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 sitecopy(1)                      sitecopy                       sitecopy(1)
 User Manuals                                                   User Manuals

                                  June 2001



 NAME
      sitecopy - maintain remote copies of web sites

 SYNOPSIS
      sitecopy [options] [operation mode] sitename ...

 DESCRIPTION
      sitecopy is for copying locally stored web sites to remote web
      servers.  A single command will upload files to the server which have
      changed locally, and delete files from the server which have been
      removed locally, to keep the remote site synchronized with the local
      site.  The aim is to remove the hassle of uploading and deleting
      individual files using an FTP client.  sitecopy will also optionally
      try to spot files you move locally, and move them remotely.

      FTP, WebDAV and other HTTP-based authoring servers (for instance,
      AOLserver and Netscape Enterprise) are supported.


 GETTING STARTED
      This section covers how to start maintaining a web site using
      sitecopy.  After introducing the basics, two situations are covered:
      first, where you have already upload the site to the remote server;
      second, where you haven't.  Lastly, normal site maintenance activities
      are explained.


    Introducing the Basics
      If you have not already done so, you need to create an rcfile, which
      will store information about the sites you wish to administer. You
      also need to create a storage directory, which sitecopy uses to record
      the state of the files on each of the remote sites. The rcfile and
      storage directory must both be accessible only by you - sitecopy will
      not run otherwise.  To create the storage directory with the correct
      permissions, use the command
           mkdir -m 700 .sitecopy
      from your home directory. To create the rcfile, use the commands
           touch .sitecopyrc
           chmod 600 .sitecopyrc
      from your home directory. Once this is done, edit the rcfile to enter
      your site details as shown in the CONFIGURATION section.


    Existing Remote Site
      If you have already uploaded the site to the remote server, ensure
      your local files are synchronized with the remote files. Then, run
           sitecopy --catchup sitename
      where sitename is the name of the site you used after the site keyword
      in the rcfile.



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 sitecopy(1)                      sitecopy                       sitecopy(1)
 User Manuals                                                   User Manuals

                                  June 2001



      If you do not have a local copy of the remote site, then you can use
      fetch mode to discover what is on the remote site, and synchronize
      mode to download it. Fetch mode works well for WebDAV servers, and
      might work if you're lucky for FTP servers. Run
           sitecopy --fetch sitename
      to fetch the site - if this succeeds, then run
           sitecopy --synch sitename
      to download a local copy.  Do NOT do this if you already have a local
      copy of your site.


    New Remote Site
      Ensure that the root directory of the site has been created on the
      server by the server administrator. Run
           sitecopy --init sitename
      where sitename is the name of the site you used after the site keyword
      in the rcfile.


    Site Maintenance
      After setting up the site as given in one of the two above sections,
      you can now start editing your local files as normal. When you have
      finished a set of changes, and you want to update the remote copy of
      the site, run:
           sitecopy --update sitename
      and all the changed files will be uploaded to the server. Any files
      you delete locally will be deleted remotely too, unless the nodelete
      option is specified in the rcfile. If you move any files between
      directories, the remote files will be deleted from the server then
      uploaded again unless you specify the checkmoved option in the rcfile.

      At any time, if you wish to see what changes you have made to the
      local site since the last update, you can run
           sitecopy sitename
      which will display the list of differences.


    Synchronization Problems
      In some circumstances, the actual files which make up the remote site
      will be different from what sitecopy thinks is on the remote site.
      This can happen, for instance, if the connection to the server is
      broken during an update. When this situation arises, Fetch Mode should
      be used to fetch the list of files making up the site from the remote
      server.


 INVOCATION
      In normal operation, specify a single operation mode, followed by any
      options you choose, then one or more site names. For instance,



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 sitecopy(1)                      sitecopy                       sitecopy(1)
 User Manuals                                                   User Manuals

                                  June 2001



           sitecopy --update --quiet mainsite anothersite
      will quietly update the sites named 'mainsite' and 'anothersite'.


 OPERATION MODES
      -l, --list
           List Mode - produces a listing of all the differences between the
           local files and the remote copy for the specified sites.

      -ll, --flatlist
           Flat list Mode - like list mode, except the output produced is
           suitable for parsing by an external script or program. An AWK
           script, changes.awk. is provided which produces an HTML page from
           this mode.

      -u, --update
           Update Mode - updates the remote copy of the specified sites.

      -f, --fetch
           Fetch Mode - fetches the list of files from the remote server.
           Note that this mode has only limited support in FTP - the server
           must accept the MDTM command, and use a Unix-style 'ls' for LIST
           implementation.

      -s, --synchronize
           Synchronize Mode - updates the local site from the remote copy.
           WARNING: This mode overwrites local files. Use with care.

      -i, --initialize
           Initialization Mode - initializes the sites specified - making
           sitecopy think there are NO files on the remote server.

      -c, --catchup
           Catchup Mode - makes sitecopy think the local site is exactly the
           same as the remote copy.

      -v, --view
           View Mode - displays all the site definitions from the rcfile.

      -h, --help
           Display help information.

      -V, --version
           Display version information.

 OPTIONS
      -y, --prompting
           Applicable in Update Mode only, will prompt the user for
           confirmation for each update (i.e., creating a directory,



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 sitecopy(1)                      sitecopy                       sitecopy(1)
 User Manuals                                                   User Manuals

                                  June 2001



           uploading a file etc.).

      -r RCFILE, --rcfile=RCFILE
           Specify an alternate run control file location.

      -p PATH, --storepath=PATH
           Specify an alternate location to use for the remote site storage
           directory.

      -q, --quiet
           Quiet output - display the filename only for each update
           performed.

      -qq, --silent
           Very quiet output - display nothing for each update performed.

      -o, --show-progress
           Applicable in Update Mode only, displays the progress (percentage
           complete) of data transfer.

      -k, --keep-going
           Keep going past errors in Update Mode or Synch Mode


      -a, --allsites
           Perform the given operation on all sites - applicable for all
           modes except View Mode, for which it has no effect.

      -d MASK, --debug=KEY[,KEY...]
           Turns on debugging.  A list of comma-separated keywords should be
           given. Each keyword may be one of:
             socket    Socket handling
             files     File handling
             rcfile    rcfile parser
             http      HTTP driver
             httpbody  Display response bodies in HTTP
             ftp       FTP driver
             xml       XML parsing information
             xmlparse  Low-level XML parsing information
             httpauth  HTTP authentication information
             cleartext Display passwords in plain text

           Passwords will be obscured in the debug output unless the
           cleartext keyword is used. An example use of debugging is to
           debug FTP fetch mode:

                sitecopy --debug=ftp,socket --fetch sitename





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 sitecopy(1)                      sitecopy                       sitecopy(1)
 User Manuals                                                   User Manuals

                                  June 2001



 CONCEPTS
      The stored state of a site is the snapshot of the state of the site
      saved into the storage directory (~/.sitecopy/). The storage file is
      used to record this state between invocations. In update mode,
      sitecopy builds up a files list for each site by scanning the local
      directory, reading in the stored state, and comparing the two -
      determining which files have changed, which have moved, and so on.


 CONFIGURATION
      Configuration is performed via the run control file (rcfile).  This
      file contains a set of site definitions.  A unique name is assigned to
      every site definition, which is used on the command line to refer to
      the site.

      Each site definition contains the details of the server the site is
      stored on, how the site may be accessed at that server, where the site
      is held locally and remotely, and any other options for the site.


    Site Definition
      A site definition is made up of a series of lines:

      site sitename
         server server-name
         remote remote-root-directory
         local local-root-directory
       [ port port-number ]
       [ username username ]
       [ password password ]
       [ proxy-server proxy-name
         proxy-port port-number ]
       [ url siteURL ]
       [ protocol { ftp | webdav } ]
       [ ftp nopasv ]
       [ ftp showquit ]
       [ ftp { usecwd | nousecwd } ]
       [ http expect ]
       [ http secure ]
       [ safe ]
       [ state { checksum | timesize } ]
       [ permissions { ignore | exec | all | dir } ]
       [ symlinks { ignore | follow | maintain } ]
       [ nodelete ]
       [ nooverwrite ]
       [ checkmoved [renames] ]
       [ tempupload ]
       [ exclude pattern ]...
       [ ignore pattern ]...



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 sitecopy(1)                      sitecopy                       sitecopy(1)
 User Manuals                                                   User Manuals

                                  June 2001



       [ ascii pattern ]...

      Anything after a hash (#) in a line is ignored as a comment.  Values
      may be quoted and characters may be backslash-escaped.  For example,
      to use the exclude pattern *#, use the following line:
           exclude


    Remote Server Options
      The server key is used to specify the remote server the site is stored
      on.  This may be either a DNS name or IP address. A connection is made
      to the default port for the protocol used, or that given by the port
      key.  sitecopy supports the WebDAV or FTP protocols - the protocol key
      specifies which to use, taking the value of either webdav or ftp
      respectively. By default, FTP will be used.

      The proxy-server and proxy-port keys may be used to specify a proxy
      server to use. Proxy servers are currently only supported for WebDAV.

      If the FTP server does not support passive (PASV) mode, then the key
      ftp nopasv should be used.  To display the message returned by the
      server on closing the connection, use the ftp showquit option.  If the
      server only supports uploading files in the current working directory,
      use the key ftp usecwd (possible symptom: "overwrite permission
      denied"). Note that the remote-directory (keyword remote) must be an
      absolute path (starting with '/'), or usecwd will be ignored.

      If the WebDAV server correctly supports the 100-continue expectation,
      e.g. Apache 1.3.9 and later, the key http expect should be used. Doing
      so can save some bandwidth and time in an update.

      If the WebDAV server supports access via SSL, the key http secure can
      be used.  Doing so will cause the transfers between sitecopy and the
      host to be performed using an secure, encrypted link.  The first time
      SSL is used to access the server, the user will be prompted to verify
      the SSL certificate, if it's not signed by a CA trusted in the
      system's CA root bundle.

      To authenticate the user with the server, the username and password
      keys are used. If it exists, the ~/.netrc will be searched for a
      password if one is not specified. See ftp(1) for the syntax of this
      file.

      Basic and digest authentication are supported for WebDAV. Note that
      basic authentication must not be used unless the connection is known
      to be secure.

      The full URL that is used to access the site can optionally be
      specified in the url key. This is used only in flat list mode, so the



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                                  June 2001



      site URL can be inserted in 'Recent Changes' pages. The URL must not
      have a trailing slash; a valid example is
           url http://www.site.com/mysite

      If the tempupload option is given, new or changed files are upload
      with a ".in." prefix, then moved to the true filename when the upload
      is complete.


    File State
      File state is stored in the storage files (~/.sitecopy/*), and is used
      to discover when a file has been changed.  Two methods are supported,
      and can be selected using the state option, with either parameter:
      timesize (the default), and checksum.

      timesize uses the last-modification date and the size of files to
      detect when they have changed. checksum uses an MD5 checksum to detect
      any changes to the file contents.

      Note that MD5 checksumming involves reading in the entire file, and is
      slower than simply using the last-modification date and size. It may
      be useful for instance if a versioning system is in use which updates
      the last-modification date on a 'checkout', but this doesn't actually
      change the file contents.


    Safe Mode
      Safe Mode is enabled by using the safe key. When enabled, each time a
      file is uploaded to the server, the modification time of the file as
      on the server is recorded. Subsequently, whenever this file has been
      changed locally and is to be uploaded again, the current modification
      time of the file on the server is retrieved, and compared with the
      stored value. If these differ, then the remote copy of the file has
      been altered by a foreign party.  A warning message is issued, and
      your local copy of the file will not be uploaded over it, to prevent
      losing any changes.

      Safe Mode can be used with FTP or WebDAV servers, but if
      Apache/mod_dav is used, mod_dav 0.9.11 or later is required.

      Note Safe mode cannot be used in conjunction with the nooverwrite
      option (see below).


    File Storage Locations
      The remote key specifies the root directory of the remote copy of the
      site.  It may be in the form of an absolute pathname, e.g.
           remote /www/mysite/
      For FTP, the directory may also be specified relative to the login



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 sitecopy(1)                      sitecopy                       sitecopy(1)
 User Manuals                                                   User Manuals

                                  June 2001



      directory, in which case it must be prefixed by "~/", for example:
           remote ~/public_html/

      The local key specifies the directory in which the site is stored
      locally.  This may be given relative to your home directory (as given
      by the environment variable $HOME), again using the "~/" prefix.
           local ~/html/foosite/
           local /home/fred/html/foosite/
      are equivalent, if $HOME is set to "/home/fred".

      For both the local and remote keywords, a trailing slash may be used,
      but is not required.


    File Permissions Handling
      File permissions handling is dictated by the permissions key, which
      may be given one of three values:

      ignore
           to ignore file permissions completely (the default),

      exec to mirror the permissions of executable files only,

      all  to mirror the permissions of all files.

      This can be used, for instance, to ensure the permissions of CGI files
      are set. The option is currently ignored for WebDAV servers. For FTP
      servers, a chmod is performed remotely to set the permissions.

      To handle directory permissions, the key:
         permissions dir
      may be used in addition to a permissions key of either exec, local or
      all. Note that permissions all does not imply permissions dir.


    Symbolic Link Handling
      Symlinks found in the local site can be either ignored, followed, or
      maintained. In 'follow' mode, the files references by the symlinks
      will be uploaded in their place. In 'maintain' mode, the link will be
      created remotely as well, see below for more information. The mode
      used for each site is specified with the symlinks rcfile key, which
      may take the value of ignore, follow or maintain to select the mode as
      appropriate.

      The default mode is follow, i.e. symbolic links found in the local
      site are followed.


    Symbolic link Maintain Mode



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 User Manuals                                                   User Manuals

                                  June 2001



      This mode is currently only supported by the WebDAV driver, and will
      work only with servers which implement WebDAV Advanced Collections,
      which is a work-in-progress. The target of the link on the server is
      literally copied from the target of the symlink. Hint: you can use
      URL's if you like:
           ln -s "http://www.somewhere.org/" somewherehome

      In this way, a "302 Redirect" can be easily set up from the client,
      without having to alter the server configuration.


    Deleting and Moving Remote Files
      The nodelete option may be used to prevent remote files from ever
      being deleted. This may be useful if you keep large amounts of data on
      the remote server which you do not need to store locally as well.

      If your server does not allow you to upload changed files over
      existing files, then you can use the nooverwrite option. When this is
      used, before uploading a changed file, the remote file will be
      deleted.

      If the checkmoved option is used, sitecopy will look for any files
      which have been moved locally. If any are found, when the remote site
      is updated, the files will be moved remotely.

      If the checkmoved renames option is used, sitecopy will look for any
      files which have been moved or renamed locally. This option may only
      be used in conjunction with the state checksum option.

      WARNING

      If you are not using MD5 checksumming (i.e. the state checksum option)
      to determine file state, do NOT use the checkmoved option if you tend
      to hold files in different directories with identical sizes,
      modification times and names and ever move them about. This seems
      unlikely, but don't say you haven't been warned.


    Excluding Files
      Files may be excluded from the files list by use of the exclude key,
      which accepts shell-style globbing patterns. For example, use
           exclude *.bak
           exclude *~
           exclude
      to exclude all files which have a .bak extension, end in a tilde (~)
      character, or which begin and end with a a hash. Don't forget to quote
      or escape the value if it includes a hash!

      To exclude certain files within an particular directory, simply prefix



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 User Manuals                                                   User Manuals

                                  June 2001



      the pattern with the directory name - including a leading slash. For
      instance:
           exclude /docs/*.m4
           exclude /files/*.gz
      which will exclude all files with the .m4 extension in the 'docs'
      subdirectory of the site, and all files with the .gz extension in the
      files subdirectory.

      An entire directory can also be excluded - simply use the directory
      name with no trailing slash. For example
           exclude /foo/bar
           exclude /where/else
      to exclude the 'foo/bar' and 'where/else' subdirectories of the site.

      Exclude patterns are consulted when scanning the local directory, and
      when scanning the remote site during a --fetch.  Any file which
      matches any exclude pattern is not added to the files list.  This
      means that a file which has already been uploaded by sitecopy, and
      subsequently matches an exclude pattern will be deleted from the
      server.


    Ignoring Local Changes to Files
      The ignore option is used to instruct sitecopy to ignore any local
      changes made to a file. If a change is made to the contents of an
      ignored file, this file will not be uploaded by update mode. Ignored
      files will be created, moved and deleted as normal.

      The ignore option is used in the same way as the exclude option.

      Note that synchronize mode will overwrite changes made to ignored
      files.


    FTP Transfer Mode
      To specify the FTP transfer mode for files, use the ascii key. Any
      files which are transferred using ASCII mode have CRLF/LF translation
      performed appropriately. For example, use
           ascii *.pl
      to upload all files with the .pl extension as ASCII text.  This key
      has no effect with WebDAV (currently).


 RETURN VALUES
      Return values are specified for different operation modes. If multiple
      sites are specified on the command line, the return value is in
      respect to the last site given.





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 sitecopy(1)                      sitecopy                       sitecopy(1)
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                                  June 2001



    Update Mode
       -1 ... update never even started - configuration problem
        0 ... update was entirely successful.
        1 ... update went wrong somewhere
        2 ... could not connect or login to server


    List Mode (default mode of operation)
       -1 ... could not form list - configuration problem
        0 ... the remote site does not need updating
        1 ... the remote site needs updating


 EXAMPLE RCFILE CONTENTS
    FTP Server, Simple Usage
      Fred's site is uploaded to the FTP server 'my.server.com' and held in
      the directory 'public_html', which is in the login directory. The site
      is stored locally in the directory /home/fred/html.

      site mysite
        server my.server.com
        url http://www.server.com/fred
        username fred
        password juniper
        local /home/fred/html/
        remote ~/public_html/


    FTP Server, Complex Usage
      Here, Freda's site is uploaded to the FTP server 'ftp.elsewhere.com',
      where it is held in the directory /www/freda/. The local site is
      stored in /home/freda/sites/elsewhere/

      site anothersite
        server ftp.elsewhere.com
        username freda
        password blahblahblah
        local /home/freda/sites/elsewhere/
        remote /www/freda/
        # Freda wants files with a .bak extension or a
        # trailing ~ to be ignored:
        exclude *.bak
        exclude *~


    WebDAV Server, Simple Usage
      This example shows use of a WebDAV server.

      site supersite



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 sitecopy(1)                      sitecopy                       sitecopy(1)
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                                  June 2001



        server dav.wow.com
        protocol webdav
        username pow
        password zap
        local /home/joe/www/super/
        remote /


 FILES
      ~/.sitecopyrc Default run control file location.
      ~/.sitecopy/ Remote site information storage directory
      ~/.netrc Remote server accounts information


 BUGS
      Known problems: Fetch + synch modes are NOT reliable for FTP.  If you
      need reliable operation of fetch or synch modes, you shouldn't be
      using sitecopy.  Try rsync instead.


      Please send bug reports and feature requests to <sitecopy@lyra.org>
      rather than to the author, since the mailing list is archived and can
      be a useful resource for others.


 SEE ALSO
      rsync(1), ftp(1), mirror(1)


 STANDARDS
      [Listed for reference only, no claim of compliance to any of the below
      standards is made.]

      RFC 959 - File Transfer Protocol (FTP)
      RFC 1521 - Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions Part One
      RFC 1945 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.0
      RFC 2396 - Uniform Resource Identifiers: Generic Syntax
      RFC 2518 - HTTP Extensions for Distributed Authoring -- WEBDAV
      RFC 2616 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1
      RFC 2617 - HTTP Authentication
      REC-XML - Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0
      REC-XML-NAMES - Namespaces in XML


 DRAFT STANDARDS
      draft-ietf-ftpext-mlst-05.txt - Extensions to FTP
      draft-ietf-webdav-collections-protocol-03.txt - WebDAV Advanced
      Collections Protocol




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                                  June 2001



 AUTHOR
      Joe Orton and others.
      e-mail: sitecopy@lyra.org
      www: http://www.lyra.org/sitecopy/
















































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