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NAME
rsync - a fast, versatile, remote (and local) file-copying tool
SYNOPSIS
Local: rsync [OPTION...] SRC... [DEST]
Access via remote shell:
Pull: rsync [OPTION...] [USER@]HOST:SRC... [DEST]
Push: rsync [OPTION...] SRC... [USER@]HOST:DEST
Access via rsync daemon:
Pull: rsync [OPTION...] [USER@]HOST::SRC... [DEST]
rsync [OPTION...] rsync://[USER@]HOST[:PORT]/SRC... [DEST]
Push: rsync [OPTION...] SRC... [USER@]HOST::DEST
rsync [OPTION...] SRC... rsync://[USER@]HOST[:PORT]/DEST
Usages with just one SRC arg and no DEST arg will list the source files
instead of copying.
DESCRIPTION
Rsync is a fast and extraordinarily versatile file copying tool. It
can copy locally, to/from another host over any remote shell, or
to/from a remote rsync daemon. It offers a large number of options
that control every aspect of its behavior and permit very flexible
specification of the set of files to be copied. It is famous for its
delta-transfer algorithm, which reduces the amount of data sent over
the network by sending only the differences between the source files
and the existing files in the destination. Rsync is widely used for
backups and mirroring and as an improved copy command for everyday
use.
Rsync finds files that need to be transferred using a quick check
algorithm (by default) that looks for files that have changed in size
or in last-modified time. Any changes in the other preserved
attributes (as requested by options) are made on the destination file
directly when the quick check indicates that the files data does not
need to be updated.
Some of the additional features of rsync are:
o support for copying links, devices, owners, groups, and
permissions
o exclude and exclude-from options similar to GNU tar
o a CVS exclude mode for ignoring the same files that CVS would
ignore
o can use any transparent remote shell, including ssh or rsh
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o does not require super-user privileges
o pipelining of file transfers to minimize latency costs
o support for anonymous or authenticated rsync daemons (ideal for
mirroring)
GENERAL
Rsync copies files either to or from a remote host, or locally on the
current host (it does not support copying files between two remote
hosts).
There are two different ways for rsync to contact a remote system:
using a remote-shell program as the transport (such as ssh or rsh) or
contacting an rsync daemon directly via TCP. The remote-shell
transport is used whenever the source or destination path contains a
single colon (:) separator after a host specification. Contacting an
rsync daemon directly happens when the source or destination path
contains a double colon (::) separator after a host specification, OR
when an rsync:// URL is specified (see also the USING RSYNC-DAEMON
FEATURES VIA A REMOTE-SHELL CONNECTION section for an exception to
this latter rule).
As a special case, if a single source arg is specified without a
destination, the files are listed in an output format similar to ls
-l.
As expected, if neither the source or destination path specify a
remote host, the copy occurs locally (see also the --list-only
option).
Rsync refers to the local side as the client and the remote side as
the server. Dont confuse server with an rsync daemon -- a daemon is
always a server, but a server can be either a daemon or a remote-shell
spawned process.
SETUP
See the file README for installation instructions.
Once installed, you can use rsync to any machine that you can access
via a remote shell (as well as some that you can access using the
rsync daemon-mode protocol). For remote transfers, a modern rsync
uses ssh for its communications, but it may have been configured to
use a different remote shell by default, such as rsh or remsh.
You can also specify any remote shell you like, either by using the -e
command line option, or by setting the RSYNC_RSH environment variable.
Note that rsync must be installed on both the source and destination
machines.
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USAGE
You use rsync in the same way you use rcp. You must specify a source
and a destination, one of which may be remote.
Perhaps the best way to explain the syntax is with some examples:
rsync -t *.c foo:src/
This would transfer all files matching the pattern *.c from the
current directory to the directory src on the machine foo. If any of
the files already exist on the remote system then the rsync
remote-update protocol is used to update the file by sending only the
differences in the data. Note that the expansion of wildcards on the
commandline (*.c) into a list of files is handled by the shell before
it runs rsync and not by rsync itself (exactly the same as all other
posix-style programs).
rsync -avz foo:src/bar /data/tmp
This would recursively transfer all files from the directory src/bar
on the machine foo into the /data/tmp/bar directory on the local
machine. The files are transferred in archive mode, which ensures that
symbolic links, devices, attributes, permissions, ownerships, etc. are
preserved in the transfer. Additionally, compression will be used to
reduce the size of data portions of the transfer.
rsync -avz foo:src/bar/ /data/tmp
A trailing slash on the source changes this behavior to avoid creating
an additional directory level at the destination. You can think of a
trailing / on a source as meaning copy the contents of this directory
as opposed to copy the directory by name, but in both cases the
attributes of the containing directory are transferred to the
containing directory on the destination. In other words, each of the
following commands copies the files in the same way, including their
setting of the attributes of /dest/foo:
rsync -av /src/foo /dest
rsync -av /src/foo/ /dest/foo
Note also that host and module references dont require a trailing
slash to copy the contents of the default directory. For example,
both of these copy the remote directorys contents into /dest:
rsync -av host: /dest
rsync -av host::module /dest
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You can also use rsync in local-only mode, where both the source and
destination dont have a : in the name. In this case it behaves like an
improved copy command.
Finally, you can list all the (listable) modules available from a
particular rsync daemon by leaving off the module name:
rsync somehost.mydomain.com::
See the following section for more details.
ADVANCED USAGE
The syntax for requesting multiple files from a remote host is done by
specifying additional remote-host args in the same style as the first,
or with the hostname omitted. For instance, all these work:
rsync -av host:file1 :file2 host:file{3,4} /dest/
rsync -av host::modname/file{1,2} host::modname/file3 /dest/
rsync -av host::modname/file1 ::modname/file{3,4}
Older versions of rsync required using quoted spaces in the SRC, like
these examples:
rsync -av host:'dir1/file1 dir2/file2' /dest
rsync host::'modname/dir1/file1 modname/dir2/file2' /dest
This word-splitting still works (by default) in the latest rsync, but
is not as easy to use as the first method.
If you need to transfer a filename that contains whitespace, you can
either specify the --protect-args (-s) option, or youll need to escape
the whitespace in a way that the remote shell will understand. For
instance:
rsync -av host:'file\ name\ with\ spaces' /dest
CONNECTING TO AN RSYNC DAEMON
It is also possible to use rsync without a remote shell as the
transport. In this case you will directly connect to a remote rsync
daemon, typically using TCP port 873. (This obviously requires the
daemon to be running on the remote system, so refer to the STARTING AN
RSYNC DAEMON TO ACCEPT CONNECTIONS section below for information on
that.)
Using rsync in this way is the same as using it with a remote shell
except that:
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o you either use a double colon :: instead of a single colon to
separate the hostname from the path, or you use an rsync:// URL.
o the first word of the path is actually a module name.
o the remote daemon may print a message of the day when you
connect.
o if you specify no path name on the remote daemon then the list of
accessible paths on the daemon will be shown.
o if you specify no local destination then a listing of the
specified files on the remote daemon is provided.
o you must not specify the --rsh (-e) option.
An example that copies all the files in a remote module named src:
rsync -av host::src /dest
Some modules on the remote daemon may require authentication. If so,
you will receive a password prompt when you connect. You can avoid the
password prompt by setting the environment variable RSYNC_PASSWORD to
the password you want to use or using the --password-file option. This
may be useful when scripting rsync.
WARNING: On some systems environment variables are visible to all
users. On those systems using --password-file is recommended.
You may establish the connection via a web proxy by setting the
environment variable RSYNC_PROXY to a hostname:port pair pointing to
your web proxy. Note that your web proxys configuration must support
proxy connections to port 873.
You may also establish a daemon connection using a program as a proxy
by setting the environment variable RSYNC_CONNECT_PROG to the commands
you wish to run in place of making a direct socket connection. The
string may contain the escape %H to represent the hostname specified
in the rsync command (so use %% if you need a single % in your
string). For example:
export RSYNC_CONNECT_PROG='ssh proxyhost nc %H 873'
rsync -av targethost1::module/src/ /dest/
rsync -av rsync:://targethost2/module/src/ /dest/
The command specified above uses ssh to run nc (netcat) on a
proxyhost, which forwards all data to port 873 (the rsync daemon) on
the targethost (%H).
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USING RSYNC-DAEMON FEATURES VIA A REMOTE-SHELL CONNECTION
It is sometimes useful to use various features of an rsync daemon
(such as named modules) without actually allowing any new socket
connections into a system (other than what is already required to
allow remote-shell access). Rsync supports connecting to a host using
a remote shell and then spawning a single-use daemon server that
expects to read its config file in the home dir of the remote user.
This can be useful if you want to encrypt a daemon-style transfers
data, but since the daemon is started up fresh by the remote user, you
may not be able to use features such as chroot or change the uid used
by the daemon. (For another way to encrypt a daemon transfer,
consider using ssh to tunnel a local port to a remote machine and
configure a normal rsync daemon on that remote host to only allow
connections from localhost.)
From the users perspective, a daemon transfer via a remote-shell
connection uses nearly the same command-line syntax as a normal
rsync-daemon transfer, with the only exception being that you must
explicitly set the remote shell program on the command-line with the
--rsh=COMMAND option. (Setting the RSYNC_RSH in the environment will
not turn on this functionality.) For example:
rsync -av --rsh=ssh host::module /dest
If you need to specify a different remote-shell user, keep in mind
that the user@ prefix in front of the host is specifying the
rsync-user value (for a module that requires user-based
authentication). This means that you must give the -l user option to
ssh when specifying the remote-shell, as in this example that uses the
short version of the --rsh option:
rsync -av -e ssh -l ssh-user rsync-user@host::module /dest
The ssh-user will be used at the ssh level; the rsync-user will be
used to log-in to the module.
STARTING AN RSYNC DAEMON TO ACCEPT CONNECTIONS
In order to connect to an rsync daemon, the remote system needs to
have a daemon already running (or it needs to have configured
something like inetd to spawn an rsync daemon for incoming connections
on a particular port). For full information on how to start a daemon
that will handling incoming socket connections, see the rsyncd.conf(5)
man page -- that is the config file for the daemon, and it contains
the full details for how to run the daemon (including stand-alone and
inetd configurations).
If youre using one of the remote-shell transports for the transfer,
there is no need to manually start an rsync daemon.
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SORTED TRANSFER ORDER
Rsync always sorts the specified filenames into its internal transfer
list. This handles the merging together of the contents of
identically named directories, makes it easy to remove duplicate
filenames, and may confuse someone when the files are transferred in a
different order than what was given on the command-line.
If you need a particular file to be transferred prior to another,
either separate the files into different rsync calls, or consider
using --delay-updates (which doesnt affect the sorted transfer order,
but does make the final file-updating phase happen much more rapidly).
EXAMPLES
Here are some examples of how I use rsync.
To backup my wifes home directory, which consists of large MS Word
files and mail folders, I use a cron job that runs
rsync -Cavz . arvidsjaur:backup
each night over a PPP connection to a duplicate directory on my
machine arvidsjaur.
To synchronize my samba source trees I use the following Makefile
targets:
get:
rsync -avuzb --exclude '*~' samba:samba/ .
put:
rsync -Cavuzb . samba:samba/
sync: get put
this allows me to sync with a CVS directory at the other end of the
connection. I then do CVS operations on the remote machine, which
saves a lot of time as the remote CVS protocol isnt very efficient.
I mirror a directory between my old and new ftp sites with the
command:
rsync -az -e ssh --delete ~ftp/pub/samba nimbus:~ftp/pub/tridge
This is launched from cron every few hours.
OPTIONS SUMMARY
Here is a short summary of the options available in rsync. Please
refer to the detailed description below for a complete description.
-v, --verbose increase verbosity
--info=FLAGS fine-grained informational verbosity
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--debug=FLAGS fine-grained debug verbosity
--msgs2stderr special output handling for debugging
-q, --quiet suppress non-error messages
--no-motd suppress daemon-mode MOTD (see caveat)
-c, --checksum skip based on checksum, not mod-time & size
-a, --archive archive mode; equals -rlptgoD (no -H,-A,-X)
--no-OPTION turn off an implied OPTION (e.g. --no-D)
-r, --recursive recurse into directories
-R, --relative use relative path names
--no-implied-dirs don't send implied dirs with --relative
-b, --backup make backups (see --suffix & --backup-dir)
--backup-dir=DIR make backups into hierarchy based in DIR
--suffix=SUFFIX backup suffix (default ~ w/o --backup-dir)
-u, --update skip files that are newer on the receiver
--inplace update destination files in-place
--append append data onto shorter files
--append-verify --append w/old data in file checksum
-d, --dirs transfer directories without recursing
-l, --links copy symlinks as symlinks
-L, --copy-links transform symlink into referent file/dir
--copy-unsafe-links only unsafe symlinks are transformed
--safe-links ignore symlinks that point outside the tree
--munge-links munge symlinks to make them safer
-k, --copy-dirlinks transform symlink to dir into referent dir
-K, --keep-dirlinks treat symlinked dir on receiver as dir
-H, --hard-links preserve hard links
-p, --perms preserve permissions
-E, --executability preserve executability
--chmod=CHMOD affect file and/or directory permissions
-A, --acls preserve ACLs (implies -p)
-X, --xattrs preserve extended attributes
-o, --owner preserve owner (super-user only)
-g, --group preserve group
--devices preserve device files (super-user only)
--specials preserve special files
-D same as --devices --specials
-t, --times preserve modification times
-O, --omit-dir-times omit directories from --times
-J, --omit-link-times omit symlinks from --times
--super receiver attempts super-user activities
--fake-super store/recover privileged attrs using xattrs
-S, --sparse handle sparse files efficiently
--preallocate allocate dest files before writing
-n, --dry-run perform a trial run with no changes made
-W, --whole-file copy files whole (w/o delta-xfer algorithm)
-x, --one-file-system don't cross filesystem boundaries
-B, --block-size=SIZE force a fixed checksum block-size
-e, --rsh=COMMAND specify the remote shell to use
--rsync-path=PROGRAM specify the rsync to run on remote machine
--existing skip creating new files on receiver
--ignore-existing skip updating files that exist on receiver
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--remove-source-files sender removes synchronized files (non-dir)
--del an alias for --delete-during
--delete delete extraneous files from dest dirs
--delete-before receiver deletes before xfer, not during
--delete-during receiver deletes during the transfer
--delete-delay find deletions during, delete after
--delete-after receiver deletes after transfer, not during
--delete-excluded also delete excluded files from dest dirs
--ignore-missing-args ignore missing source args without error
--delete-missing-args delete missing source args from destination
--ignore-errors delete even if there are I/O errors
--force force deletion of dirs even if not empty
--max-delete=NUM don't delete more than NUM files
--max-size=SIZE don't transfer any file larger than SIZE
--min-size=SIZE don't transfer any file smaller than SIZE
--partial keep partially transferred files
--partial-dir=DIR put a partially transferred file into DIR
--delay-updates put all updated files into place at end
-m, --prune-empty-dirs prune empty directory chains from file-list
--numeric-ids don't map uid/gid values by user/group name
--usermap=STRING custom username mapping
--groupmap=STRING custom groupname mapping
--chown=USER:GROUP simple username/groupname mapping
--timeout=SECONDS set I/O timeout in seconds
--contimeout=SECONDS set daemon connection timeout in seconds
-I, --ignore-times don't skip files that match size and time
--size-only skip files that match in size
--modify-window=NUM compare mod-times with reduced accuracy
-T, --temp-dir=DIR create temporary files in directory DIR
-y, --fuzzy find similar file for basis if no dest file
--compare-dest=DIR also compare received files relative to DIR
--copy-dest=DIR ... and include copies of unchanged files
--link-dest=DIR hardlink to files in DIR when unchanged
-z, --compress compress file data during the transfer
--compress-level=NUM explicitly set compression level
--skip-compress=LIST skip compressing files with suffix in LIST
-C, --cvs-exclude auto-ignore files in the same way CVS does
-f, --filter=RULE add a file-filtering RULE
-F same as --filter='dir-merge /.rsync-filter'
repeated: --filter='- .rsync-filter'
--exclude=PATTERN exclude files matching PATTERN
--exclude-from=FILE read exclude patterns from FILE
--include=PATTERN don't exclude files matching PATTERN
--include-from=FILE read include patterns from FILE
--files-from=FILE read list of source-file names from FILE
-0, --from0 all *from/filter files are delimited by 0s
-s, --protect-args no space-splitting; wildcard chars only
--address=ADDRESS bind address for outgoing socket to daemon
--port=PORT specify double-colon alternate port number
--sockopts=OPTIONS specify custom TCP options
--blocking-io use blocking I/O for the remote shell
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--outbuf=N|L|B set out buffering to None, Line, or Block
--stats give some file-transfer stats
-8, --8-bit-output leave high-bit chars unescaped in output
-h, --human-readable output numbers in a human-readable format
--progress show progress during transfer
-P same as --partial --progress
-i, --itemize-changes output a change-summary for all updates
-M, --remote-option=OPTION send OPTION to the remote side only
--out-format=FORMAT output updates using the specified FORMAT
--log-file=FILE log what we're doing to the specified FILE
--log-file-format=FMT log updates using the specified FMT
--password-file=FILE read daemon-access password from FILE
--list-only list the files instead of copying them
--bwlimit=RATE limit socket I/O bandwidth
--write-batch=FILE write a batched update to FILE
--only-write-batch=FILE like --write-batch but w/o updating dest
--read-batch=FILE read a batched update from FILE
--protocol=NUM force an older protocol version to be used
--iconv=CONVERT_SPEC request charset conversion of filenames
--checksum-seed=NUM set block/file checksum seed (advanced)
-4, --ipv4 prefer IPv4
-6, --ipv6 prefer IPv6
--version print version number
(-h) --help show this help (see below for -h comment)
Rsync can also be run as a daemon, in which case the following options
are accepted:
--daemon run as an rsync daemon
--address=ADDRESS bind to the specified address
--bwlimit=RATE limit socket I/O bandwidth
--config=FILE specify alternate rsyncd.conf file
-M, --dparam=OVERRIDE override global daemon config parameter
--no-detach do not detach from the parent
--port=PORT listen on alternate port number
--log-file=FILE override the log file setting
--log-file-format=FMT override the log format setting
--sockopts=OPTIONS specify custom TCP options
-v, --verbose increase verbosity
-4, --ipv4 prefer IPv4
-6, --ipv6 prefer IPv6
-h, --help show this help (if used after --daemon)
OPTIONS
Rsync accepts both long (double-dash + word) and short (single-dash +
letter) options. The full list of the available options are described
below. If an option can be specified in more than one way, the
choices are comma-separated. Some options only have a long variant,
not a short. If the option takes a parameter, the parameter is only
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listed after the long variant, even though it must also be specified
for the short. When specifying a parameter, you can either use the
form --option=param or replace the = with whitespace. The parameter
may need to be quoted in some manner for it to survive the shells
command-line parsing. Keep in mind that a leading tilde (~) in a
filename is substituted by your shell, so --option=~/foo will not
change the tilde into your home directory (remove the = for that).
--help
Print a short help page describing the options available in rsync
and exit. For backward-compatibility with older versions of
rsync, the help will also be output if you use the -h option
without any other args.
--version
print the rsync version number and exit.
-v, --verbose
This option increases the amount of information you are given
during the transfer. By default, rsync works silently. A single
-v will give you information about what files are being
transferred and a brief summary at the end. Two -v options will
give you information on what files are being skipped and slightly
more information at the end. More than two -v options should only
be used if you are debugging rsync.
In a modern rsync, the -v option is equivalent to the setting of
groups of --info and --debug options. You can choose to use
these newer options in addition to, or in place of using
--verbose, as any fine-grained settings override the implied
settings of -v. Both --info and --debug have a way to ask for
help that tells you exactly what flags are set for each increase
in verbosity.
However, do keep in mind that a daemons max verbosity setting
will limit how high of a level the various individual flags can
be set on the daemon side. For instance, if the max is 2, then
any info and/or debug flag that is set to a higher value than
what would be set by -vv will be downgraded to the -vv level in
the daemons logging.
--info=FLAGS
This option lets you have fine-grained control over the
information output you want to see. An individual flag name may
be followed by a level number, with 0 meaning to silence that
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output, 1 being the default output level, and higher numbers
increasing the output of that flag (for those that support higher
levels). Use --info=help to see all the available flag names,
what they output, and what flag names are added for each increase
in the verbose level. Some examples:
rsync -a --info=progress2 src/ dest/
rsync -avv --info=stats2,misc1,flist0 src/ dest/
Note that --info=names output is affected by the --out-format and
--itemize-changes (-i) options. See those options for more
information on what is output and when.
This option was added to 3.1.0, so an older rsync on the server
side might reject your attempts at fine-grained control (if one
or more flags needed to be send to the server and the server was
too old to understand them). See also the max verbosity caveat
above when dealing with a daemon.
--debug=FLAGS
This option lets you have fine-grained control over the debug
output you want to see. An individual flag name may be followed
by a level number, with 0 meaning to silence that output, 1 being
the default output level, and higher numbers increasing the
output of that flag (for those that support higher levels). Use
--debug=help to see all the available flag names, what they
output, and what flag names are added for each increase in the
verbose level. Some examples:
rsync -avvv --debug=none src/ dest/
rsync -avA --del --debug=del2,acl src/ dest/
Note that some debug messages will only be output when
--msgs2stderr is specified, especially those pertaining to I/O
and buffer debugging.
This option was added to 3.1.0, so an older rsync on the server
side might reject your attempts at fine-grained control (if one
or more flags needed to be send to the server and the server was
too old to understand them). See also the max verbosity caveat
above when dealing with a daemon.
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--msgs2stderr
This option changes rsync to send all its output directly to
stderr rather than to send messages to the client side via the
protocol (which normally outputs info messages via stdout). This
is mainly intended for debugging in order to avoid changing the
data sent via the protocol, since the extra protocol data can
change what is being tested. The option does not affect the
remote side of a transfer without using --remote-option -- e.g.
-M--msgs2stderr. Also keep in mind that a daemon connection does
not have a stderr channel to send messages back to the client
side, so if you are doing any daemon-transfer debugging using
this option, you should start up a daemon using --no-detach so
that you can see the stderr output on the daemon side.
This option has the side-effect of making stderr output get
line-buffered so that the merging of the output of 3 programs
happens in a more readable manner.
-q, --quiet
This option decreases the amount of information you are given
during the transfer, notably suppressing information messages
from the remote server. This option is useful when invoking rsync
from cron.
--no-motd
This option affects the information that is output by the client
at the start of a daemon transfer. This suppresses the
message-of-the-day (MOTD) text, but it also affects the list of
modules that the daemon sends in response to the rsync host::
request (due to a limitation in the rsync protocol), so omit this
option if you want to request the list of modules from the
daemon.
-I, --ignore-times
Normally rsync will skip any files that are already the same size
and have the same modification timestamp. This option turns off
this quick check behavior, causing all files to be updated.
--size-only
This modifies rsyncs quick check algorithm for finding files that
need to be transferred, changing it from the default of
transferring files with either a changed size or a changed
last-modified time to just looking for files that have changed in
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size. This is useful when starting to use rsync after using
another mirroring system which may not preserve timestamps
exactly.
--modify-window
When comparing two timestamps, rsync treats the timestamps as
being equal if they differ by no more than the modify-window
value. This is normally 0 (for an exact match), but you may find
it useful to set this to a larger value in some situations. In
particular, when transferring to or from an MS Windows FAT
filesystem (which represents times with a 2-second resolution),
--modify-window=1 is useful (allowing times to differ by up to 1
second).
-c, --checksum
This changes the way rsync checks if the files have been changed
and are in need of a transfer. Without this option, rsync uses a
quick check that (by default) checks if each files size and time
of last modification match between the sender and receiver. This
option changes this to compare a 128-bit checksum for each file
that has a matching size. Generating the checksums means that
both sides will expend a lot of disk I/O reading all the data in
the files in the transfer (and this is prior to any reading that
will be done to transfer changed files), so this can slow things
down significantly.
The sending side generates its checksums while it is doing the
file-system scan that builds the list of the available files.
The receiver generates its checksums when it is scanning for
changed files, and will checksum any file that has the same size
as the corresponding senders file: files with either a changed
size or a changed checksum are selected for transfer.
Note that rsync always verifies that each transferred file was
correctly reconstructed on the receiving side by checking a
whole-file checksum that is generated as the file is transferred,
but that automatic after-the-transfer verification has nothing to
do with this options before-the-transfer Does this file need to
be updated? check.
For protocol 30 and beyond (first supported in 3.0.0), the
checksum used is MD5. For older protocols, the checksum used is
MD4.
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-a, --archive
This is equivalent to -rlptgoD. It is a quick way of saying you
want recursion and want to preserve almost everything (with -H
being a notable omission). The only exception to the above
equivalence is when --files-from is specified, in which case -r
is not implied.
Note that -a does not preserve hardlinks, because finding
multiply-linked files is expensive. You must separately specify
-H.
--no-OPTION
You may turn off one or more implied options by prefixing the
option name with no-. Not all options may be prefixed with a
no-: only options that are implied by other options (e.g. --no-D,
--no-perms) or have different defaults in various circumstances
(e.g. --no-whole-file, --no-blocking-io, --no-dirs). You may
specify either the short or the long option name after the no-
prefix (e.g. --no-R is the same as --no-relative).
For example: if you want to use -a (--archive) but dont want -o
(--owner), instead of converting -a into -rlptgD, you could
specify -a --no-o (or -a --no-owner).
The order of the options is important: if you specify --no-r -a,
the -r option would end up being turned on, the opposite of -a
--no-r. Note also that the side-effects of the --files-from
option are NOT positional, as it affects the default state of
several options and slightly changes the meaning of -a (see the
--files-from option for more details).
-r, --recursive
This tells rsync to copy directories recursively. See also
--dirs (-d).
Beginning with rsync 3.0.0, the recursive algorithm used is now
an incremental scan that uses much less memory than before and
begins the transfer after the scanning of the first few
directories have been completed. This incremental scan only
affects our recursion algorithm, and does not change a
non-recursive transfer. It is also only possible when both ends
of the transfer are at least version 3.0.0.
Some options require rsync to know the full file list, so these
options disable the incremental recursion mode. These include:
--delete-before, --delete-after, --prune-empty-dirs, and
--delay-updates. Because of this, the default delete mode when
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you specify --delete is now --delete-during when both ends of the
connection are at least 3.0.0 (use --del or --delete-during to
request this improved deletion mode explicitly). See also the
--delete-delay option that is a better choice than using
--delete-after.
Incremental recursion can be disabled using the
--no-inc-recursive option or its shorter --no-i-r alias.
-R, --relative
Use relative paths. This means that the full path names specified
on the command line are sent to the server rather than just the
last parts of the filenames. This is particularly useful when you
want to send several different directories at the same time. For
example, if you used this command:
rsync -av /foo/bar/baz.c remote:/tmp/
... this would create a file named baz.c in /tmp/ on the remote
machine. If instead you used
rsync -avR /foo/bar/baz.c remote:/tmp/
then a file named /tmp/foo/bar/baz.c would be created on the
remote machine, preserving its full path. These extra path
elements are called implied directories (i.e. the foo and the
foo/bar directories in the above example).
Beginning with rsync 3.0.0, rsync always sends these implied
directories as real directories in the file list, even if a path
element is really a symlink on the sending side. This prevents
some really unexpected behaviors when copying the full path of a
file that you didnt realize had a symlink in its path. If you
want to duplicate a server-side symlink, include both the symlink
via its path, and referent directory via its real path. If youre
dealing with an older rsync on the sending side, you may need to
use the --no-implied-dirs option.
It is also possible to limit the amount of path information that
is sent as implied directories for each path you specify. With a
modern rsync on the sending side (beginning with 2.6.7), you can
insert a dot and a slash into the source path, like this:
rsync -avR /foo/./bar/baz.c remote:/tmp/
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That would create /tmp/bar/baz.c on the remote machine. (Note
that the dot must be followed by a slash, so /foo/. would not be
abbreviated.) For older rsync versions, you would need to use a
chdir to limit the source path. For example, when pushing files:
(cd /foo; rsync -avR bar/baz.c remote:/tmp/)
(Note that the parens put the two commands into a sub-shell, so
that the cd command doesnt remain in effect for future commands.)
If youre pulling files from an older rsync, use this idiom (but
only for a non-daemon transfer):
rsync -avR --rsync-path=cd /foo; rsync \
remote:bar/baz.c /tmp/
--no-implied-dirs
This option affects the default behavior of the --relative
option. When it is specified, the attributes of the implied
directories from the source names are not included in the
transfer. This means that the corresponding path elements on the
destination system are left unchanged if they exist, and any
missing implied directories are created with default attributes.
This even allows these implied path elements to have big
differences, such as being a symlink to a directory on the
receiving side.
For instance, if a command-line arg or a files-from entry told
rsync to transfer the file path/foo/file, the directories path
and path/foo are implied when --relative is used. If path/foo is
a symlink to bar on the destination system, the receiving rsync
would ordinarily delete path/foo, recreate it as a directory, and
receive the file into the new directory. With --no-implied-dirs,
the receiving rsync updates path/foo/file using the existing path
elements, which means that the file ends up being created in
path/bar. Another way to accomplish this link preservation is to
use the --keep-dirlinks option (which will also affect symlinks
to directories in the rest of the transfer).
When pulling files from an rsync older than 3.0.0, you may need
to use this option if the sending side has a symlink in the path
you request and you wish the implied directories to be
transferred as normal directories.
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-b, --backup
With this option, preexisting destination files are renamed as
each file is transferred or deleted. You can control where the
backup file goes and what (if any) suffix gets appended using the
--backup-dir and --suffix options.
Note that if you dont specify --backup-dir, (1) the
--omit-dir-times option will be implied, and (2) if --delete is
also in effect (without --delete-excluded), rsync will add a
protect filter-rule for the backup suffix to the end of all your
existing excludes (e.g. -f P *~). This will prevent previously
backed-up files from being deleted. Note that if you are
supplying your own filter rules, you may need to manually insert
your own exclude/protect rule somewhere higher up in the list so
that it has a high enough priority to be effective (e.g., if your
rules specify a trailing inclusion/exclusion of *, the auto-added
rule would never be reached).
--backup-dir=DIR
In combination with the --backup option, this tells rsync to
store all backups in the specified directory on the receiving
side. This can be used for incremental backups. You can
additionally specify a backup suffix using the --suffix option
(otherwise the files backed up in the specified directory will
keep their original filenames).
Note that if you specify a relative path, the backup directory
will be relative to the destination directory, so you probably
want to specify either an absolute path or a path that starts
with ../. If an rsync daemon is the receiver, the backup dir
cannot go outside the modules path hierarchy, so take extra care
not to delete it or copy into it.
--suffix=SUFFIX
This option allows you to override the default backup suffix used
with the --backup (-b) option. The default suffix is a ~ if no
--backup-dir was specified, otherwise it is an empty string.
-u, --update
This forces rsync to skip any files which exist on the
destination and have a modified time that is newer than the
source file. (If an existing destination file has a modification
time equal to the source files, it will be updated if the sizes
are different.)
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Note that this does not affect the copying of dirs, symlinks, or
other special files. Also, a difference of file format between
the sender and receiver is always considered to be important
enough for an update, no matter what date is on the objects. In
other words, if the source has a directory where the destination
has a file, the transfer would occur regardless of the
timestamps.
This option is a transfer rule, not an exclude, so it doesnt
affect the data that goes into the file-lists, and thus it doesnt
affect deletions. It just limits the files that the receiver
requests to be transferred.
--inplace
This option changes how rsync transfers a file when its data
needs to be updated: instead of the default method of creating a
new copy of the file and moving it into place when it is
complete, rsync instead writes the updated data directly to the
destination file.
This has several effects:
o Hard links are not broken. This means the new data will be
visible through other hard links to the destination file.
Moreover, attempts to copy differing source files onto a
multiply-linked destination file will result in a tug of war
with the destination data changing back and forth.
o In-use binaries cannot be updated (either the OS will
prevent this from happening, or binaries that attempt to
swap-in their data will misbehave or crash).
o The files data will be in an inconsistent state during the
transfer and will be left that way if the transfer is
interrupted or if an update fails.
o A file that rsync cannot write to cannot be updated. While a
super user can update any file, a normal user needs to be
granted write permission for the open of the file for
writing to be successful.
o The efficiency of rsyncs delta-transfer algorithm may be
reduced if some data in the destination file is overwritten
before it can be copied to a position later in the file.
This does not apply if you use --backup, since rsync is
smart enough to use the backup file as the basis file for
the transfer.
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WARNING: you should not use this option to update files that are
being accessed by others, so be careful when choosing to use this
for a copy.
This option is useful for transferring large files with
block-based changes or appended data, and also on systems that
are disk bound, not network bound. It can also help keep a
copy-on-write filesystem snapshot from diverging the entire
contents of a file that only has minor changes.
The option implies --partial (since an interrupted transfer does
not delete the file), but conflicts with --partial-dir and
--delay-updates. Prior to rsync 2.6.4 --inplace was also
incompatible with --compare-dest and --link-dest.
--append
This causes rsync to update a file by appending data onto the end
of the file, which presumes that the data that already exists on
the receiving side is identical with the start of the file on the
sending side. If a file needs to be transferred and its size on
the receiver is the same or longer than the size on the sender,
the file is skipped. This does not interfere with the updating
of a files non-content attributes (e.g. permissions, ownership,
etc.) when the file does not need to be transferred, nor does it
affect the updating of any non-regular files. Implies --inplace,
but does not conflict with --sparse (since it is always extending
a files length).
The use of --append can be dangerous if you arent 100% sure that
the files that are longer have only grown by the appending of
data onto the end. You should thus use include/exclude/filter
rules to ensure that such a transfer is only affecting files that
you know to be growing via appended data.
--append-verify
This works just like the --append option, but the existing data
on the receiving side is included in the full-file checksum
verification step, which will cause a file to be resent if the
final verification step fails (rsync uses a normal, non-appending
--inplace transfer for the resend).
Note: prior to rsync 3.0.0, the --append option worked like
--append-verify, so if you are interacting with an older rsync
(or the transfer is using a protocol prior to 30), specifying
either append option will initiate an --append-verify transfer.
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-d, --dirs
Tell the sending side to include any directories that are
encountered. Unlike --recursive, a directorys contents are not
copied unless the directory name specified is . or ends with a
trailing slash (e.g. ., dir/., dir/, etc.). Without this option
or the --recursive option, rsync will skip all directories it
encounters (and output a message to that effect for each one).
If you specify both --dirs and --recursive, --recursive takes
precedence.
The --dirs option is implied by the --files-from option or the
--list-only option (including an implied --list-only usage) if
--recursive wasnt specified (so that directories are seen in the
listing). Specify --no-dirs (or --no-d) if you want to turn this
off.
There is also a backward-compatibility helper option, --old-dirs
(or --old-d) that tells rsync to use a hack of -r --exclude=/*/*
to get an older rsync to list a single directory without
recursing.
-l, --links
When symlinks are encountered, recreate the symlink on the
destination.
-L, --copy-links
When symlinks are encountered, the item that they point to (the
referent) is copied, rather than the symlink. In older versions
of rsync, this option also had the side-effect of telling the
receiving side to follow symlinks, such as symlinks to
directories. In a modern rsync such as this one, youll need to
specify --keep-dirlinks (-K) to get this extra behavior. The
only exception is when sending files to an rsync that is too old
to understand -K -- in that case, the -L option will still have
the side-effect of -K on that older receiving rsync.
--copy-unsafe-links
This tells rsync to copy the referent of symbolic links that
point outside the copied tree. Absolute symlinks are also
treated like ordinary files, and so are any symlinks in the
source path itself when --relative is used. This option has no
additional effect if --copy-links was also specified.
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--safe-links
This tells rsync to ignore any symbolic links which point outside
the copied tree. All absolute symlinks are also ignored. Using
this option in conjunction with --relative may give unexpected
results.
--munge-links
This option tells rsync to (1) modify all symlinks on the
receiving side in a way that makes them unusable but recoverable
(see below), or (2) to unmunge symlinks on the sending side that
had been stored in a munged state. This is useful if you dont
quite trust the source of the data to not try to slip in a
symlink to a unexpected place.
The way rsync disables the use of symlinks is to prefix each one
with the string /rsyncd-munged/. This prevents the links from
being used as long as that directory does not exist. When this
option is enabled, rsync will refuse to run if that path is a
directory or a symlink to a directory.
The option only affects the client side of the transfer, so if
you need it to affect the server, specify it via --remote-option.
(Note that in a local transfer, the client side is the sender.)
This option has no affect on a daemon, since the daemon
configures whether it wants munged symlinks via its munge
symlinks parameter. See also the munge-symlinks perl script in
the support directory of the source code.
-k, --copy-dirlinks
This option causes the sending side to treat a symlink to a
directory as though it were a real directory. This is useful if
you dont want symlinks to non-directories to be affected, as they
would be using --copy-links.
Without this option, if the sending side has replaced a directory
with a symlink to a directory, the receiving side will delete
anything that is in the way of the new symlink, including a
directory hierarchy (as long as --force or --delete is in
effect).
See also --keep-dirlinks for an analogous option for the
receiving side.
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--copy-dirlinks applies to all symlinks to directories in the
source. If you want to follow only a few specified symlinks, a
trick you can use is to pass them as additional source args with
a trailing slash, using --relative to make the paths match up
right. For example:
rsync -r --relative src/./ src/./follow-me/ dest/
This works because rsync calls lstat(2) on the source arg as
given, and the trailing slash makes lstat(2) follow the symlink,
giving rise to a directory in the file-list which overrides the
symlink found during the scan of src/./.
-K, --keep-dirlinks
This option causes the receiving side to treat a symlink to a
directory as though it were a real directory, but only if it
matches a real directory from the sender. Without this option,
the receivers symlink would be deleted and replaced with a real
directory.
For example, suppose you transfer a directory foo that contains a
file file, but foo is a symlink to directory bar on the receiver.
Without --keep-dirlinks, the receiver deletes symlink foo,
recreates it as a directory, and receives the file into the new
directory. With --keep-dirlinks, the receiver keeps the symlink
and file ends up in bar.
One note of caution: if you use --keep-dirlinks, you must trust
all the symlinks in the copy! If it is possible for an untrusted
user to create their own symlink to any directory, the user could
then (on a subsequent copy) replace the symlink with a real
directory and affect the content of whatever directory the
symlink references. For backup copies, you are better off using
something like a bind mount instead of a symlink to modify your
receiving hierarchy.
See also --copy-dirlinks for an analogous option for the sending
side.
-H, --hard-links
This tells rsync to look for hard-linked files in the source and
link together the corresponding files on the destination.
Without this option, hard-linked files in the source are treated
as though they were separate files.
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This option does NOT necessarily ensure that the pattern of hard
links on the destination exactly matches that on the source.
Cases in which the destination may end up with extra hard links
include the following:
o If the destination contains extraneous hard-links (more
linking than what is present in the source file list), the
copying algorithm will not break them explicitly. However,
if one or more of the paths have content differences, the
normal file-update process will break those extra links
(unless you are using the --inplace option).
o If you specify a --link-dest directory that contains hard
links, the linking of the destination files against the
--link-dest files can cause some paths in the destination to
become linked together due to the --link-dest associations.
Note that rsync can only detect hard links between files that are
inside the transfer set. If rsync updates a file that has extra
hard-link connections to files outside the transfer, that linkage
will be broken. If you are tempted to use the --inplace option
to avoid this breakage, be very careful that you know how your
files are being updated so that you are certain that no
unintended changes happen due to lingering hard links (and see
the --inplace option for more caveats).
If incremental recursion is active (see --recursive), rsync may
transfer a missing hard-linked file before it finds that another
link for that contents exists elsewhere in the hierarchy. This
does not affect the accuracy of the transfer (i.e. which files
are hard-linked together), just its efficiency (i.e. copying the
data for a new, early copy of a hard-linked file that could have
been found later in the transfer in another member of the
hard-linked set of files). One way to avoid this inefficiency is
to disable incremental recursion using the --no-inc-recursive
option.
-p, --perms
This option causes the receiving rsync to set the destination
permissions to be the same as the source permissions. (See also
the --chmod option for a way to modify what rsync considers to be
the source permissions.)
When this option is off, permissions are set as follows:
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o Existing files (including updated files) retain their
existing permissions, though the --executability option
might change just the execute permission for the file.
o New files get their normal permission bits set to the source
files permissions masked with the receiving directorys
default permissions (either the receiving processs umask, or
the permissions specified via the destination directorys
default ACL), and their special permission bits disabled
except in the case where a new directory inherits a setgid
bit from its parent directory.
Thus, when --perms and --executability are both disabled, rsyncs
behavior is the same as that of other file-copy utilities, such
as cp(1) and tar(1).
In summary: to give destination files (both old and new) the
source permissions, use --perms. To give new files the
destination-default permissions (while leaving existing files
unchanged), make sure that the --perms option is off and use
--chmod=ugo=rwX (which ensures that all non-masked bits get
enabled). If youd care to make this latter behavior easier to
type, you could define a popt alias for it, such as putting this
line in the file ~/.popt (the following defines the -Z option,
and includes --no-g to use the default group of the destination
dir):
rsync alias -Z --no-p --no-g --chmod=ugo=rwX
You could then use this new option in a command such as this one:
rsync -avZ src/ dest/
(Caveat: make sure that -a does not follow -Z, or it will
re-enable the two --no-* options mentioned above.)
The preservation of the destinations setgid bit on newly-created
directories when --perms is off was added in rsync 2.6.7. Older
rsync versions erroneously preserved the three special permission
bits for newly-created files when --perms was off, while
overriding the destinations setgid bit setting on a newly-created
directory. Default ACL observance was added to the ACL patch for
rsync 2.6.7, so older (or non-ACL-enabled) rsyncs use the umask
even if default ACLs are present. (Keep in mind that it is the
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version of the receiving rsync that affects these behaviors.)
-E, --executability
This option causes rsync to preserve the executability (or
non-executability) of regular files when --perms is not enabled.
A regular file is considered to be executable if at least one x
is turned on in its permissions. When an existing destination
files executability differs from that of the corresponding source
file, rsync modifies the destination files permissions as
follows:
o To make a file non-executable, rsync turns off all its x
permissions.
o To make a file executable, rsync turns on each x permission
that has a corresponding r permission enabled.
If --perms is enabled, this option is ignored.
-A, --acls
This option causes rsync to update the destination ACLs to be the
same as the source ACLs. The option also implies --perms.
The source and destination systems must have compatible ACL
entries for this option to work properly. See the --fake-super
option for a way to backup and restore ACLs that are not
compatible.
-X, --xattrs
This option causes rsync to update the destination extended
attributes to be the same as the source ones.
For systems that support extended-attribute namespaces, a copy
being done by a super-user copies all namespaces except system.*.
A normal user only copies the user.* namespace. To be able to
backup and restore non-user namespaces as a normal user, see the
--fake-super option.
Note that this option does not copy rsyncs special xattr values
(e.g. those used by --fake-super) unless you repeat the option
(e.g. -XX). This copy all xattrs mode cannot be used with
--fake-super.
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--chmod
This option tells rsync to apply one or more comma-separated
chmod modes to the permission of the files in the transfer. The
resulting value is treated as though it were the permissions that
the sending side supplied for the file, which means that this
option can seem to have no effect on existing files if --perms is
not enabled.
In addition to the normal parsing rules specified in the chmod(1)
manpage, you can specify an item that should only apply to a
directory by prefixing it with a D, or specify an item that
should only apply to a file by prefixing it with a F. For
example, the following will ensure that all directories get
marked set-gid, that no files are other-writable, that both are
user-writable and group-writable, and that both have consistent
executability across all bits:
--chmod=Dg+s,ug+w,Fo-w,+X
Using octal mode numbers is also allowed:
--chmod=D2775,F664
It is also legal to specify multiple --chmod options, as each
additional option is just appended to the list of changes to
make.
See the --perms and --executability options for how the resulting
permission value can be applied to the files in the transfer.
-o, --owner
This option causes rsync to set the owner of the destination file
to be the same as the source file, but only if the receiving
rsync is being run as the super-user (see also the --super and
--fake-super options). Without this option, the owner of new
and/or transferred files are set to the invoking user on the
receiving side.
The preservation of ownership will associate matching names by
default, but may fall back to using the ID number in some
circumstances (see also the --numeric-ids option for a full
discussion).
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-g, --group
This option causes rsync to set the group of the destination file
to be the same as the source file. If the receiving program is
not running as the super-user (or if --no-super was specified),
only groups that the invoking user on the receiving side is a
member of will be preserved. Without this option, the group is
set to the default group of the invoking user on the receiving
side.
The preservation of group information will associate matching
names by default, but may fall back to using the ID number in
some circumstances (see also the --numeric-ids option for a full
discussion).
--devices
This option causes rsync to transfer character and block device
files to the remote system to recreate these devices. This
option has no effect if the receiving rsync is not run as the
super-user (see also the --super and --fake-super options).
--specials
This option causes rsync to transfer special files such as named
sockets and fifos.
-D The -D option is equivalent to --devices --specials.
-t, --times
This tells rsync to transfer modification times along with the
files and update them on the remote system. Note that if this
option is not used, the optimization that excludes files that
have not been modified cannot be effective; in other words, a
missing -t or -a will cause the next transfer to behave as if it
used -I, causing all files to be updated (though rsyncs
delta-transfer algorithm will make the update fairly efficient if
the files havent actually changed, youre much better off using
-t).
-O, --omit-dir-times
This tells rsync to omit directories when it is preserving
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modification times (see --times). If NFS is sharing the
directories on the receiving side, it is a good idea to use -O.
This option is inferred if you use --backup without --backup-dir.
This option also has the side-effect of avoiding early creation
of directories in incremental recursion copies. The default
--inc-recursive copying normally does an early-create pass of all
the sub-directories in a parent directory in order for it to be
able to then set the modify time of the parent directory right
away (without having to delay that until a bunch of recursive
copying has finished). This early-create idiom is not necessary
if directory modify times are not being preserved, so it is
skipped. Since early-create directories dont have accurate mode,
mtime, or ownership, the use of this option can help when someone
wants to avoid these partially-finished directories.
-J, --omit-link-times
This tells rsync to omit symlinks when it is preserving
modification times (see --times).
--super
This tells the receiving side to attempt super-user activities
even if the receiving rsync wasnt run by the super-user. These
activities include: preserving users via the --owner option,
preserving all groups (not just the current users groups) via the
--groups option, and copying devices via the --devices option.
This is useful for systems that allow such activities without
being the super-user, and also for ensuring that you will get
errors if the receiving side isnt being run as the super-user.
To turn off super-user activities, the super-user can use
--no-super.
--fake-super
When this option is enabled, rsync simulates super-user
activities by saving/restoring the privileged attributes via
special extended attributes that are attached to each file (as
needed). This includes the files owner and group (if it is not
the default), the files device info (device & special files are
created as empty text files), and any permission bits that we
wont allow to be set on the real file (e.g. the real file gets
u-s,g-s,o-t for safety) or that would limit the owners access
(since the real super-user can always access/change a file, the
files we create can always be accessed/changed by the creating
user). This option also handles ACLs (if --acls was specified)
and non-user extended attributes (if --xattrs was specified).
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This is a good way to backup data without using a super-user, and
to store ACLs from incompatible systems.
The --fake-super option only affects the side where the option is
used. To affect the remote side of a remote-shell connection,
use the --remote-option (-M) option:
rsync -av -M--fake-super /src/ host:/dest/
For a local copy, this option affects both the source and the
destination. If you wish a local copy to enable this option just
for the destination files, specify -M--fake-super. If you wish a
local copy to enable this option just for the source files,
combine --fake-super with -M--super.
This option is overridden by both --super and --no-super.
See also the fake super setting in the daemons rsyncd.conf file.
-S, --sparse
Try to handle sparse files efficiently so they take up less space
on the destination. Conflicts with --inplace because its not
possible to overwrite data in a sparse fashion.
--preallocate
This tells the receiver to allocate each destination file to its
eventual size before writing data to the file. Rsync will only
use the real filesystem-level preallocation support provided by
Linuxs fallocate(2) system call or Cygwins posix_fallocate(3),
not the slow glibc implementation that writes a zero byte into
each block.
Without this option, larger files may not be entirely contiguous
on the filesystem, but with this option rsync will probably copy
more slowly. If the destination is not an extent-supporting
filesystem (such as ext4, xfs, NTFS, etc.), this option may have
no positive effect at all.
-n, --dry-run
This makes rsync perform a trial run that doesnt make any changes
(and produces mostly the same output as a real run). It is most
commonly used in combination with the -v, --verbose and/or -i,
--itemize-changes options to see what an rsync command is going
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to do before one actually runs it.
The output of --itemize-changes is supposed to be exactly the
same on a dry run and a subsequent real run (barring intentional
trickery and system call failures); if it isnt, thats a bug.
Other output should be mostly unchanged, but may differ in some
areas. Notably, a dry run does not send the actual data for file
transfers, so --progress has no effect, the bytes sent, bytes
received, literal data, and matched data statistics are too
small, and the speedup value is equivalent to a run where no file
transfers were needed.
-W, --whole-file
With this option rsyncs delta-transfer algorithm is not used and
the whole file is sent as-is instead. The transfer may be faster
if this option is used when the bandwidth between the source and
destination machines is higher than the bandwidth to disk
(especially when the disk is actually a networked filesystem).
This is the default when both the source and destination are
specified as local paths, but only if no batch-writing option is
in effect.
-x, --one-file-system
This tells rsync to avoid crossing a filesystem boundary when
recursing. This does not limit the users ability to specify
items to copy from multiple filesystems, just rsyncs recursion
through the hierarchy of each directory that the user specified,
and also the analogous recursion on the receiving side during
deletion. Also keep in mind that rsync treats a bind mount to
the same device as being on the same filesystem.
If this option is repeated, rsync omits all mount-point
directories from the copy. Otherwise, it includes an empty
directory at each mount-point it encounters (using the attributes
of the mounted directory because those of the underlying
mount-point directory are inaccessible).
If rsync has been told to collapse symlinks (via --copy-links or
--copy-unsafe-links), a symlink to a directory on another device
is treated like a mount-point. Symlinks to non-directories are
unaffected by this option.
--existing, --ignore-non-existing
This tells rsync to skip creating files (including directories)
that do not exist yet on the destination. If this option is
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combined with the --ignore-existing option, no files will be
updated (which can be useful if all you want to do is delete
extraneous files).
This option is a transfer rule, not an exclude, so it doesnt
affect the data that goes into the file-lists, and thus it doesnt
affect deletions. It just limits the files that the receiver
requests to be transferred.
--ignore-existing
This tells rsync to skip updating files that already exist on the
destination (this does not ignore existing directories, or
nothing would get done). See also --existing.
This option is a transfer rule, not an exclude, so it doesnt
affect the data that goes into the file-lists, and thus it doesnt
affect deletions. It just limits the files that the receiver
requests to be transferred.
This option can be useful for those doing backups using the
--link-dest option when they need to continue a backup run that
got interrupted. Since a --link-dest run is copied into a new
directory hierarchy (when it is used properly), using --ignore
existing will ensure that the already-handled files dont get
tweaked (which avoids a change in permissions on the hard-linked
files). This does mean that this option is only looking at the
existing files in the destination hierarchy itself.
--remove-source-files
This tells rsync to remove from the sending side the files
(meaning non-directories) that are a part of the transfer and
have been successfully duplicated on the receiving side.
Note that you should only use this option on source files that
are quiescent. If you are using this to move files that show up
in a particular directory over to another host, make sure that
the finished files get renamed into the source directory, not
directly written into it, so that rsync cant possibly transfer a
file that is not yet fully written. If you cant first write the
files into a different directory, you should use a naming idiom
that lets rsync avoid transferring files that are not yet
finished (e.g. name the file foo.new when it is written, rename
it to foo when it is done, and then use the option
--exclude='*.new' for the rsync transfer).
Starting with 3.1.0, rsync will skip the sender-side removal (and
output an error) if the files size or modify time has not stayed
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unchanged.
--delete
This tells rsync to delete extraneous files from the receiving
side (ones that arent on the sending side), but only for the
directories that are being synchronized. You must have asked
rsync to send the whole directory (e.g. dir or dir/) without
using a wildcard for the directorys contents (e.g. dir/*) since
the wildcard is expanded by the shell and rsync thus gets a
request to transfer individual files, not the files parent
directory. Files that are excluded from the transfer are also
excluded from being deleted unless you use the --delete-excluded
option or mark the rules as only matching on the sending side
(see the include/exclude modifiers in the FILTER RULES section).
Prior to rsync 2.6.7, this option would have no effect unless
--recursive was enabled. Beginning with 2.6.7, deletions will
also occur when --dirs (-d) is enabled, but only for directories
whose contents are being copied.
This option can be dangerous if used incorrectly! It is a very
good idea to first try a run using the --dry-run option (-n) to
see what files are going to be deleted.
If the sending side detects any I/O errors, then the deletion of
any files at the destination will be automatically disabled. This
is to prevent temporary filesystem failures (such as NFS errors)
on the sending side from causing a massive deletion of files on
the destination. You can override this with the --ignore-errors
option.
The --delete option may be combined with one of the --delete-WHEN
options without conflict, as well as --delete-excluded. However,
if none of the --delete-WHEN options are specified, rsync will
choose the --delete-during algorithm when talking to rsync 3.0.0
or newer, and the --delete-before algorithm when talking to an
older rsync. See also --delete-delay and --delete-after.
--delete-before
Request that the file-deletions on the receiving side be done
before the transfer starts. See --delete (which is implied) for
more details on file-deletion.
Deleting before the transfer is helpful if the filesystem is
tight for space and removing extraneous files would help to make
the transfer possible. However, it does introduce a delay before
the start of the transfer, and this delay might cause the
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transfer to timeout (if --timeout was specified). It also forces
rsync to use the old, non-incremental recursion algorithm that
requires rsync to scan all the files in the transfer into memory
at once (see --recursive).
--delete-during, --del
Request that the file-deletions on the receiving side be done
incrementally as the transfer happens. The per-directory delete
scan is done right before each directory is checked for updates,
so it behaves like a more efficient --delete-before, including
doing the deletions prior to any per-directory filter files being
updated. This option was first added in rsync version 2.6.4.
See --delete (which is implied) for more details on
file-deletion.
--delete-delay
Request that the file-deletions on the receiving side be computed
during the transfer (like --delete-during), and then removed
after the transfer completes. This is useful when combined with
--delay-updates and/or --fuzzy, and is more efficient than using
--delete-after (but can behave differently, since --delete-after
computes the deletions in a separate pass after all updates are
done). If the number of removed files overflows an internal
buffer, a temporary file will be created on the receiving side to
hold the names (it is removed while open, so you shouldnt see it
during the transfer). If the creation of the temporary file
fails, rsync will try to fall back to using --delete-after (which
it cannot do if --recursive is doing an incremental scan). See
--delete (which is implied) for more details on file-deletion.
--delete-after
Request that the file-deletions on the receiving side be done
after the transfer has completed. This is useful if you are
sending new per-directory merge files as a part of the transfer
and you want their exclusions to take effect for the delete phase
of the current transfer. It also forces rsync to use the old,
non-incremental recursion algorithm that requires rsync to scan
all the files in the transfer into memory at once (see
--recursive). See --delete (which is implied) for more details
on file-deletion.
--delete-excluded
In addition to deleting the files on the receiving side that are
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not on the sending side, this tells rsync to also delete any
files on the receiving side that are excluded (see --exclude).
See the FILTER RULES section for a way to make individual
exclusions behave this way on the receiver, and for a way to
protect files from --delete-excluded. See --delete (which is
implied) for more details on file-deletion.
--ignore-missing-args
When rsync is first processing the explicitly requested source
files (e.g. command-line arguments or --files-from entries), it
is normally an error if the file cannot be found. This option
suppresses that error, and does not try to transfer the file.
This does not affect subsequent vanished-file errors if a file
was initially found to be present and later is no longer there.
--delete-missing-args
This option takes the behavior of (the implied)
--ignore-missing-args option a step farther: each missing arg
will become a deletion request of the corresponding destination
file on the receiving side (should it exist). If the destination
file is a non-empty directory, it will only be successfully
deleted if --force or --delete are in effect. Other than that,
this option is independent of any other type of delete
processing.
The missing source files are represented by special file-list
entries which display as a *missing entry in the --list-only
output.
--ignore-errors
Tells --delete to go ahead and delete files even when there are
I/O errors.
--force
This option tells rsync to delete a non-empty directory when it
is to be replaced by a non-directory. This is only relevant if
deletions are not active (see --delete for details).
Note for older rsync versions: --force used to still be required
when using --delete-after, and it used to be non-functional
unless the --recursive option was also enabled.
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--max-delete=NUM
This tells rsync not to delete more than NUM files or
directories. If that limit is exceeded, all further deletions
are skipped through the end of the transfer. At the end, rsync
outputs a warning (including a count of the skipped deletions)
and exits with an error code of 25 (unless some more important
error condition also occurred).
Beginning with version 3.0.0, you may specify --max-delete=0 to
be warned about any extraneous files in the destination without
removing any of them. Older clients interpreted this as
unlimited, so if you dont know what version the client is, you
can use the less obvious --max-delete=-1 as a backward-compatible
way to specify that no deletions be allowed (though really old
versions didnt warn when the limit was exceeded).
--max-size=SIZE
This tells rsync to avoid transferring any file that is larger
than the specified SIZE. The SIZE value can be suffixed with a
string to indicate a size multiplier, and may be a fractional
value (e.g. --max-size=1.5m).
This option is a transfer rule, not an exclude, so it doesnt
affect the data that goes into the file-lists, and thus it doesnt
affect deletions. It just limits the files that the receiver
requests to be transferred.
The suffixes are as follows: K (or KiB) is a kibibyte (1024), M
(or MiB) is a mebibyte (1024*1024), and G (or GiB) is a gibibyte
(1024*1024*1024). If you want the multiplier to be 1000 instead
of 1024, use KB, MB, or GB. (Note: lower-case is also accepted
for all values.) Finally, if the suffix ends in either +1 or -1,
the value will be offset by one byte in the indicated direction.
Examples: --max-size=1.5mb-1 is 1499999 bytes, and
--max-size=2g+1 is 2147483649 bytes.
Note that rsync versions prior to 3.1.0 did not allow
--max-size=0.
--min-size=SIZE
This tells rsync to avoid transferring any file that is smaller
than the specified SIZE, which can help in not transferring
small, junk files. See the --max-size option for a description
of SIZE and other information.
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Note that rsync versions prior to 3.1.0 did not allow
--min-size=0.
-B, --block-size=BLOCKSIZE
This forces the block size used in rsyncs delta-transfer
algorithm to a fixed value. It is normally selected based on the
size of each file being updated. See the technical report for
details.
-e, --rsh=COMMAND
This option allows you to choose an alternative remote shell
program to use for communication between the local and remote
copies of rsync. Typically, rsync is configured to use ssh by
default, but you may prefer to use rsh on a local network.
If this option is used with [user@]host::module/path, then the
remote shell COMMAND will be used to run an rsync daemon on the
remote host, and all data will be transmitted through that remote
shell connection, rather than through a direct socket connection
to a running rsync daemon on the remote host. See the section
USING RSYNC-DAEMON FEATURES VIA A REMOTE-SHELL CONNECTION above.
Command-line arguments are permitted in COMMAND provided that
COMMAND is presented to rsync as a single argument. You must use
spaces (not tabs or other whitespace) to separate the command and
args from each other, and you can use single- and/or
double-quotes to preserve spaces in an argument (but not
backslashes). Note that doubling a single-quote inside a
single-quoted string gives you a single-quote; likewise for
double-quotes (though you need to pay attention to which quotes
your shell is parsing and which quotes rsync is parsing). Some
examples:
-e 'ssh -p 2234'
-e 'ssh -o ProxyCommand nohup ssh firewall nc -w1 %h %p'
(Note that ssh users can alternately customize site-specific
connect options in their .ssh/config file.)
You can also choose the remote shell program using the RSYNC_RSH
environment variable, which accepts the same range of values as
-e.
See also the --blocking-io option which is affected by this
option.
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--rsync-path=PROGRAM
Use this to specify what program is to be run on the remote
machine to start-up rsync. Often used when rsync is not in the
default remote-shells path (e.g.
--rsync-path=/usr/local/bin/rsync). Note that PROGRAM is run
with the help of a shell, so it can be any program, script, or
command sequence youd care to run, so long as it does not corrupt
the standard-in & standard-out that rsync is using to
communicate.
One tricky example is to set a different default directory on the
remote machine for use with the --relative option. For instance:
rsync -avR --rsync-path=cd /a/b && rsync host:c/d /e/
-M, --remote-option=OPTION
This option is used for more advanced situations where you want
certain effects to be limited to one side of the transfer only.
For instance, if you want to pass --log-file=FILE and
--fake-super to the remote system, specify it like this:
rsync -av -M --log-file=foo -M--fake-super src/ dest/
If you want to have an option affect only the local side of a
transfer when it normally affects both sides, send its negation
to the remote side. Like this:
rsync -av -x -M--no-x src/ dest/
Be cautious using this, as it is possible to toggle an option
that will cause rsync to have a different idea about what data to
expect next over the socket, and that will make it fail in a
cryptic fashion.
Note that it is best to use a separate --remote-option for each
option you want to pass. This makes your useage compatible with
the --protect-args option. If that option is off, any spaces in
your remote options will be split by the remote shell unless you
take steps to protect them.
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When performing a local transfer, the local side is the sender
and the remote side is the receiver.
Note some versions of the popt option-parsing library have a bug
in them that prevents you from using an adjacent arg with an
equal in it next to a short option letter (e.g.
-M--log-file=/tmp/foo. If this bug affects your version of popt,
you can use the version of popt that is included with rsync.
-C, --cvs-exclude
This is a useful shorthand for excluding a broad range of files
that you often dont want to transfer between systems. It uses a
similar algorithm to CVS to determine if a file should be
ignored.
The exclude list is initialized to exclude the following items
(these initial items are marked as perishable -- see the FILTER
RULES section):
RCS SCCS CVS CVS.adm RCSLOG cvslog.* tags TAGS .make.state
.nse_depinfo *~ #* .#* ,* _$* *$ *.old *.bak *.BAK *.orig
*.rej .del-* *.a *.olb *.o *.obj *.so *.exe *.Z *.elc *.ln
core .svn/ .git/ .hg/ .bzr/
then, files listed in a $HOME/.cvsignore are added to the list
and any files listed in the CVSIGNORE environment variable (all
cvsignore names are delimited by whitespace).
Finally, any file is ignored if it is in the same directory as a
.cvsignore file and matches one of the patterns listed therein.
Unlike rsyncs filter/exclude files, these patterns are split on
whitespace. See the cvs(1) manual for more information.
If youre combining -C with your own --filter rules, you should
note that these CVS excludes are appended at the end of your own
rules, regardless of where the -C was placed on the command-line.
This makes them a lower priority than any rules you specified
explicitly. If you want to control where these CVS excludes get
inserted into your filter rules, you should omit the -C as a
command-line option and use a combination of --filter=:C and
--filter=-C (either on your command-line or by putting the :C and
-C rules into a filter file with your other rules). The first
option turns on the per-directory scanning for the .cvsignore
file. The second option does a one-time import of the CVS
excludes mentioned above.
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-f, --filter=RULE
This option allows you to add rules to selectively exclude
certain files from the list of files to be transferred. This is
most useful in combination with a recursive transfer.
You may use as many --filter options on the command line as you
like to build up the list of files to exclude. If the filter
contains whitespace, be sure to quote it so that the shell gives
the rule to rsync as a single argument. The text below also
mentions that you can use an underscore to replace the space that
separates a rule from its arg.
See the FILTER RULES section for detailed information on this
option.
-F The -F option is a shorthand for adding two --filter rules to
your command. The first time it is used is a shorthand for this
rule:
--filter='dir-merge /.rsync-filter'
This tells rsync to look for per-directory .rsync-filter files
that have been sprinkled through the hierarchy and use their
rules to filter the files in the transfer. If -F is repeated, it
is a shorthand for this rule:
--filter='exclude .rsync-filter'
This filters out the .rsync-filter files themselves from the
transfer.
See the FILTER RULES section for detailed information on how
these options work.
--exclude=PATTERN
This option is a simplified form of the --filter option that
defaults to an exclude rule and does not allow the full
rule-parsing syntax of normal filter rules.
See the FILTER RULES section for detailed information on this
option.
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--exclude-from=FILE
This option is related to the --exclude option, but it specifies
a FILE that contains exclude patterns (one per line). Blank
lines in the file and lines starting with ; or # are ignored. If
FILE is -, the list will be read from standard input.
--include=PATTERN
This option is a simplified form of the --filter option that
defaults to an include rule and does not allow the full
rule-parsing syntax of normal filter rules.
See the FILTER RULES section for detailed information on this
option.
--include-from=FILE
This option is related to the --include option, but it specifies
a FILE that contains include patterns (one per line). Blank
lines in the file and lines starting with ; or # are ignored. If
FILE is -, the list will be read from standard input.
--files-from=FILE
Using this option allows you to specify the exact list of files
to transfer (as read from the specified FILE or - for standard
input). It also tweaks the default behavior of rsync to make
transferring just the specified files and directories easier:
o The --relative (-R) option is implied, which preserves the
path information that is specified for each item in the file
(use --no-relative or --no-R if you want to turn that off).
o The --dirs (-d) option is implied, which will create
directories specified in the list on the destination rather
than noisily skipping them (use --no-dirs or --no-d if you
want to turn that off).
o The --archive (-a) options behavior does not imply
--recursive (-r), so specify it explicitly, if you want it.
o These side-effects change the default state of rsync, so the
position of the --files-from option on the command-line has
no bearing on how other options are parsed (e.g. -a works
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the same before or after --files-from, as does --no-R and
all other options).
The filenames that are read from the FILE are all relative to the
source dir -- any leading slashes are removed and no ..
references are allowed to go higher than the source dir. For
example, take this command:
rsync -a --files-from=/tmp/foo /usr remote:/backup
If /tmp/foo contains the string bin (or even /bin), the /usr/bin
directory will be created as /backup/bin on the remote host. If
it contains bin/ (note the trailing slash), the immediate
contents of the directory would also be sent (without needing to
be explicitly mentioned in the file -- this began in version
2.6.4). In both cases, if the -r option was enabled, that dirs
entire hierarchy would also be transferred (keep in mind that -r
needs to be specified explicitly with --files-from, since it is
not implied by -a). Also note that the effect of the (enabled by
default) --relative option is to duplicate only the path info
that is read from the file -- it does not force the duplication
of the source-spec path (/usr in this case).
In addition, the --files-from file can be read from the remote
host instead of the local host if you specify a host: in front of
the file (the host must match one end of the transfer). As a
short-cut, you can specify just a prefix of : to mean use the
remote end of the transfer. For example:
rsync -a --files-from=:/path/file-list src:/ /tmp/copy
This would copy all the files specified in the /path/file-list
file that was located on the remote src host.
If the --iconv and --protect-args options are specified and the
--files-from filenames are being sent from one host to another,
the filenames will be translated from the sending hosts charset
to the receiving hosts charset.
NOTE: sorting the list of files in the --files-from input helps
rsync to be more efficient, as it will avoid re-visiting the path
elements that are shared between adjacent entries. If the input
is not sorted, some path elements (implied directories) may end
up being scanned multiple times, and rsync will eventually
unduplicate them after they get turned into file-list elements.
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-0, --from0
This tells rsync that the rules/filenames it reads from a file
are terminated by a null (\0) character, not a NL, CR, or CR+LF.
This affects --exclude-from, --include-from, --files-from, and
any merged files specified in a --filter rule. It does not
affect --cvs-exclude (since all names read from a .cvsignore file
are split on whitespace).
-s, --protect-args
This option sends all filenames and most options to the remote
rsync without allowing the remote shell to interpret them. This
means that spaces are not split in names, and any non-wildcard
special characters are not translated (such as ~, $, ;, &, etc.).
Wildcards are expanded on the remote host by rsync (instead of
the shell doing it).
If you use this option with --iconv, the args related to the
remote side will also be translated from the local to the remote
character-set. The translation happens before wild-cards are
expanded. See also the --files-from option.
You may also control this option via the RSYNC_PROTECT_ARGS
environment variable. If this variable has a non-zero value,
this option will be enabled by default, otherwise it will be
disabled by default. Either state is overridden by a manually
specified positive or negative version of this option (note that
--no-s and --no-protect-args are the negative versions). Since
this option was first introduced in 3.0.0, youll need to make
sure its disabled if you ever need to interact with a remote
rsync that is older than that.
Rsync can also be configured (at build time) to have this option
enabled by default (with is overridden by both the environment
and the command-line). This option will eventually become a new
default setting at some as-yet-undetermined point in the future.
-T, --temp-dir=DIR
This option instructs rsync to use DIR as a scratch directory
when creating temporary copies of the files transferred on the
receiving side. The default behavior is to create each temporary
file in the same directory as the associated destination file.
Beginning with rsync 3.1.1, the temp-file names inside the
specified DIR will not be prefixed with an extra dot (though they
will still have a random suffix added).
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This option is most often used when the receiving disk partition
does not have enough free space to hold a copy of the largest
file in the transfer. In this case (i.e. when the scratch
directory is on a different disk partition), rsync will not be
able to rename each received temporary file over the top of the
associated destination file, but instead must copy it into place.
Rsync does this by copying the file over the top of the
destination file, which means that the destination file will
contain truncated data during this copy. If this were not done
this way (even if the destination file were first removed, the
data locally copied to a temporary file in the destination
directory, and then renamed into place) it would be possible for
the old file to continue taking up disk space (if someone had it
open), and thus there might not be enough room to fit the new
version on the disk at the same time.
If you are using this option for reasons other than a shortage of
disk space, you may wish to combine it with the --delay-updates
option, which will ensure that all copied files get put into
subdirectories in the destination hierarchy, awaiting the end of
the transfer. If you dont have enough room to duplicate all the
arriving files on the destination partition, another way to tell
rsync that you arent overly concerned about disk space is to use
the --partial-dir option with a relative path; because this tells
rsync that it is OK to stash off a copy of a single file in a
subdir in the destination hierarchy, rsync will use the
partial-dir as a staging area to bring over the copied file, and
then rename it into place from there. (Specifying a --partial-dir
with an absolute path does not have this side-effect.)
-y, --fuzzy
This option tells rsync that it should look for a basis file for
any destination file that is missing. The current algorithm
looks in the same directory as the destination file for either a
file that has an identical size and modified-time, or a
similarly-named file. If found, rsync uses the fuzzy basis file
to try to speed up the transfer.
If the option is repeated, the fuzzy scan will also be done in
any matching alternate destination directories that are specified
via --compare-dest, --copy-dest, or --link-dest.
Note that the use of the --delete option might get rid of any
potential fuzzy-match files, so either use --delete-after or
specify some filename exclusions if you need to prevent this.
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--compare-dest=DIR
This option instructs rsync to use DIR on the destination machine
as an additional hierarchy to compare destination files against
doing transfers (if the files are missing in the destination
directory). If a file is found in DIR that is identical to the
senders file, the file will NOT be transferred to the destination
directory. This is useful for creating a sparse backup of just
files that have changed from an earlier backup. This option is
typically used to copy into an empty (or newly created)
directory.
Beginning in version 2.6.4, multiple --compare-dest directories
may be provided, which will cause rsync to search the list in the
order specified for an exact match. If a match is found that
differs only in attributes, a local copy is made and the
attributes updated. If a match is not found, a basis file from
one of the DIRs will be selected to try to speed up the transfer.
If DIR is a relative path, it is relative to the destination
directory. See also --copy-dest and --link-dest.
NOTE: beginning with version 3.1.0, rsync will remove a file from
a non-empty destination hierarchy if an exact match is found in
one of the compare-dest hierarchies (making the end result more
closely match a fresh copy).
--copy-dest=DIR
This option behaves like --compare-dest, but rsync will also copy
unchanged files found in DIR to the destination directory using a
local copy. This is useful for doing transfers to a new
destination while leaving existing files intact, and then doing a
flash-cutover when all files have been successfully transferred.
Multiple --copy-dest directories may be provided, which will
cause rsync to search the list in the order specified for an
unchanged file. If a match is not found, a basis file from one
of the DIRs will be selected to try to speed up the transfer.
If DIR is a relative path, it is relative to the destination
directory. See also --compare-dest and --link-dest.
--link-dest=DIR
This option behaves like --copy-dest, but unchanged files are
hard linked from DIR to the destination directory. The files
must be identical in all preserved attributes (e.g. permissions,
possibly ownership) in order for the files to be linked together.
An example:
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rsync -av --link-dest=$PWD/prior_dir host:src_dir/ new_dir/
If files arent linking, double-check their attributes. Also
check if some attributes are getting forced outside of rsyncs
control, such a mount option that squishes root to a single user,
or mounts a removable drive with generic ownership (such as OS Xs
Ignore ownership on this volume option).
Beginning in version 2.6.4, multiple --link-dest directories may
be provided, which will cause rsync to search the list in the
order specified for an exact match. If a match is found that
differs only in attributes, a local copy is made and the
attributes updated. If a match is not found, a basis file from
one of the DIRs will be selected to try to speed up the transfer.
This option works best when copying into an empty destination
hierarchy, as existing files may get their attributes tweaked,
and that can affect alternate destination files via hard-links.
Also, itemizing of changes can get a bit muddled. Note that
prior to version 3.1.0, an alternate-directory exact match would
never be found (nor linked into the destination) when a
destination file already exists.
Note that if you combine this option with --ignore-times, rsync
will not link any files together because it only links identical
files together as a substitute for transferring the file, never
as an additional check after the file is updated.
If DIR is a relative path, it is relative to the destination
directory. See also --compare-dest and --copy-dest.
Note that rsync versions prior to 2.6.1 had a bug that could
prevent --link-dest from working properly for a non-super-user
when -o was specified (or implied by -a). You can work-around
this bug by avoiding the -o option when sending to an old rsync.
-z, --compress
With this option, rsync compresses the file data as it is sent to
the destination machine, which reduces the amount of data being
transmitted -- something that is useful over a slow connection.
Note that this option typically achieves better compression
ratios than can be achieved by using a compressing remote shell
or a compressing transport because it takes advantage of the
implicit information in the matching data blocks that are not
explicitly sent over the connection. This matching-data
compression comes at a cost of CPU, though, and can be disabled
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by repeating the -z option, but only if both sides are at least
version 3.1.1.
Note that if your version of rsync was compiled with an external
zlib (instead of the zlib that comes packaged with rsync) then it
will not support the old-style compression, only the new-style
(repeated-option) compression. In the future this new-style
compression will likely become the default.
The client rsync requests new-style compression on the server via
the --new-compress option, so if you see that option rejected it
means that the server is not new enough to support -zz. Rsync
also accepts the --old-compress option for a future time when
new-style compression becomes the default.
See the --skip-compress option for the default list of file
suffixes that will not be compressed.
--compress-level=NUM
Explicitly set the compression level to use (see --compress)
instead of letting it default. If NUM is non-zero, the
--compress option is implied.
--skip-compress=LIST
Override the list of file suffixes that will not be compressed.
The LIST should be one or more file suffixes (without the dot)
separated by slashes (/).
You may specify an empty string to indicate that no file should
be skipped.
Simple character-class matching is supported: each must consist
of a list of letters inside the square brackets (e.g. no special
classes, such as [:alpha:], are supported, and - has no special
meaning).
The characters asterisk (*) and question-mark (?) have no special
meaning.
Heres an example that specifies 6 suffixes to skip (since 1 of
the 5 rules matches 2 suffixes):
--skip-compress=gz/jpg/mp[34]/7z/bz2
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The default list of suffixes that will not be compressed is this
(in this version of rsync):
7z ace avi bz2 deb gpg gz iso jpeg jpg lz lzma lzo mov mp3 mp4
ogg png rar rpm rzip tbz tgz tlz txz xz z zip
This list will be replaced by your --skip-compress list in all
but one situation: a copy from a daemon rsync will add your
skipped suffixes to its list of non-compressing files (and its
list may be configured to a different default).
--numeric-ids
With this option rsync will transfer numeric group and user IDs
rather than using user and group names and mapping them at both
ends.
By default rsync will use the username and groupname to determine
what ownership to give files. The special uid 0 and the special
group 0 are never mapped via user/group names even if the
--numeric-ids option is not specified.
If a user or group has no name on the source system or it has no
match on the destination system, then the numeric ID from the
source system is used instead. See also the comments on the use
chroot setting in the rsyncd.conf manpage for information on how
the chroot setting affects rsyncs ability to look up the names of
the users and groups and what you can do about it.
--usermap=STRING, --groupmap=STRING
These options allow you to specify users and groups that should
be mapped to other values by the receiving side. The STRING is
one or more FROM:TO pairs of values separated by commas. Any
matching FROM value from the sender is replaced with a TO value
from the receiver. You may specify usernames or user IDs for the
FROM and TO values, and the FROM value may also be a wild-card
string, which will be matched against the senders names
(wild-cards do NOT match against ID numbers, though see below for
why a * matches everything). You may instead specify a range of
ID numbers via an inclusive range: LOW-HIGH. For example:
--usermap=0-99:nobody,wayne:admin,*:normal --groupmap=usr:1,1:usr
The first match in the list is the one that is used. You should
specify all your user mappings using a single --usermap option,
and/or all your group mappings using a single --groupmap option.
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Note that the senders name for the 0 user and group are not
transmitted to the receiver, so you should either match these
values using a 0, or use the names in effect on the receiving
side (typically root). All other FROM names match those in use
on the sending side. All TO names match those in use on the
receiving side.
Any IDs that do not have a name on the sending side are treated
as having an empty name for the purpose of matching. This allows
them to be matched via a * or using an empty name. For instance:
--usermap=:nobody --groupmap=*:nobody
When the --numeric-ids option is used, the sender does not send
any names, so all the IDs are treated as having an empty name.
This means that you will need to specify numeric FROM values if
you want to map these nameless IDs to different values.
For the --usermap option to have any effect, the -o (--owner)
option must be used (or implied), and the receiver will need to
be running as a super-user (see also the --fake-super option).
For the --groupmap option to have any effect, the -g (--groups)
option must be used (or implied), and the receiver will need to
have permissions to set that group.
--chown=USER:GROUP
This option forces all files to be owned by USER with group
GROUP. This is a simpler interface than using --usermap and
--groupmap directly, but it is implemented using those options
internally, so you cannot mix them. If either the USER or GROUP
is empty, no mapping for the omitted user/group will occur. If
GROUP is empty, the trailing colon may be omitted, but if USER is
empty, a leading colon must be supplied.
If you specify --chown=foo:bar, this is exactly the same as
specifying --usermap=*:foo --groupmap=*:bar, only easier.
--timeout=TIMEOUT
This option allows you to set a maximum I/O timeout in seconds.
If no data is transferred for the specified time then rsync will
exit. The default is 0, which means no timeout.
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--contimeout
This option allows you to set the amount of time that rsync will
wait for its connection to an rsync daemon to succeed. If the
timeout is reached, rsync exits with an error.
--address
By default rsync will bind to the wildcard address when
connecting to an rsync daemon. The --address option allows you
to specify a specific IP address (or hostname) to bind to. See
also this option in the --daemon mode section.
--port=PORT
This specifies an alternate TCP port number to use rather than
the default of 873. This is only needed if you are using the
double-colon (::) syntax to connect with an rsync daemon (since
the URL syntax has a way to specify the port as a part of the
URL). See also this option in the --daemon mode section.
--sockopts
This option can provide endless fun for people who like to tune
their systems to the utmost degree. You can set all sorts of
socket options which may make transfers faster (or slower!). Read
the man page for the setsockopt() system call for details on some
of the options you may be able to set. By default no special
socket options are set. This only affects direct socket
connections to a remote rsync daemon. This option also exists in
the --daemon mode section.
--blocking-io
This tells rsync to use blocking I/O when launching a remote
shell transport. If the remote shell is either rsh or remsh,
rsync defaults to using blocking I/O, otherwise it defaults to
using non-blocking I/O. (Note that ssh prefers non-blocking
I/O.)
--outbuf=MODE
This sets the output buffering mode. The mode can be None (aka
Unbuffered), Line, or Block (aka Full). You may specify as
little as a single letter for the mode, and use upper or lower
case.
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The main use of this option is to change Full buffering to Line
buffering when rsyncs output is going to a file or pipe.
-i, --itemize-changes
Requests a simple itemized list of the changes that are being
made to each file, including attribute changes. This is exactly
the same as specifying --out-format='%i %n%L'. If you repeat the
option, unchanged files will also be output, but only if the
receiving rsync is at least version 2.6.7 (you can use -vv with
older versions of rsync, but that also turns on the output of
other verbose messages).
The %i escape has a cryptic output that is 11 letters long. The
general format is like the string YXcstpoguax, where Y is
replaced by the type of update being done, X is replaced by the
file-type, and the other letters represent attributes that may be
output if they are being modified.
The update types that replace the Y are as follows:
o A < means that a file is being transferred to the remote
host (sent).
o A > means that a file is being transferred to the local host
(received).
o A c means that a local change/creation is occurring for the
item (such as the creation of a directory or the changing of
a symlink, etc.).
o A h means that the item is a hard link to another item
(requires --hard-links).
o A . means that the item is not being updated (though it
might have attributes that are being modified).
o A * means that the rest of the itemized-output area contains
a message (e.g. deleting).
The file-types that replace the X are: f for a file, a d for a
directory, an L for a symlink, a D for a device, and a S for a
special file (e.g. named sockets and fifos).
The other letters in the string above are the actual letters that
will be output if the associated attribute for the item is being
updated or a . for no change. Three exceptions to this are: (1)
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a newly created item replaces each letter with a +, (2) an
identical item replaces the dots with spaces, and (3) an unknown
attribute replaces each letter with a ? (this can happen when
talking to an older rsync).
The attribute that is associated with each letter is as follows:
o A c means either that a regular file has a different
checksum (requires --checksum) or that a symlink, device, or
special file has a changed value. Note that if you are
sending files to an rsync prior to 3.0.1, this change flag
will be present only for checksum-differing regular files.
o A s means the size of a regular file is different and will
be updated by the file transfer.
o A t means the modification time is different and is being
updated to the senders value (requires --times). An
alternate value of T means that the modification time will
be set to the transfer time, which happens when a
file/symlink/device is updated without --times and when a
symlink is changed and the receiver cant set its time.
(Note: when using an rsync 3.0.0 client, you might see the s
flag combined with t instead of the proper T flag for this
time-setting failure.)
o A p means the permissions are different and are being
updated to the senders value (requires --perms).
o An o means the owner is different and is being updated to
the senders value (requires --owner and super-user
privileges).
o A g means the group is different and is being updated to the
senders value (requires --group and the authority to set the
group).
o The u slot is reserved for future use.
o The a means that the ACL information changed.
o The x means that the extended attribute information changed.
One other output is possible: when deleting files, the %i will
output the string *deleting for each item that is being removed
(assuming that you are talking to a recent enough rsync that it
logs deletions instead of outputting them as a verbose message).
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--out-format=FORMAT
This allows you to specify exactly what the rsync client outputs
to the user on a per-update basis. The format is a text string
containing embedded single-character escape sequences prefixed
with a percent (%) character. A default format of %n%L is
assumed if either --info=name or -v is specified (this tells you
just the name of the file and, if the item is a link, where it
points). For a full list of the possible escape characters, see
the log format setting in the rsyncd.conf manpage.
Specifying the --out-format option implies the --info=name
option, which will mention each file, dir, etc. that gets updated
in a significant way (a transferred file, a recreated
symlink/device, or a touched directory). In addition, if the
itemize-changes escape (%i) is included in the string (e.g. if
the --itemize-changes option was used), the logging of names
increases to mention any item that is changed in any way (as long
as the receiving side is at least 2.6.4). See the
--itemize-changes option for a description of the output of %i.
Rsync will output the out-format string prior to a files transfer
unless one of the transfer-statistic escapes is requested, in
which case the logging is done at the end of the files transfer.
When this late logging is in effect and --progress is also
specified, rsync will also output the name of the file being
transferred prior to its progress information (followed, of
course, by the out-format output).
--log-file=FILE
This option causes rsync to log what it is doing to a file. This
is similar to the logging that a daemon does, but can be
requested for the client side and/or the server side of a
non-daemon transfer. If specified as a client option, transfer
logging will be enabled with a default format of %i %n%L. See
the --log-file-format option if you wish to override this.
Heres a example command that requests the remote side to log what
is happening:
rsync -av --remote-option=--log-file=/tmp/rlog src/ dest/
This is very useful if you need to debug why a connection is
closing unexpectedly.
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--log-file-format=FORMAT
This allows you to specify exactly what per-update logging is put
into the file specified by the --log-file option (which must also
be specified for this option to have any effect). If you specify
an empty string, updated files will not be mentioned in the log
file. For a list of the possible escape characters, see the log
format setting in the rsyncd.conf manpage.
The default FORMAT used if --log-file is specified and this
option is not is %i %n%L.
--stats
This tells rsync to print a verbose set of statistics on the file
transfer, allowing you to tell how effective rsyncs
delta-transfer algorithm is for your data. This option is
equivalent to --info=stats2 if combined with 0 or 1 -v options,
or --info=stats3 if combined with 2 or more -v options.
The current statistics are as follows:
o Number of files is the count of all files (in the generic
sense), which includes directories, symlinks, etc. The
total count will be followed by a list of counts by filetype
(if the total is non-zero). For example: (reg: 5, dir: 3,
link: 2, dev: 1, special: 1) lists the totals for regular
files, directories, symlinks, devices, and special files.
If any of value is 0, it is completely omitted from the
list.
o Number of created files is the count of how many files
(generic sense) were created (as opposed to updated). The
total count will be followed by a list of counts by filetype
(if the total is non-zero).
o Number of deleted files is the count of how many files
(generic sense) were created (as opposed to updated). The
total count will be followed by a list of counts by filetype
(if the total is non-zero). Note that this line is only
output if deletions are in effect, and only if protocol 31
is being used (the default for rsync 3.1.x).
o Number of regular files transferred is the count of normal
files that were updated via rsyncs delta-transfer algorithm,
which does not include dirs, symlinks, etc. Note that rsync
3.1.0 added the word regular into this heading.
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o Total file size is the total sum of all file sizes in the
transfer. This does not count any size for directories or
special files, but does include the size of symlinks.
o Total transferred file size is the total sum of all files
sizes for just the transferred files.
o Literal data is how much unmatched file-update data we had
to send to the receiver for it to recreate the updated
files.
o Matched data is how much data the receiver got locally when
recreating the updated files.
o File list size is how big the file-list data was when the
sender sent it to the receiver. This is smaller than the
in-memory size for the file list due to some compressing of
duplicated data when rsync sends the list.
o File list generation time is the number of seconds that the
sender spent creating the file list. This requires a modern
rsync on the sending side for this to be present.
o File list transfer time is the number of seconds that the
sender spent sending the file list to the receiver.
o Total bytes sent is the count of all the bytes that rsync
sent from the client side to the server side.
o Total bytes received is the count of all non-message bytes
that rsync received by the client side from the server side.
Non-message bytes means that we dont count the bytes for a
verbose message that the server sent to us, which makes the
stats more consistent.
-8, --8-bit-output
This tells rsync to leave all high-bit characters unescaped in
the output instead of trying to test them to see if theyre valid
in the current locale and escaping the invalid ones. All control
characters (but never tabs) are always escaped, regardless of
this options setting.
The escape idiom that started in 2.6.7 is to output a literal
backslash (\) and a hash (#), followed by exactly 3 octal digits.
For example, a newline would output as \#012. A literal
backslash that is in a filename is not escaped unless it is
followed by a hash and 3 digits (0-9).
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-h, --human-readable
Output numbers in a more human-readable format. There are 3
possible levels: (1) output numbers with a separator between
each set of 3 digits (either a comma or a period, depending on if
the decimal point is represented by a period or a comma); (2)
output numbers in units of 1000 (with a character suffix for
larger units -- see below); (3) output numbers in units of 1024.
The default is human-readable level 1. Each -h option increases
the level by one. You can take the level down to 0 (to output
numbers as pure digits) by specifing the --no-human-readable
(--no-h) option.
The unit letters that are appended in levels 2 and 3 are: K
(kilo), M (mega), G (giga), or T (tera). For example, a
1234567-byte file would output as 1.23M in level-2 (assuming that
a period is your local decimal point).
Backward compatibility note: versions of rsync prior to 3.1.0 do
not support human-readable level 1, and they default to level 0.
Thus, specifying one or two -h options will behave in a
comparable manner in old and new versions as long as you didnt
specify a --no-h option prior to one or more -h options. See the
--list-only option for one difference.
--partial
By default, rsync will delete any partially transferred file if
the transfer is interrupted. In some circumstances it is more
desirable to keep partially transferred files. Using the
--partial option tells rsync to keep the partial file which
should make a subsequent transfer of the rest of the file much
faster.
--partial-dir=DIR
A better way to keep partial files than the --partial option is
to specify a DIR that will be used to hold the partial data
(instead of writing it out to the destination file). On the next
transfer, rsync will use a file found in this dir as data to
speed up the resumption of the transfer and then delete it after
it has served its purpose.
Note that if --whole-file is specified (or implied), any
partial-dir file that is found for a file that is being updated
will simply be removed (since rsync is sending files without
using rsyncs delta-transfer algorithm).
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Rsync will create the DIR if it is missing (just the last dir --
not the whole path). This makes it easy to use a relative path
(such as --partial-dir=.rsync-partial) to have rsync create the
partial-directory in the destination files directory when needed,
and then remove it again when the partial file is deleted.
If the partial-dir value is not an absolute path, rsync will add
an exclude rule at the end of all your existing excludes. This
will prevent the sending of any partial-dir files that may exist
on the sending side, and will also prevent the untimely deletion
of partial-dir items on the receiving side. An example: the
above --partial-dir option would add the equivalent of -f '-p
.rsync-partial/' at the end of any other filter rules.
If you are supplying your own exclude rules, you may need to add
your own exclude/hide/protect rule for the partial-dir because
(1) the auto-added rule may be ineffective at the end of your
other rules, or (2) you may wish to override rsyncs exclude
choice. For instance, if you want to make rsync clean-up any
left-over partial-dirs that may be lying around, you should
specify --delete-after and add a risk filter rule, e.g. -f 'R
.rsync-partial/'. (Avoid using --delete-before or
--delete-during unless you dont need rsync to use any of the
left-over partial-dir data during the current run.)
IMPORTANT: the --partial-dir should not be writable by other
users or it is a security risk. E.g. AVOID /tmp.
You can also set the partial-dir value the RSYNC_PARTIAL_DIR
environment variable. Setting this in the environment does not
force --partial to be enabled, but rather it affects where
partial files go when --partial is specified. For instance,
instead of using --partial-dir=.rsync-tmp along with --progress,
you could set RSYNC_PARTIAL_DIR=.rsync-tmp in your environment
and then just use the -P option to turn on the use of the
.rsync-tmp dir for partial transfers. The only times that the
--partial option does not look for this environment value are (1)
when --inplace was specified (since --inplace conflicts with
--partial-dir), and (2) when --delay-updates was specified (see
below).
For the purposes of the daemon-configs refuse options setting,
--partial-dir does not imply --partial. This is so that a
refusal of the --partial option can be used to disallow the
overwriting of destination files with a partial transfer, while
still allowing the safer idiom provided by --partial-dir.
--delay-updates
This option puts the temporary file from each updated file into a
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holding directory until the end of the transfer, at which time
all the files are renamed into place in rapid succession. This
attempts to make the updating of the files a little more atomic.
By default the files are placed into a directory named .~tmp~ in
each files destination directory, but if youve specified the
--partial-dir option, that directory will be used instead. See
the comments in the --partial-dir section for a discussion of how
this .~tmp~ dir will be excluded from the transfer, and what you
can do if you want rsync to cleanup old .~tmp~ dirs that might be
lying around. Conflicts with --inplace and --append.
This option uses more memory on the receiving side (one bit per
file transferred) and also requires enough free disk space on the
receiving side to hold an additional copy of all the updated
files. Note also that you should not use an absolute path to
--partial-dir unless (1) there is no chance of any of the files
in the transfer having the same name (since all the updated files
will be put into a single directory if the path is absolute) and
(2) there are no mount points in the hierarchy (since the delayed
updates will fail if they cant be renamed into place).
See also the atomic-rsync perl script in the support subdir for
an update algorithm that is even more atomic (it uses --link-dest
and a parallel hierarchy of files).
-m, --prune-empty-dirs
This option tells the receiving rsync to get rid of empty
directories from the file-list, including nested directories that
have no non-directory children. This is useful for avoiding the
creation of a bunch of useless directories when the sending rsync
is recursively scanning a hierarchy of files using
include/exclude/filter rules.
Note that the use of transfer rules, such as the --min-size
option, does not affect what goes into the file list, and thus
does not leave directories empty, even if none of the files in a
directory match the transfer rule.
Because the file-list is actually being pruned, this option also
affects what directories get deleted when a delete is active.
However, keep in mind that excluded files and directories can
prevent existing items from being deleted due to an exclude both
hiding source files and protecting destination files. See the
perishable filter-rule option for how to avoid this.
You can prevent the pruning of certain empty directories from the
file-list by using a global protect filter. For instance, this
option would ensure that the directory emptydir was kept in the
file-list:
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--filter protect emptydir/
Heres an example that copies all .pdf files in a hierarchy, only
creating the necessary destination directories to hold the .pdf
files, and ensures that any superfluous files and directories in
the destination are removed (note the hide filter of
non-directories being used instead of an exclude):
rsync -avm --del --include=*.pdf -f hide,! */ src/ dest
If you didnt want to remove superfluous destination files, the
more time-honored options of --include='*/' --exclude='*' would
work fine in place of the hide-filter (if that is more natural to
you).
--progress
This option tells rsync to print information showing the progress
of the transfer. This gives a bored user something to watch.
With a modern rsync this is the same as specifying
--info=flist2,name,progress, but any user-supplied settings for
those info flags takes precedence (e.g. --info=flist0
--progress).
While rsync is transferring a regular file, it updates a progress
line that looks like this:
782448 63% 110.64kB/s 0:00:04
In this example, the receiver has reconstructed 782448 bytes or
63% of the senders file, which is being reconstructed at a rate
of 110.64 kilobytes per second, and the transfer will finish in 4
seconds if the current rate is maintained until the end.
These statistics can be misleading if rsyncs delta-transfer
algorithm is in use. For example, if the senders file consists
of the basis file followed by additional data, the reported rate
will probably drop dramatically when the receiver gets to the
literal data, and the transfer will probably take much longer to
finish than the receiver estimated as it was finishing the
matched part of the file.
When the file transfer finishes, rsync replaces the progress line
with a summary line that looks like this:
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1,238,099 100% 146.38kB/s 0:00:08 (xfr#5, to-chk=169/396)
In this example, the file was 1,238,099 bytes long in total, the
average rate of transfer for the whole file was 146.38 kilobytes
per second over the 8 seconds that it took to complete, it was
the 5th transfer of a regular file during the current rsync
session, and there are 169 more files for the receiver to check
(to see if they are up-to-date or not) remaining out of the 396
total files in the file-list.
In an incremental recursion scan, rsync wont know the total
number of files in the file-list until it reaches the ends of the
scan, but since it starts to transfer files during the scan, it
will display a line with the text ir-chk (for incremental
recursion check) instead of to-chk until the point that it knows
the full size of the list, at which point it will switch to using
to-chk. Thus, seeing ir-chk lets you know that the total count
of files in the file list is still going to increase (and each
time it does, the count of files left to check will increase by
the number of the files added to the list).
-P The -P option is equivalent to --partial --progress. Its purpose
is to make it much easier to specify these two options for a long
transfer that may be interrupted.
There is also a --info=progress2 option that outputs statistics
based on the whole transfer, rather than individual files. Use
this flag without outputting a filename (e.g. avoid -v or specify
--info=name0) if you want to see how the transfer is doing
without scrolling the screen with a lot of names. (You dont need
to specify the --progress option in order to use
--info=progress2.)
--password-file=FILE
This option allows you to provide a password for accessing an
rsync daemon via a file or via standard input if FILE is -. The
file should contain just the password on the first line (all
other lines are ignored). Rsync will exit with an error if FILE
is world readable or if a root-run rsync command finds a
non-root-owned file.
This option does not supply a password to a remote shell
transport such as ssh; to learn how to do that, consult the
remote shells documentation. When accessing an rsync daemon
using a remote shell as the transport, this option only comes
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into effect after the remote shell finishes its authentication
(i.e. if you have also specified a password in the daemons config
file).
--list-only
This option will cause the source files to be listed instead of
transferred. This option is inferred if there is a single source
arg and no destination specified, so its main uses are: (1) to
turn a copy command that includes a destination arg into a
file-listing command, or (2) to be able to specify more than one
source arg (note: be sure to include the destination). Caution:
keep in mind that a source arg with a wild-card is expanded by
the shell into multiple args, so it is never safe to try to list
such an arg without using this option. For example:
rsync -av --list-only foo* dest/
Starting with rsync 3.1.0, the sizes output by --list-only are
affected by the --human-readable option. By default they will
contain digit separators, but higher levels of readability will
output the sizes with unit suffixes. Note also that the column
width for the size output has increased from 11 to 14 characters
for all human-readable levels. Use --no-h if you want just
digits in the sizes, and the old column width of 11 characters.
Compatibility note: when requesting a remote listing of files
from an rsync that is version 2.6.3 or older, you may encounter
an error if you ask for a non-recursive listing. This is because
a file listing implies the --dirs option w/o --recursive, and
older rsyncs dont have that option. To avoid this problem,
either specify the --no-dirs option (if you dont need to expand a
directorys content), or turn on recursion and exclude the content
of subdirectories: -r --exclude='/*/*'.
--bwlimit=RATE
This option allows you to specify the maximum transfer rate for
the data sent over the socket, specified in units per second.
The RATE value can be suffixed with a string to indicate a size
multiplier, and may be a fractional value (e.g. --bwlimit=1.5m).
If no suffix is specified, the value will be assumed to be in
units of 1024 bytes (as if K or KiB had been appended). See the
--max-size option for a description of all the available
suffixes. A value of zero specifies no limit.
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For backward-compatibility reasons, the rate limit will be
rounded to the nearest KiB unit, so no rate smaller than 1024
bytes per second is possible.
Rsync writes data over the socket in blocks, and this option both
limits the size of the blocks that rsync writes, and tries to
keep the average transfer rate at the requested limit. Some
burstiness may be seen where rsync writes out a block of data and
then sleeps to bring the average rate into compliance.
Due to the internal buffering of data, the --progress option may
not be an accurate reflection on how fast the data is being sent.
This is because some files can show up as being rapidly sent when
the data is quickly buffered, while other can show up as very
slow when the flushing of the output buffer occurs. This may be
fixed in a future version.
--write-batch=FILE
Record a file that can later be applied to another identical
destination with --read-batch. See the BATCH MODE section for
details, and also the --only-write-batch option.
--only-write-batch=FILE
Works like --write-batch, except that no updates are made on the
destination system when creating the batch. This lets you
transport the changes to the destination system via some other
means and then apply the changes via --read-batch.
Note that you can feel free to write the batch directly to some
portable media: if this media fills to capacity before the end of
the transfer, you can just apply that partial transfer to the
destination and repeat the whole process to get the rest of the
changes (as long as you dont mind a partially updated destination
system while the multi-update cycle is happening).
Also note that you only save bandwidth when pushing changes to a
remote system because this allows the batched data to be diverted
from the sender into the batch file without having to flow over
the wire to the receiver (when pulling, the sender is remote, and
thus cant write the batch).
--read-batch=FILE
Apply all of the changes stored in FILE, a file previously
generated by --write-batch. If FILE is -, the batch data will be
read from standard input. See the BATCH MODE section for
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details.
--protocol=NUM
Force an older protocol version to be used. This is useful for
creating a batch file that is compatible with an older version of
rsync. For instance, if rsync 2.6.4 is being used with the
--write-batch option, but rsync 2.6.3 is what will be used to run
the --read-batch option, you should use --protocol=28 when
creating the batch file to force the older protocol version to be
used in the batch file (assuming you cant upgrade the rsync on
the reading system).
--iconv=CONVERT_SPEC
Rsync can convert filenames between character sets using this
option. Using a CONVERT_SPEC of . tells rsync to look up the
default character-set via the locale setting. Alternately, you
can fully specify what conversion to do by giving a local and a
remote charset separated by a comma in the order
--iconv=LOCAL,REMOTE, e.g. --iconv=utf8,iso88591. This order
ensures that the option will stay the same whether youre pushing
or pulling files. Finally, you can specify either --no-iconv or
a CONVERT_SPEC of - to turn off any conversion. The default
setting of this option is site-specific, and can also be affected
via the RSYNC_ICONV environment variable.
For a list of what charset names your local iconv library
supports, you can run iconv --list.
If you specify the --protect-args option (-s), rsync will
translate the filenames you specify on the command-line that are
being sent to the remote host. See also the --files-from option.
Note that rsync does not do any conversion of names in filter
files (including include/exclude files). It is up to you to
ensure that youre specifying matching rules that can match on
both sides of the transfer. For instance, you can specify extra
include/exclude rules if there are filename differences on the
two sides that need to be accounted for.
When you pass an --iconv option to an rsync daemon that allows
it, the daemon uses the charset specified in its charset
configuration parameter regardless of the remote charset you
actually pass. Thus, you may feel free to specify just the local
charset for a daemon transfer (e.g. --iconv=utf8).
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-4, --ipv4 or -6, --ipv6
Tells rsync to prefer IPv4/IPv6 when creating sockets. This only
affects sockets that rsync has direct control over, such as the
outgoing socket when directly contacting an rsync daemon. See
also these options in the --daemon mode section.
If rsync was complied without support for IPv6, the --ipv6 option
will have no effect. The --version output will tell you if this
is the case.
--checksum-seed=NUM
Set the checksum seed to the integer NUM. This 4 byte checksum
seed is included in each block and MD4 file checksum calculation
(the more modern MD5 file checksums dont use a seed). By default
the checksum seed is generated by the server and defaults to the
current time() . This option is used to set a specific checksum
seed, which is useful for applications that want repeatable block
checksums, or in the case where the user wants a more random
checksum seed. Setting NUM to 0 causes rsync to use the default
of time() for checksum seed.
DAEMON OPTIONS
The options allowed when starting an rsync daemon are as follows:
--daemon
This tells rsync that it is to run as a daemon. The daemon you
start running may be accessed using an rsync client using the
host::module or rsync://host/module/ syntax.
If standard input is a socket then rsync will assume that it is
being run via inetd, otherwise it will detach from the current
terminal and become a background daemon. The daemon will read
the config file (rsyncd.conf) on each connect made by a client
and respond to requests accordingly. See the rsyncd.conf(5) man
page for more details.
--address
By default rsync will bind to the wildcard address when run as a
daemon with the --daemon option. The --address option allows you
to specify a specific IP address (or hostname) to bind to. This
makes virtual hosting possible in conjunction with the --config
option. See also the address global option in the rsyncd.conf
manpage.
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--bwlimit=RATE
This option allows you to specify the maximum transfer rate for
the data the daemon sends over the socket. The client can still
specify a smaller --bwlimit value, but no larger value will be
allowed. See the client version of this option (above) for some
extra details.
--config=FILE
This specifies an alternate config file than the default. This
is only relevant when --daemon is specified. The default is
/etc/rsyncd.conf unless the daemon is running over a remote shell
program and the remote user is not the super-user; in that case
the default is rsyncd.conf in the current directory (typically
$HOME).
-M, --dparam=OVERRIDE
This option can be used to set a daemon-config parameter when
starting up rsync in daemon mode. It is equivalent to adding the
parameter at the end of the global settings prior to the first
modules definition. The parameter names can be specified without
spaces, if you so desire. For instance:
rsync --daemon -M pidfile=/path/rsync.pid
--no-detach
When running as a daemon, this option instructs rsync to not
detach itself and become a background process. This option is
required when running as a service on Cygwin, and may also be
useful when rsync is supervised by a program such as daemontools
or AIXs System Resource Controller. --no-detach is also
recommended when rsync is run under a debugger. This option has
no effect if rsync is run from inetd or sshd.
--port=PORT
This specifies an alternate TCP port number for the daemon to
listen on rather than the default of 873. See also the port
global option in the rsyncd.conf manpage.
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--log-file=FILE
This option tells the rsync daemon to use the given log-file name
instead of using the log file setting in the config file.
--log-file-format=FORMAT
This option tells the rsync daemon to use the given FORMAT string
instead of using the log format setting in the config file. It
also enables transfer logging unless the string is empty, in
which case transfer logging is turned off.
--sockopts
This overrides the socket options setting in the rsyncd.conf file
and has the same syntax.
-v, --verbose
This option increases the amount of information the daemon logs
during its startup phase. After the client connects, the daemons
verbosity level will be controlled by the options that the client
used and the max verbosity setting in the modules config section.
-4, --ipv4 or -6, --ipv6
Tells rsync to prefer IPv4/IPv6 when creating the incoming
sockets that the rsync daemon will use to listen for connections.
One of these options may be required in older versions of Linux
to work around an IPv6 bug in the kernel (if you see an address
already in use error when nothing else is using the port, try
specifying --ipv6 or --ipv4 when starting the daemon).
If rsync was complied without support for IPv6, the --ipv6 option
will have no effect. The --version output will tell you if this
is the case.
-h, --help
When specified after --daemon, print a short help page describing
the options available for starting an rsync daemon.
FILTER RULES
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The filter rules allow for flexible selection of which files to
transfer (include) and which files to skip (exclude). The rules
either directly specify include/exclude patterns or they specify a way
to acquire more include/exclude patterns (e.g. to read them from a
file).
As the list of files/directories to transfer is built, rsync checks
each name to be transferred against the list of include/exclude
patterns in turn, and the first matching pattern is acted on: if it
is an exclude pattern, then that file is skipped; if it is an include
pattern then that filename is not skipped; if no matching pattern is
found, then the filename is not skipped.
Rsync builds an ordered list of filter rules as specified on the
command-line. Filter rules have the following syntax:
RULE [PATTERN_OR_FILENAME]
RULE,MODIFIERS [PATTERN_OR_FILENAME]
You have your choice of using either short or long RULE names, as
described below. If you use a short-named rule, the , separating the
RULE from the MODIFIERS is optional. The PATTERN or FILENAME that
follows (when present) must come after either a single space or an
underscore (_). Here are the available rule prefixes:
exclude, - specifies an exclude pattern.
include, + specifies an include pattern.
merge, . specifies a merge-file to read for more rules.
dir-merge, : specifies a per-directory merge-file.
hide, H specifies a pattern for hiding files from the transfer.
show, S files that match the pattern are not hidden.
protect, P specifies a pattern for protecting files from
deletion.
risk, R files that match the pattern are not protected.
clear, ! clears the current include/exclude list (takes no arg)
When rules are being read from a file, empty lines are ignored, as are
comment lines that start with a #.
Note that the --include/--exclude command-line options do not allow
the full range of rule parsing as described above -- they only allow
the specification of include/exclude patterns plus a ! token to clear
the list (and the normal comment parsing when rules are read from a
file). If a pattern does not begin with - (dash, space) or + (plus,
space), then the rule will be interpreted as if + (for an include
option) or - (for an exclude option) were prefixed to the string. A
--filter option, on the other hand, must always contain either a short
or long rule name at the start of the rule.
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Note also that the --filter, --include, and --exclude options take one
rule/pattern each. To add multiple ones, you can repeat the options on
the command-line, use the merge-file syntax of the --filter option, or
the --include-from/--exclude-from options.
INCLUDE/EXCLUDE PATTERN RULES
You can include and exclude files by specifying patterns using the +,
-, etc. filter rules (as introduced in the FILTER RULES section
above). The include/exclude rules each specify a pattern that is
matched against the names of the files that are going to be
transferred. These patterns can take several forms:
o if the pattern starts with a / then it is anchored to a
particular spot in the hierarchy of files, otherwise it is
matched against the end of the pathname. This is similar to a
leading ^ in regular expressions. Thus /foo would match a name
of foo at either the root of the transfer (for a global rule) or
in the merge-files directory (for a per-directory rule). An
unqualified foo would match a name of foo anywhere in the tree
because the algorithm is applied recursively from the top down;
it behaves as if each path component gets a turn at being the end
of the filename. Even the unanchored sub/foo would match at any
point in the hierarchy where a foo was found within a directory
named sub. See the section on ANCHORING INCLUDE/EXCLUDE PATTERNS
for a full discussion of how to specify a pattern that matches at
the root of the transfer.
o if the pattern ends with a / then it will only match a directory,
not a regular file, symlink, or device.
o rsync chooses between doing a simple string match and wildcard
matching by checking if the pattern contains one of these three
wildcard characters: *, ?, and [ .
o a * matches any path component, but it stops at slashes.
o use ** to match anything, including slashes.
o a ? matches any character except a slash (/).
o a [ introduces a character class, such as [a-z] or [[:alpha:]].
o in a wildcard pattern, a backslash can be used to escape a
wildcard character, but it is matched literally when no wildcards
are present. This means that there is an extra level of
backslash removal when a pattern contains wildcard characters
compared to a pattern that has none. e.g. if you add a wildcard
to foo\bar (which matches the backslash) you would need to use
foo\\bar* to avoid the \b becoming just b.
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o if the pattern contains a / (not counting a trailing /) or a **,
then it is matched against the full pathname, including any
leading directories. If the pattern doesnt contain a / or a **,
then it is matched only against the final component of the
filename. (Remember that the algorithm is applied recursively so
full filename can actually be any portion of a path from the
starting directory on down.)
o a trailing dir_name/*** will match both the directory (as if
dir_name/ had been specified) and everything in the directory (as
if dir_name/** had been specified). This behavior was added in
version 2.6.7.
Note that, when using the --recursive (-r) option (which is implied by
-a), every subcomponent of every path is visited from the top down, so
include/exclude patterns get applied recursively to each subcomponents
full name (e.g. to include /foo/bar/baz the subcomponents /foo and
/foo/bar must not be excluded). The exclude patterns actually
short-circuit the directory traversal stage when rsync finds the files
to send. If a pattern excludes a particular parent directory, it can
render a deeper include pattern ineffectual because rsync did not
descend through that excluded section of the hierarchy. This is
particularly important when using a trailing * rule. For instance,
this wont work:
+ /some/path/this-file-will-not-be-found
+ /file-is-included
- *
This fails because the parent directory some is excluded by the *
rule, so rsync never visits any of the files in the some or some/path
directories. One solution is to ask for all directories in the
hierarchy to be included by using a single rule: + */ (put it
somewhere before the - * rule), and perhaps use the --prune-empty-dirs
option. Another solution is to add specific include rules for all the
parent dirs that need to be visited. For instance, this set of rules
works fine:
+ /some/
+ /some/path/
+ /some/path/this-file-is-found
+ /file-also-included
- *
Here are some examples of exclude/include matching:
o - *.o would exclude all names matching *.o
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o - /foo would exclude a file (or directory) named foo in the
transfer-root directory
o - foo/ would exclude any directory named foo
o - /foo/*/bar would exclude any file named bar which is at two
levels below a directory named foo in the transfer-root directory
o - /foo/**/bar would exclude any file named bar two or more levels
below a directory named foo in the transfer-root directory
o The combination of + */, + *.c, and - * would include all
directories and C source files but nothing else (see also the
--prune-empty-dirs option)
o The combination of + foo/, + foo/bar.c, and - * would include
only the foo directory and foo/bar.c (the foo directory must be
explicitly included or it would be excluded by the *)
The following modifiers are accepted after a + or -:
o A / specifies that the include/exclude rule should be matched
against the absolute pathname of the current item. For example,
-/ /etc/passwd would exclude the passwd file any time the
transfer was sending files from the /etc directory, and -/
subdir/foo would always exclude foo when it is in a dir named
subdir, even if foo is at the root of the current transfer.
o A ! specifies that the include/exclude should take effect if the
pattern fails to match. For instance, -! */ would exclude all
non-directories.
o A C is used to indicate that all the global CVS-exclude rules
should be inserted as excludes in place of the -C. No arg should
follow.
o An s is used to indicate that the rule applies to the sending
side. When a rule affects the sending side, it prevents files
from being transferred. The default is for a rule to affect both
sides unless --delete-excluded was specified, in which case
default rules become sender-side only. See also the hide (H) and
show (S) rules, which are an alternate way to specify
sending-side includes/excludes.
o An r is used to indicate that the rule applies to the receiving
side. When a rule affects the receiving side, it prevents files
from being deleted. See the s modifier for more info. See also
the protect (P) and risk (R) rules, which are an alternate way to
specify receiver-side includes/excludes.
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o A p indicates that a rule is perishable, meaning that it is
ignored in directories that are being deleted. For instance, the
-C options default rules that exclude things like CVS and *.o are
marked as perishable, and will not prevent a directory that was
removed on the source from being deleted on the destination.
MERGE-FILE FILTER RULES
You can merge whole files into your filter rules by specifying either
a merge (.) or a dir-merge (:) filter rule (as introduced in the
FILTER RULES section above).
There are two kinds of merged files -- single-instance (.) and
per-directory (:). A single-instance merge file is read one time, and
its rules are incorporated into the filter list in the place of the .
rule. For per-directory merge files, rsync will scan every directory
that it traverses for the named file, merging its contents when the
file exists into the current list of inherited rules. These
per-directory rule files must be created on the sending side because
it is the sending side that is being scanned for the available files
to transfer. These rule files may also need to be transferred to the
receiving side if you want them to affect what files dont get deleted
(see PER-DIRECTORY RULES AND DELETE below).
Some examples:
merge /etc/rsync/default.rules
dir-merge .per-dir-filter
dir-merge,n- .non-inherited-per-dir-excludes
:n- .non-inherited-per-dir-excludes
The following modifiers are accepted after a merge or dir-merge rule:
o A - specifies that the file should consist of only exclude
patterns, with no other rule-parsing except for in-file comments.
o A + specifies that the file should consist of only include
patterns, with no other rule-parsing except for in-file comments.
o A C is a way to specify that the file should be read in a
CVS-compatible manner. This turns on n, w, and -, but also
allows the list-clearing token (!) to be specified. If no
filename is provided, .cvsignore is assumed.
o A e will exclude the merge-file name from the transfer; e.g.
dir-merge,e .rules is like dir-merge .rules and - .rules.
o An n specifies that the rules are not inherited by
subdirectories.
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o A w specifies that the rules are word-split on whitespace instead
of the normal line-splitting. This also turns off comments.
Note: the space that separates the prefix from the rule is
treated specially, so - foo + bar is parsed as two rules
(assuming that prefix-parsing wasnt also disabled).
o You may also specify any of the modifiers for the + or - rules
(above) in order to have the rules that are read in from the file
default to having that modifier set (except for the ! modifier,
which would not be useful). For instance, merge,-/ .excl would
treat the contents of .excl as absolute-path excludes, while
dir-merge,s .filt and :sC would each make all their per-directory
rules apply only on the sending side. If the merge rule
specifies sides to affect (via the s or r modifier or both), then
the rules in the file must not specify sides (via a modifier or a
rule prefix such as hide).
Per-directory rules are inherited in all subdirectories of the
directory where the merge-file was found unless the n modifier was
used. Each subdirectorys rules are prefixed to the inherited
per-directory rules from its parents, which gives the newest rules a
higher priority than the inherited rules. The entire set of dir-merge
rules are grouped together in the spot where the merge-file was
specified, so it is possible to override dir-merge rules via a rule
that got specified earlier in the list of global rules. When the
list-clearing rule (!) is read from a per-directory file, it only
clears the inherited rules for the current merge file.
Another way to prevent a single rule from a dir-merge file from being
inherited is to anchor it with a leading slash. Anchored rules in a
per-directory merge-file are relative to the merge-files directory, so
a pattern /foo would only match the file foo in the directory where
the dir-merge filter file was found.
Heres an example filter file which youd specify via --filter=. file:
merge /home/user/.global-filter
- *.gz
dir-merge .rules
+ *.[ch]
- *.o
This will merge the contents of the /home/user/.global-filter file at
the start of the list and also turns the .rules filename into a
per-directory filter file. All rules read in prior to the start of
the directory scan follow the global anchoring rules (i.e. a leading
slash matches at the root of the transfer).
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If a per-directory merge-file is specified with a path that is a
parent directory of the first transfer directory, rsync will scan all
the parent dirs from that starting point to the transfer directory for
the indicated per-directory file. For instance, here is a common
filter (see -F):
--filter=': /.rsync-filter'
That rule tells rsync to scan for the file .rsync-filter in all
directories from the root down through the parent directory of the
transfer prior to the start of the normal directory scan of the file
in the directories that are sent as a part of the transfer. (Note:
for an rsync daemon, the root is always the same as the modules path.)
Some examples of this pre-scanning for per-directory files:
rsync -avF /src/path/ /dest/dir
rsync -av --filter=': ../../.rsync-filter' /src/path/ /dest/dir
rsync -av --filter=': .rsync-filter' /src/path/ /dest/dir
The first two commands above will look for .rsync-filter in / and /src
before the normal scan begins looking for the file in /src/path and
its subdirectories. The last command avoids the parent-dir scan and
only looks for the .rsync-filter files in each directory that is a
part of the transfer.
If you want to include the contents of a .cvsignore in your patterns,
you should use the rule :C, which creates a dir-merge of the
.cvsignore file, but parsed in a CVS-compatible manner. You can use
this to affect where the --cvs-exclude (-C) options inclusion of the
per-directory .cvsignore file gets placed into your rules by putting
the :C wherever you like in your filter rules. Without this, rsync
would add the dir-merge rule for the .cvsignore file at the end of all
your other rules (giving it a lower priority than your command-line
rules). For example:
cat <<EOT | rsync -avC --filter='. -' a/ b
+ foo.o
:C
- *.old
EOT
rsync -avC --include=foo.o -f :C --exclude='*.old' a/ b
Both of the above rsync commands are identical. Each one will merge
all the per-directory .cvsignore rules in the middle of the list
rather than at the end. This allows their dir-specific rules to
supersede the rules that follow the :C instead of being subservient to
all your rules. To affect the other CVS exclude rules (i.e. the
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default list of exclusions, the contents of $HOME/.cvsignore, and the
value of $CVSIGNORE) you should omit the -C command-line option and
instead insert a -C rule into your filter rules; e.g. --filter=-C.
LIST-CLEARING FILTER RULE
You can clear the current include/exclude list by using the ! filter
rule (as introduced in the FILTER RULES section above). The current
list is either the global list of rules (if the rule is encountered
while parsing the filter options) or a set of per-directory rules
(which are inherited in their own sub-list, so a subdirectory can use
this to clear out the parents rules).
ANCHORING INCLUDE/EXCLUDE PATTERNS
As mentioned earlier, global include/exclude patterns are anchored at
the root of the transfer (as opposed to per-directory patterns, which
are anchored at the merge-files directory). If you think of the
transfer as a subtree of names that are being sent from sender to
receiver, the transfer-root is where the tree starts to be duplicated
in the destination directory. This root governs where patterns that
start with a / match.
Because the matching is relative to the transfer-root, changing the
trailing slash on a source path or changing your use of the --relative
option affects the path you need to use in your matching (in addition
to changing how much of the file tree is duplicated on the destination
host). The following examples demonstrate this.
Lets say that we want to match two source files, one with an absolute
path of /home/me/foo/bar, and one with a path of /home/you/bar/baz.
Here is how the various command choices differ for a 2-source
transfer:
Example cmd: rsync -a /home/me /home/you /dest
+/- pattern: /me/foo/bar
+/- pattern: /you/bar/baz
Target file: /dest/me/foo/bar
Target file: /dest/you/bar/baz
Example cmd: rsync -a /home/me/ /home/you/ /dest
+/- pattern: /foo/bar (note missing me)
+/- pattern: /bar/baz (note missing you)
Target file: /dest/foo/bar
Target file: /dest/bar/baz
Example cmd: rsync -a --relative /home/me/ /home/you /dest
+/- pattern: /home/me/foo/bar (note full path)
+/- pattern: /home/you/bar/baz (ditto)
Target file: /dest/home/me/foo/bar
Target file: /dest/home/you/bar/baz
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Example cmd: cd /home; rsync -a --relative me/foo you/ /dest
+/- pattern: /me/foo/bar (starts at specified path)
+/- pattern: /you/bar/baz (ditto)
Target file: /dest/me/foo/bar
Target file: /dest/you/bar/baz
The easiest way to see what name you should filter is to just look at
the output when using --verbose and put a / in front of the name (use
the --dry-run option if youre not yet ready to copy any files).
PER-DIRECTORY RULES AND DELETE
Without a delete option, per-directory rules are only relevant on the
sending side, so you can feel free to exclude the merge files
themselves without affecting the transfer. To make this easy, the e
modifier adds this exclude for you, as seen in these two equivalent
commands:
rsync -av --filter=': .excl' --exclude=.excl host:src/dir /dest
rsync -av --filter=':e .excl' host:src/dir /dest
However, if you want to do a delete on the receiving side AND you want
some files to be excluded from being deleted, youll need to be sure
that the receiving side knows what files to exclude. The easiest way
is to include the per-directory merge files in the transfer and use
--delete-after, because this ensures that the receiving side gets all
the same exclude rules as the sending side before it tries to delete
anything:
rsync -avF --delete-after host:src/dir /dest
However, if the merge files are not a part of the transfer, youll need
to either specify some global exclude rules (i.e. specified on the
command line), or youll need to maintain your own per-directory merge
files on the receiving side. An example of the first is this (assume
that the remote .rules files exclude themselves):
rsync -av --filter=: .rules --filter=. /my/extra.rules
--delete host:src/dir /dest
In the above example the extra.rules file can affect both sides of the
transfer, but (on the sending side) the rules are subservient to the
rules merged from the .rules files because they were specified after
the per-directory merge rule.
In one final example, the remote side is excluding the .rsync-filter
files from the transfer, but we want to use our own .rsync-filter
files to control what gets deleted on the receiving side. To do this
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we must specifically exclude the per-directory merge files (so that
they dont get deleted) and then put rules into the local files to
control what else should not get deleted. Like one of these commands:
rsync -av --filter=':e /.rsync-filter' --delete \
host:src/dir /dest
rsync -avFF --delete host:src/dir /dest
BATCH MODE
Batch mode can be used to apply the same set of updates to many
identical systems. Suppose one has a tree which is replicated on a
number of hosts. Now suppose some changes have been made to this
source tree and those changes need to be propagated to the other
hosts. In order to do this using batch mode, rsync is run with the
write-batch option to apply the changes made to the source tree to one
of the destination trees. The write-batch option causes the rsync
client to store in a batch file all the information needed to repeat
this operation against other, identical destination trees.
Generating the batch file once saves having to perform the file
status, checksum, and data block generation more than once when
updating multiple destination trees. Multicast transport protocols can
be used to transfer the batch update files in parallel to many hosts
at once, instead of sending the same data to every host individually.
To apply the recorded changes to another destination tree, run rsync
with the read-batch option, specifying the name of the same batch
file, and the destination tree. Rsync updates the destination tree
using the information stored in the batch file.
For your convenience, a script file is also created when the
write-batch option is used: it will be named the same as the batch
file with .sh appended. This script file contains a command-line
suitable for updating a destination tree using the associated batch
file. It can be executed using a Bourne (or Bourne-like) shell,
optionally passing in an alternate destination tree pathname which is
then used instead of the original destination path. This is useful
when the destination tree path on the current host differs from the
one used to create the batch file.
Examples:
$ rsync --write-batch=foo -a host:/source/dir/ /adest/dir/
$ scp foo* remote:
$ ssh remote ./foo.sh /bdest/dir/
$ rsync --write-batch=foo -a /source/dir/ /adest/dir/
$ ssh remote rsync --read-batch=- -a /bdest/dir/ <foo
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In these examples, rsync is used to update /adest/dir/ from
/source/dir/ and the information to repeat this operation is stored in
foo and foo.sh. The host remote is then updated with the batched data
going into the directory /bdest/dir. The differences between the two
examples reveals some of the flexibility you have in how you deal with
batches:
o The first example shows that the initial copy doesnt have to be
local -- you can push or pull data to/from a remote host using
either the remote-shell syntax or rsync daemon syntax, as
desired.
o The first example uses the created foo.sh file to get the right
rsync options when running the read-batch command on the remote
host.
o The second example reads the batch data via standard input so
that the batch file doesnt need to be copied to the remote
machine first. This example avoids the foo.sh script because it
needed to use a modified --read-batch option, but you could edit
the script file if you wished to make use of it (just be sure
that no other option is trying to use standard input, such as the
--exclude-from=- option).
Caveats:
The read-batch option expects the destination tree that it is updating
to be identical to the destination tree that was used to create the
batch update fileset. When a difference between the destination trees
is encountered the update might be discarded with a warning (if the
file appears to be up-to-date already) or the file-update may be
attempted and then, if the file fails to verify, the update discarded
with an error. This means that it should be safe to re-run a
read-batch operation if the command got interrupted. If you wish to
force the batched-update to always be attempted regardless of the
files size and date, use the -I option (when reading the batch). If
an error occurs, the destination tree will probably be in a partially
updated state. In that case, rsync can be used in its regular
(non-batch) mode of operation to fix up the destination tree.
The rsync version used on all destinations must be at least as new as
the one used to generate the batch file. Rsync will die with an error
if the protocol version in the batch file is too new for the
batch-reading rsync to handle. See also the --protocol option for a
way to have the creating rsync generate a batch file that an older
rsync can understand. (Note that batch files changed format in
version 2.6.3, so mixing versions older than that with newer versions
will not work.)
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When reading a batch file, rsync will force the value of certain
options to match the data in the batch file if you didnt set them to
the same as the batch-writing command. Other options can (and should)
be changed. For instance --write-batch changes to --read-batch,
--files-from is dropped, and the --filter/--include/--exclude options
are not needed unless one of the --delete options is specified.
The code that creates the BATCH.sh file transforms any
filter/include/exclude options into a single list that is appended as
a here document to the shell script file. An advanced user can use
this to modify the exclude list if a change in what gets deleted by
--delete is desired. A normal user can ignore this detail and just
use the shell script as an easy way to run the appropriate
--read-batch command for the batched data.
The original batch mode in rsync was based on rsync+, but the latest
version uses a new implementation.
SYMBOLIC LINKS
Three basic behaviors are possible when rsync encounters a symbolic
link in the source directory.
By default, symbolic links are not transferred at all. A message
skipping non-regular file is emitted for any symlinks that exist.
If --links is specified, then symlinks are recreated with the same
target on the destination. Note that --archive implies --links.
If --copy-links is specified, then symlinks are collapsed by copying
their referent, rather than the symlink.
Rsync can also distinguish safe and unsafe symbolic links. An example
where this might be used is a web site mirror that wishes to ensure
that the rsync module that is copied does not include symbolic links
to /etc/passwd in the public section of the site. Using
--copy-unsafe-links will cause any links to be copied as the file they
point to on the destination. Using --safe-links will cause unsafe
links to be omitted altogether. (Note that you must specify --links
for --safe-links to have any effect.)
Symbolic links are considered unsafe if they are absolute symlinks
(start with /), empty, or if they contain enough .. components to
ascend from the directory being copied.
Heres a summary of how the symlink options are interpreted. The list
is in order of precedence, so if your combination of options isnt
mentioned, use the first line that is a complete subset of your
options:
--copy-links
Turn all symlinks into normal files (leaving no symlinks for any
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other options to affect).
--links --copy-unsafe-links
Turn all unsafe symlinks into files and duplicate all safe
symlinks.
--copy-unsafe-links
Turn all unsafe symlinks into files, noisily skip all safe
symlinks.
--links --safe-links
Duplicate safe symlinks and skip unsafe ones.
--links
Duplicate all symlinks.
DIAGNOSTICS
rsync occasionally produces error messages that may seem a little
cryptic. The one that seems to cause the most confusion is protocol
version mismatch -- is your shell clean?.
This message is usually caused by your startup scripts or remote shell
facility producing unwanted garbage on the stream that rsync is using
for its transport. The way to diagnose this problem is to run your
remote shell like this:
ssh remotehost /bin/true > out.dat
then look at out.dat. If everything is working correctly then out.dat
should be a zero length file. If you are getting the above error from
rsync then you will probably find that out.dat contains some text or
data. Look at the contents and try to work out what is producing it.
The most common cause is incorrectly configured shell startup scripts
(such as .cshrc or .profile) that contain output statements for
non-interactive logins.
If you are having trouble debugging filter patterns, then try
specifying the -vv option. At this level of verbosity rsync will show
why each individual file is included or excluded.
EXIT VALUES
0 Success
1 Syntax or usage error
2 Protocol incompatibility
3 Errors selecting input/output files, dirs
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4 Requested action not supported: an attempt was made to manipulate
64-bit files on a platform that cannot support them; or an option
was specified that is supported by the client and not by the
server.
5 Error starting client-server protocol
6 Daemon unable to append to log-file
10 Error in socket I/O
11 Error in file I/O
12 Error in rsync protocol data stream
13 Errors with program diagnostics
14 Error in IPC code
20 Received SIGUSR1 or SIGINT
21 Some error returned by waitpid()
22 Error allocating core memory buffers
23 Partial transfer due to error
24 Partial transfer due to vanished source files
25 The --max-delete limit stopped deletions
30 Timeout in data send/receive
35 Timeout waiting for daemon connection
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
CVSIGNORE
The CVSIGNORE environment variable supplements any ignore
patterns in .cvsignore files. See the --cvs-exclude option for
more details.
RSYNC_ICONV
Specify a default --iconv setting using this environment
variable. (First supported in 3.0.0.)
RSYNC_PROTECT_ARGS
Specify a non-zero numeric value if you want the --protect-args
option to be enabled by default, or a zero value to make sure
that it is disabled by default. (First supported in 3.1.0.)
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RSYNC_RSH
The RSYNC_RSH environment variable allows you to override the
default shell used as the transport for rsync. Command line
options are permitted after the command name, just as in the -e
option.
RSYNC_PROXY
The RSYNC_PROXY environment variable allows you to redirect your
rsync client to use a web proxy when connecting to a rsync
daemon. You should set RSYNC_PROXY to a hostname:port pair.
RSYNC_PASSWORD
Setting RSYNC_PASSWORD to the required password allows you to run
authenticated rsync connections to an rsync daemon without user
intervention. Note that this does not supply a password to a
remote shell transport such as ssh; to learn how to do that,
consult the remote shells documentation.
USER or LOGNAME
The USER or LOGNAME environment variables are used to determine
the default username sent to an rsync daemon. If neither is set,
the username defaults to nobody.
HOME The HOME environment variable is used to find the users default
.cvsignore file.
FILES
/etc/rsyncd.conf or rsyncd.conf
SEE ALSO
rsyncd.conf(5)
BUGS
times are transferred as *nix time_t values
When transferring to FAT filesystems rsync may re-sync unmodified
files. See the comments on the --modify-window option.
file permissions, devices, etc. are transferred as native numerical
values
see also the comments on the --delete option
Please report bugs! See the web site at http://rsync.samba.org/
VERSION
This man page is current for version 3.1.2 of rsync.
INTERNAL OPTIONS
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The options --server and --sender are used internally by rsync, and
should never be typed by a user under normal circumstances. Some
awareness of these options may be needed in certain scenarios, such as
when setting up a login that can only run an rsync command. For
instance, the support directory of the rsync distribution has an
example script named rrsync (for restricted rsync) that can be used
with a restricted ssh login.
CREDITS
rsync is distributed under the GNU General Public License. See the
file COPYING for details.
A WEB site is available at http://rsync.samba.org/. The site includes
an FAQ-O-Matic which may cover questions unanswered by this manual
page.
The primary ftp site for rsync is ftp://rsync.samba.org/pub/rsync.
We would be delighted to hear from you if you like this program.
Please contact the mailing-list at rsync@lists.samba.org.
This program uses the excellent zlib compression library written by
Jean-loup Gailly and Mark Adler.
THANKS
Special thanks go out to: John Van Essen, Matt McCutchen, Wesley W.
Terpstra, David Dykstra, Jos Backus, Sebastian Krahmer, Martin Pool,
and our gone-but-not-forgotten compadre, J.W. Schultz.
Thanks also to Richard Brent, Brendan Mackay, Bill Waite, Stephen
Rothwell and David Bell. Ive probably missed some people, my
apologies if I have.
AUTHOR
rsync was originally written by Andrew Tridgell and Paul Mackerras.
Many people have later contributed to it. It is currently maintained
by Wayne Davison.
Mailing lists for support and development are available at
http://lists.samba.org
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