technicalpickles/homesick - GitHub
june 2011 by mlednor
Homesick is sorta like rip, but for dotfiles. It uses git to clone a repository containing dotfiles, and saves them in ~/.homesick. It then allows you to symlink all the dotfiles into place with a single command.
We call a repository that is compatible with homesick to be a 'castle'. To act as a castle, a repository must be organized like so:
Contains a 'home' directory
'home' contains any number of files and directories that begin with '.'
backup
sync
We call a repository that is compatible with homesick to be a 'castle'. To act as a castle, a repository must be organized like so:
Contains a 'home' directory
'home' contains any number of files and directories that begin with '.'
june 2011 by mlednor
SparkleShare - Sharing work made easy
april 2011 by mlednor
SparkleShare is a syncing and collaboration tool that shines by its absence. It's designed to get out of your way, to make sharing documents and collaboration easier, and to make peers aware of what you are doing.
backup
sync
dropbox
opensource
april 2011 by mlednor
lsyncd - Project Hosting on Google Code
october 2010 by mlednor
Lsyncd uses rsync to synchronize local directories with a remote machine running rsyncd. Lsyncd watches multiple directories trees through inotify. The first step after adding the watches is to rsync all directories with the remote host, and then sync single file by collecting the inotify events. So lsyncd is a light-weight live mirror solution that should be easy to install and use while blending well with your system. See lsyncd --help for detailed command line options.
backup
storage
sync
october 2010 by mlednor
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