Synchronizing files over the Internet – version 2

A while back I posted my solution for Synchronizing files over the Internet. And even though it works, it is still way too slow for me (it takes a god awful long time to scan the server side files for changes). So I started my search for a faster solution again. While googling for a windows program that does the same thing rsync does for Unix I found something better: a Windows version of rsync. This isn’t one of those boring cygwin compiles of rsync that burdens you with the whole cygwin side effects (well, probably it IS just a cygwin compile, but the frontend takes away any “residue” of that).

Anyway, now I’ve got a rsync server running under Linux on the Internet, and my clients have the Windows rsync client that gets run automatically every 30 min. It’s simply blazing fast since the server and clients can independently calculate any changes in files and the network (bottleneck) is just used to transfer what was changed in the files (and minimal file information).

Server downtime

The  server hosting this page will have a slight downtime tonight between midnight and 7:00 am. I’m having the RAM upgraded to 2GB since the swapfile has been doing a lot of work lately (my mysql databases have grown pretty large and when I orderd the server a few years back 512MB seemd to be enough ;))

Things that go BOOM

I think god hates me, and he is thinking up really creative ways to show me it too. I had just got finished at work preparing some things for tomorrow, when the lights went out and came back on about a minute later. Turns out a voltage transformation station nearby decided to short circuit and tear down the whole power grid of the city (that, I found out later). Now that wouldn’t have bothered me since (as a data center) we have emergency power that can run for a while. Yeah, that is really useful … unless of course the circuit my computer is on decided to blow the fuse when the power came back on (and I of course don’t have access to the room with the fuses, or else I could have just flipped it back up). Now I either had the choice of grabbing my laptop and going into one of the network rooms and working from there or saying “aw F#$%” and going home. The later choice won.

The city is kinda interesting without power. Took them about 45min. to get it turned back on too. Traffic was a bit chaotic without traffic lights (thank god I went on foot, the stupid drivers would have run me down within 5 mins.) Streetcars held up a while since they seem to be running on their own grid, but eventually the started getting stuck in traffic too (and running low on power ;))

PS. If the video from the last posting doesn’t work, try the link underneath. For some reason it works on some computers, and on others it doesn’t. I haven’t been able to figure out why yet.

Helmetcam test

took my helmet camera with me today when we went climbing. I learned two things: next time put on the camera BEFORE I do the hard routes (by the time I got around to grabbing my cam, my arms were tired and you all get to see a boring route), and I somehow have to get the picture more “zoomed out”. My head is pretty close to the wall (leaning costs strength) so unfortunatly 90% of the film is looking at a wall up close. Yeah, it’s really that exciting.

 

 

Gallery link: http://bilder.dopefish.de/helmkamera/Untitled.wmv.html