Commit graph

7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
joerg
40cda70de3 Move duplicity and rdiff-backup to the newer net/librsync. 2015-09-17 17:53:35 +00:00
wiz
59e422c223 patch-aa didn't work too well, remove it. Bump PKGREVISION. 2009-08-24 06:15:23 +00:00
wiz
b17feb0c77 Avoid using os.popen2 with Python>=2.6.
Patch from https://savannah.nongnu.org/bugs/?26064

Bump PKGREVISION.
2009-08-23 15:23:26 +00:00
snj
3f8a531ce0 Update to latest stable version, 1.2.2. Zillions of fixes and a some
new features.  See the bundled CHANGELOG for details.

Now requires at least python24.

Add PKGMANDIR support.
2008-10-30 04:40:26 +00:00
abs
a425cdb4d8 Update rdiff-backup to 0.12.3 (Also fixes PR pkg/22095)
- Over 1500 lines of changelog since 0.10.2
	- Now rdiff-backup writes metadata (uid, gid, mtime, etc.) to a
	  compressed text file in the rdiff-backup-data directory
	- No longer seems compelled to send symlinks every time
2003-08-14 12:08:00 +00:00
wiz
1f6a5506d4 Update to 0.10.2, from PR 20268 by David S.
Minor bugfixes.
2003-03-22 01:03:09 +00:00
agc
f705f48d3a Initial import of rdiff-backup-0.10.1 into the NetBSD Packages Collection.
Provided in PR 18577 by David.S at idiom dot com, some modifications
by me to use buildlink2 files, and to specify the correct version of
python required.

Rdiff-backup backs up one directory to another, possibly over a network.
The target directory ends up a copy of the source directory, but extra
reverse diffs are stored in a special subdirectory of that target directory,
so you can still recover files lost some time ago. The idea is to combine
the best features of a mirror and an incremental backup. Rdiff-backup also
preserves subdirectories, hard links, dev files, permissions, uid/gid
ownership (if it is running as root), and modification times. Finally,
rdiff-backup can operate in a bandwidth efficient manner over a pipe, like
rsync. Thus you can use rdiff-backup and ssh to securely back a hard drive
up to a remote location, and only the differences will be transmitted.
2002-10-15 15:16:02 +00:00