Installation of rsync
For security reasons, running the rsync server as an unprivileged user and group
is encouraged. If you intend to run rsync as a daemon, create the
rsyncd
user and group with the
following commands issued by the root
user:
groupadd -g 48 rsyncd &&
useradd -c "rsyncd Daemon" -m -d /home/rsync -g rsyncd \
-s /bin/false -u 48 rsyncd
Install rsync by running the
following commands:
./configure --prefix=/usr \
--disable-lz4 \
--disable-xxhash \
--without-included-zlib &&
make
If you have Doxygen-1.9.1 installed and wish to build HTML
API documentation, issue:
doxygen
To test the results, issue: make
check.
Now, as the root
user:
make install
If you built the documentation, install it using the following
commands as the root
user:
install -v -m755 -d /usr/share/doc/rsync-3.2.3/api &&
install -v -m644 dox/html/* /usr/share/doc/rsync-3.2.3/api
Command Explanations
--disable-lz4
: This switch
disables LZ4 compression support. Note that it uses the superior
'zstd' algorithm when this switch is in use, and zstd is provided
in LFS.
--disable-xxhash
: This
switch disables advanced xxhash checksum support. Remove this
switch if you have installed xxhash.
--without-included-zlib
:
This switch enables compilation with the system-installed zlib
library.
Configuring rsync
Config Files
/etc/rsyncd.conf
Configuration Information
For client access to remote files, you may need to install the
OpenSSH-8.4p1 package to connect to the
remote server.
This is a simple download-only configuration to set up running
rsync as a server.
See the rsyncd.conf(5) man-page for additional options (i.e.,
user authentication).
cat > /etc/rsyncd.conf << "EOF"
# This is a basic rsync configuration file
# It exports a single module without user authentication.
motd file = /home/rsync/welcome.msg
use chroot = yes
[localhost]
path = /home/rsync
comment = Default rsync module
read only = yes
list = yes
uid = rsyncd
gid = rsyncd
EOF
You can find additional configuration information and general
documentation about rsync at https://rsync.samba.org/documentation.html.
Systemd Unit
Note that you only need to start the rsync server if you want to provide an
rsync archive on your local
machine. You don't need this unit to
run the rsync client.
Install the rsyncd.service
unit included in the
blfs-systemd-units-20210122 package.
make install-rsyncd
Note
This package comes with two types of units: A service file and
a socket file. The service file will start rsync daemon once at
boot and it will keep running until the system shuts down. The
socket file will make systemd listen on rsync port (Default
873, needs to be edited for anything else) and will start rsync
daemon when something tries to connect to that port and stop
the daemon when the connection is terminated. This is called
socket activation and is analogous to using {,x}inetd on a SysVinit based system.
By default, the first method is used - rsync daemon is started
at boot and stopped at shutdown. If the socket method is
desired, you need to run as the root
user:
systemctl stop rsyncd &&
systemctl disable rsyncd &&
systemctl enable rsyncd.socket &&
systemctl start rsyncd.socket
Note that socket method is only useful for remote backups. For
local backups you'll need the service method.