message telling them to try later. The default is 0 which means no limit.
See also the "lock file" option.
+dit(bf(max verbosity)) The "max verbosity" option allows you to control
+the maximum amount of verbose information that you'll allow the daemon to
+generate (since the information goes into the log file). The default is 1,
+which allows the client to request one level of verbosity.
+
dit(bf(lock file)) The "lock file" option specifies the file to use to
support the "max connections" option. The rsync server uses record
locking on this file to ensure that the max connections limit is not
was run as root. This complements the "uid" option. The default is gid -2,
which is normally the group "nobody".
+dit(bf(filter)) The "filter" option allows you to specify a space-separated
+list of filter rules that the server will not allow to be read or written.
+This is only superficially equivalent to the client specifying these
+patterns with the --filter option. Only one "filter" option may be
+specified, but it may contain as many rules as you like, including
+merge-file rules. Note that per-directory merge-file rules do not provide
+as much protection as global rules, but they can be used to make --delete
+work better when a client downloads the server's files (if the per-dir
+merge files are included in the transfer).
+
dit(bf(exclude)) The "exclude" option allows you to specify a
space-separated list of patterns that the server will not allow to be read
or written. This is only superficially equivalent to the client
instead of "refuse options = compress" to avoid returning an error to a
client that requests compression.
+Note that rsync's --del option is implemented as a popt alias, so there
+is no need (an indeed, no way) to refuse "del" by name -- just matching
+the --delete-during option (e.g. "delete*") will refuse --del as well.
+
dit(bf(dont compress)) The "dont compress" option allows you to select
filenames based on wildcard patterns that should not be compressed
during transfer. Compression is expensive in terms of CPU usage so it