

Looks like a line by line translation from the python. Will you use it to backup your home directory?
Looks like a line by line translation from the python. Will you use it to backup your home directory?
Especially one that lets you know how long it’s been since you took time to run a backup, keeps track of which set of backups could be updated, and which should be refreshed, and keeps a log file up to date and in .csv format so you can mess with it in a spreadsheet?
That’s ok Like any landing you can walk away from. Any code that runs to spec is good, much could be better.
Yeah, no problem… I started out with just bare rsync - but I did the backup infrequently and needed my notes to know the command. Then I wrote a simple shell script to run the rsync for me. Then I decided I needed more than one backup, redundancy is good. Then I wanted to keep track of the backups so I had it write to .backuplog then that file started getting dated (every time I run a “sun” backup the record of the previous one is useless) so Finally TaDa! loci is born.
It’s also to help me learn python. And it works for me. : ^ )
They probably named it HORNET for a reason - think Japanese Murder Hornets… What Could Possibly Go Wrong??
It will probably start out as little glitches and slowdowns to destroy faith in your system (“Windows works right all the time”) a random 2 second pauses. Finally one day every Linux box in the world crashes, all at the same time, because some ‘dummy’ in Microsoft deleted the private signing key.
There is also Workspace Behavior=>Screen Locking where one may set automatic screen lock, ( I uncheck both boxes )
My system came with Python3 installed. Debian 12.