Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I'm trying to push changes to my server through ssh on windows (cygwin) using rsync. The command I am using is:

rsync -rvz -e ssh /cygdrive/c/myfolder/ rsyncuser@192.168.1.110:/srv/www/prj112/myfolder/

/srv/www/prj112/myfolder/ is owned by rsyncuser. My problem is that eventhough with rsync the sub directories are create as they publish, each directory is assigned default permission of d--------- so rsync fails to copy any files inside it.

How do I fix this?

share|improve this question
Could you post your Windows and Cygwin versions along with the output of the following command: ls -la /srv/www/prj112/myfolder? – namsral May 6 '11 at 13:43

4 Answers

up vote 26 down vote accepted
+250

The option to ignore NTFS permissions has changed in Cygwin version 1.7. This might be what's causing the problem.

Try adding the 'noacl' flag to your Cygwin mounts in C:\cygwin\etc\fstab, for example:

none /cygdrive cygdrive user,noacl,posix=0 0 0

You can pass custom permissions via rsync using the 'chmod' option:

rsync -rvz --chmod=ugo=rwX -e ssh source destination
share|improve this answer
4  
+1 for the --chmod option – Rob Cowie May 12 '11 at 8:37

Your problem stems from the fact that the Unix permissions on that directory really are 0. All of the access information is stored in separate ACLs, which rsync does not copy. Thus, it sets the permissions on the remote copy to 0, and, obviously, is unable to write to that directory afterwards. You can run

chmod -R 775

on that directory, which should fix your rsync problem.

After a look at the manpage I can tell that the chmod param is available in rsync since version ~2.6.8. But you have to use --chmod=ugo=rwX in combination with rsync -av

You should also try this command:

rsync -av <SOURCE_DIR> rsyncuser@192.168.1.110:/srv/www/prj112/myfolder

It would work on Linux at least. And note that rsync does not need to mention ssh--at least on Linux.

But if all fails and just to give an option you may take a look at this ready packed-up tool on sourceforge cwRsync

share|improve this answer

if you deploy a site from windows (for ex. octopress use rsync) it's possible set permission to 775 adding multiple chmod command:

   rsync -avz --chmod=ug=rwx --chmod=o=rx -e ssh
share|improve this answer

Cygwin rsync will report permission denied when some process has the target file open. Download and run Process Explorer and find out if anything else is locking the file or simply try renaming the file and see if you get the Windows error about some other process having the file open.

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.