The files has no signifiant extentions but their parentcatalog has some typical name as "ROOT".
However this catalogname is in use in another parallell structure for configurations, logs and such
and must be backuped. From my point of view is the trick to find a common named parentcatalog middle in
a subtree where You can normally find cachefiles.
Example
In one server we have in the first version x1 of a Apacheserver and have 3 catalog ROOT in the subtree.
After configuring version x2 there are 6 catalog ROOT (only the latest in use) and I dont want backups for /programxx/x1/...ROOT/xxcaches-files and /programxx/x2/.../ROOT/xxcache-files.
Then we have perhaps 50 alike server with a mix of different program and versions and a lot of files
-and a "standard directive" would be fine to exclude
crazyrov
4 Operator
•
1.3K Posts
0
August 22nd, 2014 05:00
Does the cache files you are referring to have any distinctive extension ?
lestu
2 Posts
0
August 25th, 2014 05:00
The files has no signifiant extentions but their parentcatalog has some typical name as "ROOT".
However this catalogname is in use in another parallell structure for configurations, logs and such
and must be backuped. From my point of view is the trick to find a common named parentcatalog middle in
a subtree where You can normally find cachefiles.
Example
In one server we have in the first version x1 of a Apacheserver and have 3 catalog ROOT in the subtree.
After configuring version x2 there are 6 catalog ROOT (only the latest in use) and I dont want backups for /programxx/x1/...ROOT/xxcaches-files and /programxx/x2/.../ROOT/xxcache-files.
Then we have perhaps 50 alike server with a mix of different program and versions and a lot of files
-and a "standard directive" would be fine to exclude