alone server mode (one connect only).

    -R      Remove files from database which do not match config entries.

Exit codes: The modes -H, -L, -M and -S return 2 if the requested db is empty. The mode -T returns 2 if both hosts are in sync. Otherwise, only exit codes 0 (no errors) and 1 (some unspecified errrors) are expected.

Modifiers: -r Recursive operation over subdirectories -d Dry-run on all remote update operations

    -B      Do not block everything into big SQL transactions. This
            slows down csync2 but allows multiple csync2 processes to
            access the database at the same time. Use e.g. when slow
            lines are used or huge files are transferred.

    -A      Open database in asynchronous mode. This will cause data
            corruption if the operating system crashes or the computer
            loses power.

    -I      Init-run. Use with care and read the documentation first!
            You usually do not need this option unless you are
            initializing groups with really large file lists.

    -X      Also add removals to dirty db when doing a -TI run.
    -U      Don't mark all other peers as dirty when doing a -TI run.

    -G Group1,Group2,Group3,...
            Only use these groups from config-file.

    -P peer1,peer1,...
            Only update these peers (still mark all as dirty).
            Only show files for these peers in -o (compare) mode.

    -F      Add new entries to dirty database with force flag set.

    -t      Print timestamps to debug output (e.g. for profiling).

    -s filename
            Print timestamps also to this file.

    -W fd   Write a list of directories in which relevant files can be
            found to the specified file descriptor (when doing a -c run).
            The directory names in this output are zero-terminated.

Database switches: -D database-dir or url default: /var/lib/csync2 Absolute path: use sqlite database in that directory URLs: sqlite:///some/path[/database.db3] sqlite3:///some/path[/database.db3] sqlite2:///some/path[/database.db] mysql://[user>:<password>@]<hostname/[database] pgsql://[user>:<password>@]<hostname/[database] If database is not given, it defaults to csync2. Note that for non-sqlite backends, the database name is "cleaned", characters outside of [0-9][a-z][A-Z] will be replaced with .

Creating key file: csync2 -k filename

Environment variables: CSYNC2_SYSTEM_DIR Directory containing csync2.cfg and other csync2 system files. Defaults to /etc.

Csync2 will refuse to do anything if this file is found: $CSYNC2_SYSTEM_DIR/csync2.lock

lge commented 4 years ago

read csync2.adoc, csync2-quickstart.adoc ; others have managed as well... you can do it, too.