SHARE
Facebook X Pinterest WhatsApp

Automatically Process New Files With fsniper

Written By
thumbnail
Web Webster
Web Webster
Oct 18, 2008

“Another use case presents itself in the context of security.
Suppose you have a collection of media files that you share
read-only on a file server. This security makes it impossible for a
user to add new files to the server. With fsniper, you can share an
“upload” directory and have scripts move files that are uploaded to
it across to the read-only fileserver automatically. If the client
machine has a problem it could write random files to the upload
directory, but then you have control of new files in the upload
directory with the scripts that fsniper calls. For example, your
move scripts might check that the file names are sane and that the
file types are valid, not allowing random files, only valid JPEG
files. At the very least your move scripts might block overwriting
files or check the old version of a file into a revision control
system before overwriting it.”

Complete
Story

thumbnail
Web Webster

Web Webster

Web Webster has more than 20 years of writing and editorial experience in the tech sector. He’s written and edited news, demand generation, user-focused, and thought leadership content for business software solutions, consumer tech, and Linux Today, he edits and writes for a portfolio of tech industry news and analysis websites including webopedia.com, and DatabaseJournal.com.

Recommended for you...

Red Hat reveals major enhancements to Red Hat Enterprise Linux AI
sjvn
Oct 22, 2024
How to Find AWS EC2 Instance Type Over SSH (6 Methods)
Benny Lanco
Sep 23, 2024
Crond: Daemon to Execute Scheduled Commands
Rose Hosting Blog
Sep 20, 2024
A Detailed Introduction to Oracle VirtualBox
Senthil Kumar
Sep 19, 2024
Linux Today Logo

LinuxToday is a trusted, contributor-driven news resource supporting all types of Linux users. Our thriving international community engages with us through social media and frequent content contributions aimed at solving problems ranging from personal computing to enterprise-level IT operations. LinuxToday serves as a home for a community that struggles to find comparable information elsewhere on the web.

Property of TechnologyAdvice. © 2025 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.