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📄 rsync.sgml

📁 Rsync 3.0.5 source code
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<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V4.1//EN"><book id="rsync">  <bookinfo>    <title>rsync</title>    <copyright>      <year>1996 -- 2002</year>      <holder>Martin Pool</holder>      <holder>Andrew Tridgell</holder>    </copyright>    <author>      <firstname>Martin</firstname>      <surname>Pool</surname>    </author>  </bookinfo>  <chapter>    <title>Introduction</title>    <para>rsync is a flexible program for efficiently copying files or      directory trees.    <para>rsync has many options to select which files will be copied      and how they are to be transferred.  It may be used as an      alternative to ftp, http, scp or rcp.    <para>The rsync remote-update protocol allows rsync to transfer just      the differences between two sets of files across the network link,      using an efficient checksum-search algorithm described in the      technical report that accompanies this package.</para>    <para>Some of the additional features of rsync are:</para>    <itemizedlist>            <listitem>	<para>support for copying links, devices, owners, groups and	  permissions	</para>      </listitem>            <listitem>	<para>	  exclude and exclude-from options similar to GNU tar	</para>      </listitem>      <listitem>	<para>	  a CVS exclude mode for ignoring the same files that CVS would ignore      </listitem>      <listitem>	<para>	  can use any transparent remote shell, including rsh or ssh      </listitem>      <listitem>	<para>	  does not require root privileges      </listitem>      <listitem>	<para>	  pipelining of file transfers to minimize latency costs      </listitem>		      <listitem>	<para>	  support for anonymous or authenticated rsync servers (ideal for	  mirroring)	</para>      </listitem>    </itemizedlist>  </chapter>  <chapter>    <title>Using rsync</title>    <section>      <title>	Introductory example      </title>            <para>	Probably the most common case of rsync usage is to copy files	to or from a remote machine using	<application>ssh</application> as a network transport.  In	this situation rsync is a good alternative to	<application>scp</application>.      </para>      <para>	The most commonly used arguments for rsync are      </para>      <variablelist>	<varlistentry>	  <term><option>-v</option></term>	  <listitem>	    <para>Be verbose.  Primarily, display the name of each file as it is copied.</para>	  </listitem>	</varlistentry>	<varlistentry>	  <term><option>-a</option></term>	  <listitem>	    <para>	      Reproduce the structure and attributes of the origin files as exactly	      as possible: this includes copying subdirectories, symlinks, special	      files, ownership and permissions.  (@xref{Attributes to	      copy}.)	    </para>	  </listitem>	</varlistentry>      </variablelist>	      <para><option>-v </option>            <para><option>-z</option>	Compress network traffic, using a modified version of the	@command{zlib} library.</para>            <para><option>-P</option>	Display a progress indicator while files are transferred.  This should	normally be ommitted if rsync is not run on a terminal.      </para>    </section>    <section>      <title>Local and remote</title>            <para>There are six different ways of using rsync. They      are:</para>            <!-- one of (CALLOUTLIST GLOSSLIST ITEMIZEDLIST ORDEREDLIST SEGMENTEDLIST SIMPLELIST VARIABLELIST CAUTION IMPORTANT NOTE TIP WARNING LITERALLAYOUT PROGRAMLISTING PROGRAMLISTINGCO SCREEN SCREENCO SCREENSHOT SYNOPSIS CMDSYNOPSIS FUNCSYNOPSIS CLASSSYNOPSIS FIELDSYNOPSIS CONSTRUCTORSYNOPSIS DESTRUCTORSYNOPSIS METHODSYNOPSIS FORMALPARA PARA SIMPARA ADDRESS BLOCKQUOTE GRAPHIC GRAPHICCO MEDIAOBJECT MEDIAOBJECTCO INFORMALEQUATION INFORMALEXAMPLE INFORMALFIGURE INFORMALTABLE EQUATION EXAMPLE FIGURE TABLE MSGSET PROCEDURE SIDEBAR QANDASET ANCHOR BRIDGEHEAD REMARK HIGHLIGHTS ABSTRACT AUTHORBLURB EPIGRAPH INDEXTERM REFENTRY SECTION) -->      <orderedlist>	<listitem>	  <para>	    for copying local files. This is invoked when neither	    source nor destination path contains a @code{:} separator	<listitem>	  <para>	    for copying from the local machine to a remote machine using	    a remote shell program as the transport (such as rsh or	    ssh). This is invoked when the destination path contains a	    single @code{:} separator.	<listitem>	  <para>	    for copying from a remote machine to the local machine	    using a remote shell program. This is invoked when the source	    contains a @code{:} separator.	<listitem>	  <para>	    for copying from a remote rsync server to the local	    machine. This is invoked when the source path contains a @code{::}	    separator or a @code{rsync://} URL.	<listitem>	  <para>	    for copying from the local machine to a remote rsync	    server. This is invoked when the destination path contains a @code{::}	    separator.	<listitem>	  <para>	    for listing files on a remote machine. This is done the	    same way as rsync transfers except that you leave off the	    local destination.  	</listitem>      </orderedlist>	  <para>Note that in all cases (other than listing) at least one of the sourceand destination paths must be local.	  <para>Any one invocation of rsync makes a copy in a single direction.  rsynccurrently has no equivalent of @command{ftp}'s interactive mode.@cindex @sc{nfs}@cindex network filesystems@cindex remote filesystems	  <para>rsync's network protocol is generally faster at copying files thannetwork filesystems such as @sc{nfs} or @sc{cifs}.  It is better torun rsync on the file server either as a daemon or over ssh thanrunning rsync giving the network directory.      </para>    </section>  </chapter>  <chapter>    <title>Frequently asked questions</title>        <!-- one of (CALLOUTLIST GLOSSLIST ITEMIZEDLIST ORDEREDLIST SEGMENTEDLIST SIMPLELIST VARIABLELIST CAUTION IMPORTANT NOTE TIP WARNING LITERALLAYOUT PROGRAMLISTING PROGRAMLISTINGCO SCREEN SCREENCO SCREENSHOT SYNOPSIS CMDSYNOPSIS FUNCSYNOPSIS CLASSSYNOPSIS FIELDSYNOPSIS CONSTRUCTORSYNOPSIS DESTRUCTORSYNOPSIS METHODSYNOPSIS FORMALPARA PARA SIMPARA ADDRESS BLOCKQUOTE GRAPHIC GRAPHICCO MEDIAOBJECT MEDIAOBJECTCO INFORMALEQUATION INFORMALEXAMPLE INFORMALFIGURE INFORMALTABLE EQUATION EXAMPLE FIGURE TABLE MSGSET PROCEDURE SIDEBAR QANDASET ANCHOR BRIDGEHEAD REMARK HIGHLIGHTS ABSTRACT AUTHORBLURB EPIGRAPH INDEXTERM SECTION SIMPLESECT REFENTRY SECT1) -->    <qandaset>      <!-- one of (QANDADIV QANDAENTRY) -->      <qandaentry>	<question>	  <!-- one of (CALLOUTLIST GLOSSLIST ITEMIZEDLIST ORDEREDLIST	  SEGMENTEDLIST SIMPLELIST VARIABLELIST CAUTION IMPORTANT NOTE	  TIP WARNING LITERALLAYOUT PROGRAMLISTING PROGRAMLISTINGCO	  SCREEN SCREENCO SCREENSHOT SYNOPSIS CMDSYNOPSIS FUNCSYNOPSIS	  CLASSSYNOPSIS FIELDSYNOPSIS CONSTRUCTORSYNOPSIS	  DESTRUCTORSYNOPSIS METHODSYNOPSIS FORMALPARA PARA SIMPARA	  ADDRESS BLOCKQUOTE GRAPHIC GRAPHICCO MEDIAOBJECT	  MEDIAOBJECTCO INFORMALEQUATION INFORMALEXAMPLE	  INFORMALFIGURE INFORMALTABLE EQUATION EXAMPLE FIGURE TABLE	  PROCEDURE ANCHOR BRIDGEHEAD REMARK HIGHLIGHTS INDEXTERM) -->	  <para>Are there mailing lists for rsync?	</question>	<answer>	  <para>Yes, and you can subscribe and unsubscribe through a	  web interface at	    <ulink	      url="http://lists.samba.org/">http://lists.samba.org/</ulink>	  </para>	  <para>	    If you are having trouble with the mailing list, please	    send mail to the administrator	    	    <email>rsync-admin@lists.samba.org</email>	    not to the list itself.	  </para>	  <para>	    The mailing list archives are searchable.  Use 	    <ulink url="http://google.com/">Google</ulink> and prepend	    the search with <userinput>site:lists.samba.org	    rsync</userinput>, plus relevant keywords.	  </para>	</answer>      </qandaentry>      <qandaentry>	<question>	  <para>	    Why is rsync so much bigger when I build it with	    <command>gcc</command>?	  </para>	</question>	<answer>	  <para>	    On gcc, rsync builds by default with debug symbols	    included.  If you strip both executables, they should end	    up about the same size.  (Use <command>make	    install-strip</command>.)	  </para>	</answer>      </qandaentry>            <qandaentry>	<question>	  <para>Is rsync useful for a single large file like an ISO image?</para>	</question>	<answer>	  <para>	    Yes, but note the following:	  <para>   Background: A common use of rsync is to update a file (or set of files) in one location from a more   correct or up-to-date copy in another location, taking advantage of portions of the files that are   identical to speed up the process. (Note that rsync will transfer a file in its entirety if no copy   exists at the destination.)	  <para>   (This discussion is written in terms of updating a local copy of a file from a correct file in a   remote location, although rsync can work in either direction.)	  <para>   The file to be updated (the local file) must be in a destination directory that has enough space for   two copies of the file. (In addition, keep an extra copy of the file to be updated in a different   location for safety -- see the discussion (below) about rsync's behavior when the rsync process is   interrupted before completion.)	  <para>   The local file must have the same name as the remote file being sync'd to (I think?). If you are   trying to upgrade an iso from, for example, beta1 to beta2, rename the local file to the same name   as the beta2 file. *(This is a useful thing to do -- only the changed portions will be   transmitted.)*	  <para>   The extra copy of the local file kept in a different location is because of rsync's behavior if   interrupted before completion:	  <para>   * If you specify the --partial option and rsync is interrupted, rsync will save the partially   rsync'd file and throw away the original local copy. (The partially rsync'd file is correct but   truncated.) If rsync is restarted, it will not have a local copy of the file to check for duplicate   blocks beyond the section of the file that has already been rsync'd, thus the remainder of the rsync   process will be a "pure transfer" of the file rather than taking advantage of the rsync algorithm.	  <para>   * If you don't specify the --partial option and rsync is interrupted, rsync will throw away the   partially rsync'd file, and, when rsync is restarted starts the rsync process over from the   beginning.	  <para>   Which of these is most desirable depends on the degree of commonality between the local and remote   copies of the file *and how much progress was made before the interruption*.	  <para>   The ideal approach after an interruption would be to create a new file by taking the original file   and deleting a portion equal in size to the portion already rsync'd and then appending *the   remaining* portion to the portion of the file that has already been rsync'd. (There has been some   discussion about creating an option to do this automatically.)   The --compare-dest option is useful when transferring multiple files, but is of no benefit in   transferring a single file. (AFAIK)   *Other potentially useful information can be found at:   -[3]http://twiki.org/cgi-bin/view/Wikilearn/RsyncingALargeFile   This answer, formatted with "real" bullets, can be found at:   -[4]http://twiki.org/cgi-bin/view/Wikilearn/RsyncingALargeFileFAQ*	  </para>	</answer>      </qandaentry>    </qandaset>  </chapter>  <appendix>    <title>Other Resources</title>        <para><ulink url="http://www.ccp14.ac.uk/ccp14admin/rsync/"></ulink></para>  </appendix></book>

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