From: Rikishi42 on
On 2010-06-05, John Hasler <jhasler(a)newsguy.com> wrote:
> Darren Salt writes:
>> netcat is an option.
>
> He almost certainly does not have netcat on a Caldera box. However, he
> says he does have rcp, so he's got it made.

rsync, obviously.


Or did I miss out on something?


--
Any time things appear to be going better, you have overlooked
something.
From: John Hasler on
Rikishi42 writes:
> Or did I miss out on something?

The machine is running Caldera Linux. That means that it is probably
older than rsync.
--
John Hasler
jhasler(a)newsguy.com
Dancing Horse Hill
Elmwood, WI USA
From: jellybean stonerfish on
On Fri, 04 Jun 2010 17:08:17 -0700, Todd wrote:

> On 06/04/2010 11:50 AM, John Hasler wrote:
>> Todd writes:
>>> I think he does have rcp. What would I need to do to the new server
>>> to get it to accept rcp?
>>
>> An rsh-server package.
>
>
> $ yum search rsh
> ...
> ========================= Matched: rsh ========================= ...
> rsh-server.i386 : Servers for remote access commands (rsh, rlogin, rcp).
>
> Thank you!
>
> -T
>
> p.s. and when I am done:
> rpm -e rsh-server

Let us know if it works for your transfer.
From: Maxwell Lol on

> If all else fails, pipe 'tar''s output to 'od' to get a 7-bit data stream=
> :

if you are going to do that, might as well compress the tar file first...
From: Todd on

>> $ yum search rsh
>> ...
>> ========================= Matched: rsh ========================= ...
>> rsh-server.i386 : Servers for remote access commands (rsh, rlogin, rcp).
>>
>> Thank you!
>>
>> -T
>>
>> p.s. and when I am done:
>> rpm -e rsh-server
>
> Let us know if it works for your transfer.

Will do! (I may be a few month before the customer goes
with the quote.)

-T