Difference between revisions of "rsync"
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(some reorg; added mikerubel.org link) |
(using rsync in a script -- see ssh) |
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− | == | + | ==About== |
[[rsync]] is a [[Linux]] [[command-line]] application for [[data synchronization|synchronizing]] (i.e. making sure both copies have the latest versions of all files) a directory tree between two machines.{{seedling}} | [[rsync]] is a [[Linux]] [[command-line]] application for [[data synchronization|synchronizing]] (i.e. making sure both copies have the latest versions of all files) a directory tree between two machines.{{seedling}} | ||
==Related Pages== | ==Related Pages== | ||
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* To keep files in sync in both directions, you have to run rsync in both directions as well; there is no single command to synchronize two directory trees. | * To keep files in sync in both directions, you have to run rsync in both directions as well; there is no single command to synchronize two directory trees. | ||
* This probably does not also remove destination files deleted from the source. | * This probably does not also remove destination files deleted from the source. | ||
+ | * To use rsync in an automated script (e.g. for backups), you need to configure [[ssh]] for password-less operation. | ||
==Links== | ==Links== | ||
===How To=== | ===How To=== | ||
* [http://www.mikerubel.org/computers/rsync_snapshots/ ''Easy'' Automated Snapshot-Style Backups with Linux and Rsync] | * [http://www.mikerubel.org/computers/rsync_snapshots/ ''Easy'' Automated Snapshot-Style Backups with Linux and Rsync] | ||
* [http://www.scrounge.org/linux/rsync.html Use rsync to back up a directory tree of files]: a basic how-to | * [http://www.scrounge.org/linux/rsync.html Use rsync to back up a directory tree of files]: a basic how-to |
Revision as of 18:24, 28 May 2013
About
rsync is a Linux command-line application for synchronizing (i.e. making sure both copies have the latest versions of all files) a directory tree between two machines.
Related Pages
user pages
- user:Woozle/rsync: full command, showing actual options we use, including machine names
Examples
Copy a directory structure from relsource on machine to reldest on the local machine:
rsync -Pav user@machine:relsource reldest
- a is for 'archive', which is short for pr which are 'preserve' and 'recursive'
- p ('preserve') preserves timestamps, permissions, etc.
- v is for 'verbose', which means it tells you what it's doing
- P is for 'progress' and 'partial', which allows for resuming an incomplete copy
Notes
- To keep files in sync in both directions, you have to run rsync in both directions as well; there is no single command to synchronize two directory trees.
- This probably does not also remove destination files deleted from the source.
- To use rsync in an automated script (e.g. for backups), you need to configure ssh for password-less operation.