Fixed the use of --xattrs with --only-write-batch.
[rsync/rsync.git] / rsync.yo
CommitLineData
9e3c856a 1mailto(rsync-bugs@samba.org)
db8f3f73 2manpage(rsync)(1)(29 Jun 2008)()()
ddf8c2b0 3manpagename(rsync)(a fast, versatile, remote (and local) file-copying tool)
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4manpagesynopsis()
5
ddf8c2b0 6verb(Local: rsync [OPTION...] SRC... [DEST]
868676dc 7
8f61dfdb 8Access via remote shell:
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9 Pull: rsync [OPTION...] [USER@]HOST:SRC... [DEST]
10 Push: rsync [OPTION...] SRC... [USER@]HOST:DEST
41059f75 11
8f61dfdb 12Access via rsync daemon:
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13 Pull: rsync [OPTION...] [USER@]HOST::SRC... [DEST]
14 rsync [OPTION...] rsync://[USER@]HOST[:PORT]/SRC... [DEST]
15 Push: rsync [OPTION...] SRC... [USER@]HOST::DEST
16 rsync [OPTION...] SRC... rsync://[USER@]HOST[:PORT]/DEST)
41059f75 17
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18Usages with just one SRC arg and no DEST arg will list the source files
19instead of copying.
039faa86 20
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21manpagedescription()
22
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23Rsync is a fast and extraordinarily versatile file copying tool. It can
24copy locally, to/from another host over any remote shell, or to/from a
25remote rsync daemon. It offers a large number of options that control
26every aspect of its behavior and permit very flexible specification of the
27set of files to be copied. It is famous for its delta-transfer algorithm,
28which reduces the amount of data sent over the network by sending only the
29differences between the source files and the existing files in the
30destination. Rsync is widely used for backups and mirroring and as an
31improved copy command for everyday use.
32
33Rsync finds files that need to be transferred using a "quick check"
34algorithm (by default) that looks for files that have changed in size or
35in last-modified time. Any changes in the other preserved attributes (as
36requested by options) are made on the destination file directly when the
37quick check indicates that the file's data does not need to be updated.
1874f7e2 38
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39Some of the additional features of rsync are:
40
b8a6dae0 41itemization(
b9f592fb 42 it() support for copying links, devices, owners, groups, and permissions
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43 it() exclude and exclude-from options similar to GNU tar
44 it() a CVS exclude mode for ignoring the same files that CVS would ignore
43cd760f 45 it() can use any transparent remote shell, including ssh or rsh
d38772e0 46 it() does not require super-user privileges
41059f75 47 it() pipelining of file transfers to minimize latency costs
5a727522 48 it() support for anonymous or authenticated rsync daemons (ideal for
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49 mirroring)
50)
51
52manpagesection(GENERAL)
53
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54Rsync copies files either to or from a remote host, or locally on the
55current host (it does not support copying files between two remote hosts).
56
57There are two different ways for rsync to contact a remote system: using a
58remote-shell program as the transport (such as ssh or rsh) or contacting an
59rsync daemon directly via TCP. The remote-shell transport is used whenever
60the source or destination path contains a single colon (:) separator after
61a host specification. Contacting an rsync daemon directly happens when the
62source or destination path contains a double colon (::) separator after a
ba3542cf 63host specification, OR when an rsync:// URL is specified (see also the
754a080f 64"USING RSYNC-DAEMON FEATURES VIA A REMOTE-SHELL CONNECTION" section for
ba3542cf 65an exception to this latter rule).
15997547 66
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67As a special case, if a single source arg is specified without a
68destination, the files are listed in an output format similar to "ls -l".
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69
70As expected, if neither the source or destination path specify a remote
71host, the copy occurs locally (see also the bf(--list-only) option).
72
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73Rsync refers to the local side as the "client" and the remote side as the
74"server". Don't confuse "server" with an rsync daemon -- a daemon is always a
75server, but a server can be either a daemon or a remote-shell spawned process.
76
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77manpagesection(SETUP)
78
79See the file README for installation instructions.
80
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81Once installed, you can use rsync to any machine that you can access via
82a remote shell (as well as some that you can access using the rsync
43cd760f 83daemon-mode protocol). For remote transfers, a modern rsync uses ssh
1bbf83c0 84for its communications, but it may have been configured to use a
43cd760f 85different remote shell by default, such as rsh or remsh.
41059f75 86
faa82484 87You can also specify any remote shell you like, either by using the bf(-e)
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88command line option, or by setting the RSYNC_RSH environment variable.
89
8e987130 90Note that rsync must be installed on both the source and destination
faa82484 91machines.
8e987130 92
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93manpagesection(USAGE)
94
95You use rsync in the same way you use rcp. You must specify a source
96and a destination, one of which may be remote.
97
4d888108 98Perhaps the best way to explain the syntax is with some examples:
41059f75 99
faa82484 100quote(tt(rsync -t *.c foo:src/))
41059f75 101
8a97fc2e 102This would transfer all files matching the pattern *.c from the
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103current directory to the directory src on the machine foo. If any of
104the files already exist on the remote system then the rsync
105remote-update protocol is used to update the file by sending only the
106differences. See the tech report for details.
107
faa82484 108quote(tt(rsync -avz foo:src/bar /data/tmp))
41059f75 109
8a97fc2e 110This would recursively transfer all files from the directory src/bar on the
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111machine foo into the /data/tmp/bar directory on the local machine. The
112files are transferred in "archive" mode, which ensures that symbolic
b5accaba 113links, devices, attributes, permissions, ownerships, etc. are preserved
14d43f1f 114in the transfer. Additionally, compression will be used to reduce the
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115size of data portions of the transfer.
116
faa82484 117quote(tt(rsync -avz foo:src/bar/ /data/tmp))
41059f75 118
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119A trailing slash on the source changes this behavior to avoid creating an
120additional directory level at the destination. You can think of a trailing
121/ on a source as meaning "copy the contents of this directory" as opposed
122to "copy the directory by name", but in both cases the attributes of the
123containing directory are transferred to the containing directory on the
124destination. In other words, each of the following commands copies the
125files in the same way, including their setting of the attributes of
126/dest/foo:
127
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128quote(
129tt(rsync -av /src/foo /dest)nl()
130tt(rsync -av /src/foo/ /dest/foo)nl()
131)
41059f75 132
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133Note also that host and module references don't require a trailing slash to
134copy the contents of the default directory. For example, both of these
135copy the remote directory's contents into "/dest":
136
137quote(
138tt(rsync -av host: /dest)nl()
139tt(rsync -av host::module /dest)nl()
140)
141
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142You can also use rsync in local-only mode, where both the source and
143destination don't have a ':' in the name. In this case it behaves like
144an improved copy command.
145
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146Finally, you can list all the (listable) modules available from a
147particular rsync daemon by leaving off the module name:
148
faa82484 149quote(tt(rsync somehost.mydomain.com::))
14d43f1f 150
bb9bdba4 151See the following section for more details.
14d43f1f 152
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153manpagesection(ADVANCED USAGE)
154
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155The syntax for requesting multiple files from a remote host is done by
156specifying additional remote-host args in the same style as the first,
157or with the hostname omitted. For instance, all these work:
675ef1aa 158
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159quote(tt(rsync -av host:file1 :file2 host:file{3,4} /dest/)nl()
160tt(rsync -av host::modname/file{1,2} host::modname/file3 /dest/)nl()
161tt(rsync -av host::modname/file1 ::modname/file{3,4}))
675ef1aa 162
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163Older versions of rsync required using quoted spaces in the SRC, like these
164examples:
675ef1aa 165
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166quote(tt(rsync -av host:'dir1/file1 dir2/file2' /dest)nl()
167tt(rsync host::'modname/dir1/file1 modname/dir2/file2' /dest))
675ef1aa 168
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169This word-splitting still works (by default) in the latest rsync, but is
170not as easy to use as the first method.
675ef1aa 171
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172If you need to transfer a filename that contains whitespace, you can either
173specify the bf(--protect-args) (bf(-s)) option, or you'll need to escape
174the whitespace in a way that the remote shell will understand. For
175instance:
675ef1aa 176
f92e15ef 177quote(tt(rsync -av host:'file\ name\ with\ spaces' /dest))
675ef1aa 178
5a727522 179manpagesection(CONNECTING TO AN RSYNC DAEMON)
41059f75 180
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181It is also possible to use rsync without a remote shell as the transport.
182In this case you will directly connect to a remote rsync daemon, typically
183using TCP port 873. (This obviously requires the daemon to be running on
184the remote system, so refer to the STARTING AN RSYNC DAEMON TO ACCEPT
185CONNECTIONS section below for information on that.)
4c3b4b25 186
1bbf83c0 187Using rsync in this way is the same as using it with a remote shell except
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188that:
189
b8a6dae0 190itemization(
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191 it() you either use a double colon :: instead of a single colon to
192 separate the hostname from the path, or you use an rsync:// URL.
2c64b258 193 it() the first word of the "path" is actually a module name.
5a727522 194 it() the remote daemon may print a message of the day when you
14d43f1f 195 connect.
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196 it() if you specify no path name on the remote daemon then the
197 list of accessible paths on the daemon will be shown.
f7632fc6 198 it() if you specify no local destination then a listing of the
5a727522 199 specified files on the remote daemon is provided.
2c64b258 200 it() you must not specify the bf(--rsh) (bf(-e)) option.
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201)
202
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203An example that copies all the files in a remote module named "src":
204
205verb( rsync -av host::src /dest)
206
207Some modules on the remote daemon may require authentication. If so,
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208you will receive a password prompt when you connect. You can avoid the
209password prompt by setting the environment variable RSYNC_PASSWORD to
faa82484 210the password you want to use or using the bf(--password-file) option. This
65575e96 211may be useful when scripting rsync.
4c3d16be 212
3bc67f0c 213WARNING: On some systems environment variables are visible to all
faa82484 214users. On those systems using bf(--password-file) is recommended.
3bc67f0c 215
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216You may establish the connection via a web proxy by setting the
217environment variable RSYNC_PROXY to a hostname:port pair pointing to
218your web proxy. Note that your web proxy's configuration must support
219proxy connections to port 873.
bef49340 220
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221You may also establish a daemon connection using a program as a proxy by
222setting the environment variable RSYNC_CONNECT_PROG to the commands you
223wish to run in place of making a direct socket connection. The string may
224contain the escape "%H" to represent the hostname specified in the rsync
225command (so use "%%" if you need a single "%" in your string). For
226example:
227
228verb( export RSYNC_CONNECT_PROG='ssh proxyhost nc %H 873'
229 rsync -av targethost1::module/src/ /dest/
230 rsync -av rsync:://targethost2/module/src/ /dest/ )
231
84e1a34e 232The command specified above uses ssh to run nc (netcat) on a proxyhost,
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233which forwards all data to port 873 (the rsync daemon) on the targethost
234(%H).
235
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236manpagesection(USING RSYNC-DAEMON FEATURES VIA A REMOTE-SHELL CONNECTION)
237
238It is sometimes useful to use various features of an rsync daemon (such as
239named modules) without actually allowing any new socket connections into a
240system (other than what is already required to allow remote-shell access).
241Rsync supports connecting to a host using a remote shell and then spawning
242a single-use "daemon" server that expects to read its config file in the
243home dir of the remote user. This can be useful if you want to encrypt a
244daemon-style transfer's data, but since the daemon is started up fresh by
245the remote user, you may not be able to use features such as chroot or
246change the uid used by the daemon. (For another way to encrypt a daemon
247transfer, consider using ssh to tunnel a local port to a remote machine and
248configure a normal rsync daemon on that remote host to only allow
249connections from "localhost".)
250
251From the user's perspective, a daemon transfer via a remote-shell
252connection uses nearly the same command-line syntax as a normal
253rsync-daemon transfer, with the only exception being that you must
254explicitly set the remote shell program on the command-line with the
255bf(--rsh=COMMAND) option. (Setting the RSYNC_RSH in the environment
256will not turn on this functionality.) For example:
257
258verb( rsync -av --rsh=ssh host::module /dest)
259
260If you need to specify a different remote-shell user, keep in mind that the
261user@ prefix in front of the host is specifying the rsync-user value (for a
262module that requires user-based authentication). This means that you must
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263give the '-l user' option to ssh when specifying the remote-shell, as in
264this example that uses the short version of the bf(--rsh) option:
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265
266verb( rsync -av -e "ssh -l ssh-user" rsync-user@host::module /dest)
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267
268The "ssh-user" will be used at the ssh level; the "rsync-user" will be
754a080f 269used to log-in to the "module".
bef49340 270
754a080f 271manpagesection(STARTING AN RSYNC DAEMON TO ACCEPT CONNECTIONS)
bef49340 272
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273In order to connect to an rsync daemon, the remote system needs to have a
274daemon already running (or it needs to have configured something like inetd
275to spawn an rsync daemon for incoming connections on a particular port).
276For full information on how to start a daemon that will handling incoming
49f4cfdf 277socket connections, see the bf(rsyncd.conf)(5) man page -- that is the config
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278file for the daemon, and it contains the full details for how to run the
279daemon (including stand-alone and inetd configurations).
bef49340 280
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281If you're using one of the remote-shell transports for the transfer, there is
282no need to manually start an rsync daemon.
bef49340 283
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284manpagesection(EXAMPLES)
285
286Here are some examples of how I use rsync.
287
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288To backup my wife's home directory, which consists of large MS Word
289files and mail folders, I use a cron job that runs
41059f75 290
faa82484 291quote(tt(rsync -Cavz . arvidsjaur:backup))
41059f75 292
f39281ae 293each night over a PPP connection to a duplicate directory on my machine
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294"arvidsjaur".
295
296To synchronize my samba source trees I use the following Makefile
297targets:
298
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299verb( get:
300 rsync -avuzb --exclude '*~' samba:samba/ .
301 put:
302 rsync -Cavuzb . samba:samba/
303 sync: get put)
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304
305this allows me to sync with a CVS directory at the other end of the
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306connection. I then do CVS operations on the remote machine, which saves a
307lot of time as the remote CVS protocol isn't very efficient.
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308
309I mirror a directory between my "old" and "new" ftp sites with the
faa82484 310command:
41059f75 311
faa82484 312tt(rsync -az -e ssh --delete ~ftp/pub/samba nimbus:"~ftp/pub/tridge")
41059f75 313
faa82484 314This is launched from cron every few hours.
41059f75 315
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316manpagesection(OPTIONS SUMMARY)
317
14d43f1f 318Here is a short summary of the options available in rsync. Please refer
faa82484 319to the detailed description below for a complete description. verb(
c95da96a 320 -v, --verbose increase verbosity
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321 --info=FLAGS fine-grained informational verbosity
322 --debug=FLAGS fine-grained debug verbosity
44d98d61 323 -q, --quiet suppress non-error messages
1de02c27 324 --no-motd suppress daemon-mode MOTD (see caveat)
44d98d61 325 -c, --checksum skip based on checksum, not mod-time & size
16edf865 326 -a, --archive archive mode; equals -rlptgoD (no -H,-A,-X)
f40aa6fb 327 --no-OPTION turn off an implied OPTION (e.g. --no-D)
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328 -r, --recursive recurse into directories
329 -R, --relative use relative path names
f40aa6fb 330 --no-implied-dirs don't send implied dirs with --relative
915dd207 331 -b, --backup make backups (see --suffix & --backup-dir)
44d98d61 332 --backup-dir=DIR make backups into hierarchy based in DIR
915dd207 333 --suffix=SUFFIX backup suffix (default ~ w/o --backup-dir)
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334 -u, --update skip files that are newer on the receiver
335 --inplace update destination files in-place
94f20a9f 336 --append append data onto shorter files
84e1a34e 337 --append-verify --append w/old data in file checksum
09ed3099 338 -d, --dirs transfer directories without recursing
eb06fa95 339 -l, --links copy symlinks as symlinks
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340 -L, --copy-links transform symlink into referent file/dir
341 --copy-unsafe-links only "unsafe" symlinks are transformed
342 --safe-links ignore symlinks that point outside the tree
41adbcec 343 --munge-links munge symlinks to make them safer
f2ebbebe 344 -k, --copy-dirlinks transform symlink to dir into referent dir
09ed3099 345 -K, --keep-dirlinks treat symlinked dir on receiver as dir
f2ebbebe 346 -H, --hard-links preserve hard links
c95da96a 347 -p, --perms preserve permissions
2d5279ac 348 -E, --executability preserve executability
dfe1ed5e 349 --chmod=CHMOD affect file and/or directory permissions
1c3344a1 350 -A, --acls preserve ACLs (implies -p)
eb7e7b24 351 -X, --xattrs preserve extended attributes
d38772e0 352 -o, --owner preserve owner (super-user only)
c95da96a 353 -g, --group preserve group
d38772e0 354 --devices preserve device files (super-user only)
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355 --specials preserve special files
356 -D same as --devices --specials
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357 -t, --times preserve modification times
358 -O, --omit-dir-times omit directories from --times
d38772e0 359 --super receiver attempts super-user activities
9439c0cb 360 --fake-super store/recover privileged attrs using xattrs
c95da96a 361 -S, --sparse handle sparse files efficiently
d100e733 362 -n, --dry-run perform a trial run with no changes made
f7a2ac07 363 -W, --whole-file copy files whole (w/o delta-xfer algorithm)
c95da96a 364 -x, --one-file-system don't cross filesystem boundaries
3ed8eb3f 365 -B, --block-size=SIZE force a fixed checksum block-size
44d98d61 366 -e, --rsh=COMMAND specify the remote shell to use
68e169ab 367 --rsync-path=PROGRAM specify the rsync to run on remote machine
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368 --existing skip creating new files on receiver
369 --ignore-existing skip updating files that exist on receiver
47c11975 370 --remove-source-files sender removes synchronized files (non-dir)
ae76a740 371 --del an alias for --delete-during
8517e9c1 372 --delete delete extraneous files from dest dirs
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373 --delete-before receiver deletes before xfer, not during
374 --delete-during receiver deletes during transfer (default)
fd0a130c 375 --delete-delay find deletions during, delete after
ae76a740 376 --delete-after receiver deletes after transfer, not before
8517e9c1 377 --delete-excluded also delete excluded files from dest dirs
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378 --ignore-missing-args ignore missing source args without error
379 --delete-missing-args delete missing source args from destination
b5accaba 380 --ignore-errors delete even if there are I/O errors
866925bf 381 --force force deletion of dirs even if not empty
0b73ca12 382 --max-delete=NUM don't delete more than NUM files
3610c458 383 --max-size=SIZE don't transfer any file larger than SIZE
59dd6786 384 --min-size=SIZE don't transfer any file smaller than SIZE
c95da96a 385 --partial keep partially transferred files
44cad59f 386 --partial-dir=DIR put a partially transferred file into DIR
44d98d61 387 --delay-updates put all updated files into place at end
a272ff8c 388 -m, --prune-empty-dirs prune empty directory chains from file-list
c95da96a 389 --numeric-ids don't map uid/gid values by user/group name
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390 --usermap=STRING custom username mapping
391 --groupmap=STRING custom groupname mapping
392 --chown=USER:GROUP simple username/groupname mapping
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393 --timeout=SECONDS set I/O timeout in seconds
394 --contimeout=SECONDS set daemon connection timeout in seconds
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395 -I, --ignore-times don't skip files that match size and time
396 --size-only skip files that match in size
397 --modify-window=NUM compare mod-times with reduced accuracy
abce74bb 398 -T, --temp-dir=DIR create temporary files in directory DIR
5b483755 399 -y, --fuzzy find similar file for basis if no dest file
915dd207 400 --compare-dest=DIR also compare received files relative to DIR
2f03ce67 401 --copy-dest=DIR ... and include copies of unchanged files
b127c1dc 402 --link-dest=DIR hardlink to files in DIR when unchanged
32a5edf4 403 -z, --compress compress file data during the transfer
bad01106 404 --compress-level=NUM explicitly set compression level
2b967218 405 --skip-compress=LIST skip compressing files with suffix in LIST
44d98d61 406 -C, --cvs-exclude auto-ignore files in the same way CVS does
16e5de84 407 -f, --filter=RULE add a file-filtering RULE
8a6f3fea 408 -F same as --filter='dir-merge /.rsync-filter'
16e5de84 409 repeated: --filter='- .rsync-filter'
2acf81eb 410 --exclude=PATTERN exclude files matching PATTERN
44d98d61 411 --exclude-from=FILE read exclude patterns from FILE
2acf81eb 412 --include=PATTERN don't exclude files matching PATTERN
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413 --include-from=FILE read include patterns from FILE
414 --files-from=FILE read list of source-file names from FILE
fa92818a 415 -0, --from0 all *from/filter files are delimited by 0s
82f37486 416 -s, --protect-args no space-splitting; wildcard chars only
3ae5367f 417 --address=ADDRESS bind address for outgoing socket to daemon
c259892c 418 --port=PORT specify double-colon alternate port number
04f48837 419 --sockopts=OPTIONS specify custom TCP options
b5accaba 420 --blocking-io use blocking I/O for the remote shell
44d98d61 421 --stats give some file-transfer stats
a6a27602 422 -8, --8-bit-output leave high-bit chars unescaped in output
955c3145 423 -h, --human-readable output numbers in a human-readable format
eb86d661 424 --progress show progress during transfer
44d98d61 425 -P same as --partial --progress
b78296cb 426 -i, --itemize-changes output a change-summary for all updates
7a2eca41 427 -M, --remote-option=OPTION send OPTION to the remote side only
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428 --out-format=FORMAT output updates using the specified FORMAT
429 --log-file=FILE log what we're doing to the specified FILE
430 --log-file-format=FMT log updates using the specified FMT
09a54c39 431 --password-file=FILE read daemon-access password from FILE
09ed3099 432 --list-only list the files instead of copying them
44d98d61 433 --bwlimit=KBPS limit I/O bandwidth; KBytes per second
faa82484 434 --write-batch=FILE write a batched update to FILE
326bb56e 435 --only-write-batch=FILE like --write-batch but w/o updating dest
44d98d61 436 --read-batch=FILE read a batched update from FILE
0b941479 437 --protocol=NUM force an older protocol version to be used
84e1a34e 438 --iconv=CONVERT_SPEC request charset conversion of filenames
44d98d61 439 --checksum-seed=NUM set block/file checksum seed (advanced)
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440 -4, --ipv4 prefer IPv4
441 -6, --ipv6 prefer IPv6
81c453b1 442 --version print version number
b8a6dae0 443(-h) --help show this help (see below for -h comment))
6902ed17 444
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445Rsync can also be run as a daemon, in which case the following options are
446accepted: verb(
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447 --daemon run as an rsync daemon
448 --address=ADDRESS bind to the specified address
44d98d61 449 --bwlimit=KBPS limit I/O bandwidth; KBytes per second
bdf278f7 450 --config=FILE specify alternate rsyncd.conf file
2206abf8 451 -M, --dparam=OVERRIDE override global daemon config parameter
bdf278f7 452 --no-detach do not detach from the parent
c259892c 453 --port=PORT listen on alternate port number
a2ed5801 454 --log-file=FILE override the "log file" setting
4b90820d 455 --log-file-format=FMT override the "log format" setting
04f48837 456 --sockopts=OPTIONS specify custom TCP options
24b0922b 457 -v, --verbose increase verbosity
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458 -4, --ipv4 prefer IPv4
459 -6, --ipv6 prefer IPv6
b8a6dae0 460 -h, --help show this help (if used after --daemon))
c95da96a 461
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462manpageoptions()
463
464rsync uses the GNU long options package. Many of the command line
465options have two variants, one short and one long. These are shown
14d43f1f 466below, separated by commas. Some options only have a long variant.
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467The '=' for options that take a parameter is optional; whitespace
468can be used instead.
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469
470startdit()
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471dit(bf(--help)) Print a short help page describing the options
472available in rsync and exit. For backward-compatibility with older
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473versions of rsync, the help will also be output if you use the bf(-h)
474option without any other args.
41059f75 475
bdf278f7 476dit(bf(--version)) print the rsync version number and exit.
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477
478dit(bf(-v, --verbose)) This option increases the amount of information you
14d43f1f 479are given during the transfer. By default, rsync works silently. A
faa82484 480single bf(-v) will give you information about what files are being
951e826b 481transferred and a brief summary at the end. Two bf(-v) options will give you
41059f75 482information on what files are being skipped and slightly more
951e826b 483information at the end. More than two bf(-v) options should only be used if
14d43f1f 484you are debugging rsync.
41059f75 485
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486In a modern rsync, the bf(-v) option is equivalent to the setting of groups
487of bf(--info) and bf(--debug) options. You can choose to use these newer
488options in addition to, or in place of using bf(--verbose), as any
489fine-grained settings override the implied settings of bf(-v). Both
490bf(--info) and bf(--debug) have a way to ask for help that tells you
491exactly what flags are set for each increase in verbosity.
492
493dit(bf(--info=FLAGS))
494This option lets you have fine-grained control over the
495information
496output you want to see. An individual flag name may be followed by a level
497number, with 0 meaning to silence that output, 1 being the default output
498level, and higher numbers increasing the output of that flag (for those
499that support higher levels). Use
500bf(--info=help)
501to see all the available flag names, what they output, and what flag names
502are added for each increase in the verbose level. Some examples:
503
504verb( rsync -a --info=progress2 src/ dest/
505 rsync -avv --info=stats2,misc1,flist0 src/ dest/ )
506
507Note that bf(--info=name)'s output is affected by the bf(--out-format) and
508bf(--itemize-changes) (bf(-i)) options. See those options for more
509information on what is output and when.
510
511This option was added to 3.1.0, so an older rsync on the server side might
512reject your attempts at fine-grained control (if one or more flags needed
513to be send to the server and the server was too old to understand them).
514
515dit(bf(--debug=FLAGS))
516This option lets you have fine-grained control over the
517debug
518output you want to see. An individual flag name may be followed by a level
519number, with 0 meaning to silence that output, 1 being the default output
520level, and higher numbers increasing the output of that flag (for those
521that support higher levels). Use
522bf(--debug=help)
523to see all the available flag names, what they output, and what flag names
524are added for each increase in the verbose level. Some examples:
525
526verb( rsync -avvv --debug=none src/ dest/
527 rsync -avA --del --debug=del2,acl src/ dest/ )
528
529This option was added to 3.1.0, so an older rsync on the server side might
530reject your attempts at fine-grained control (if one or more flags needed
531to be send to the server and the server was too old to understand them).
4f90eb43 532
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533dit(bf(-q, --quiet)) This option decreases the amount of information you
534are given during the transfer, notably suppressing information messages
951e826b 535from the remote server. This option name is useful when invoking rsync from
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536cron.
537
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538dit(bf(--no-motd)) This option affects the information that is output
539by the client at the start of a daemon transfer. This suppresses the
540message-of-the-day (MOTD) text, but it also affects the list of modules
541that the daemon sends in response to the "rsync host::" request (due to
542a limitation in the rsync protocol), so omit this option if you want to
c5b6e57a 543request the list of modules from the daemon.
1de02c27 544
41059f75 545dit(bf(-I, --ignore-times)) Normally rsync will skip any files that are
1874f7e2 546already the same size and have the same modification timestamp.
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547This option turns off this "quick check" behavior, causing all files to
548be updated.
41059f75 549
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550dit(bf(--size-only)) This modifies rsync's "quick check" algorithm for
551finding files that need to be transferred, changing it from the default of
552transferring files with either a changed size or a changed last-modified
d15f2ff0 553time to just looking for files that have changed in size. This is useful
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554when starting to use rsync after using another mirroring system which may
555not preserve timestamps exactly.
f83f0548 556
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557dit(bf(--modify-window)) When comparing two timestamps, rsync treats the
558timestamps as being equal if they differ by no more than the modify-window
559value. This is normally 0 (for an exact match), but you may find it useful
560to set this to a larger value in some situations. In particular, when
561transferring to or from an MS Windows FAT filesystem (which represents
562times with a 2-second resolution), bf(--modify-window=1) is useful
563(allowing times to differ by up to 1 second).
5b56cc19 564
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565dit(bf(-c, --checksum)) This changes the way rsync checks if the files have
566been changed and are in need of a transfer. Without this option, rsync
567uses a "quick check" that (by default) checks if each file's size and time
568of last modification match between the sender and receiver. This option
e129500c 569changes this to compare a 128-bit checksum for each file that has a
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570matching size. Generating the checksums means that both sides will expend
571a lot of disk I/O reading all the data in the files in the transfer (and
572this is prior to any reading that will be done to transfer changed files),
573so this can slow things down significantly.
574
575The sending side generates its checksums while it is doing the file-system
576scan that builds the list of the available files. The receiver generates
577its checksums when it is scanning for changed files, and will checksum any
578file that has the same size as the corresponding sender's file: files with
579either a changed size or a changed checksum are selected for transfer.
580
581Note that rsync always verifies that each em(transferred) file was
582correctly reconstructed on the receiving side by checking a whole-file
f96bac84 583checksum that is generated as the file is transferred, but that
c64ff141 584automatic after-the-transfer verification has nothing to do with this
2a24b4bd 585option's before-the-transfer "Does this file need to be updated?" check.
41059f75 586
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587For protocol 30 and beyond (first supported in 3.0.0), the checksum used is
588MD5. For older protocols, the checksum used is MD4.
589
faa82484 590dit(bf(-a, --archive)) This is equivalent to bf(-rlptgoD). It is a quick
e7bf3e5e 591way of saying you want recursion and want to preserve almost
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592everything (with -H being a notable omission).
593The only exception to the above equivalence is when bf(--files-from) is
5dd97ab9 594specified, in which case bf(-r) is not implied.
e7bf3e5e 595
faa82484 596Note that bf(-a) bf(does not preserve hardlinks), because
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597finding multiply-linked files is expensive. You must separately
598specify bf(-H).
41059f75 599
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600dit(--no-OPTION) You may turn off one or more implied options by prefixing
601the option name with "no-". Not all options may be prefixed with a "no-":
602only options that are implied by other options (e.g. bf(--no-D),
603bf(--no-perms)) or have different defaults in various circumstances
604(e.g. bf(--no-whole-file), bf(--no-blocking-io), bf(--no-dirs)). You may
605specify either the short or the long option name after the "no-" prefix
606(e.g. bf(--no-R) is the same as bf(--no-relative)).
607
608For example: if you want to use bf(-a) (bf(--archive)) but don't want
609bf(-o) (bf(--owner)), instead of converting bf(-a) into bf(-rlptgD), you
610could specify bf(-a --no-o) (or bf(-a --no-owner)).
611
612The order of the options is important: if you specify bf(--no-r -a), the
613bf(-r) option would end up being turned on, the opposite of bf(-a --no-r).
614Note also that the side-effects of the bf(--files-from) option are NOT
a9af5d8e 615positional, as it affects the default state of several options and slightly
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WD
616changes the meaning of bf(-a) (see the bf(--files-from) option for more
617details).
618
24986abd 619dit(bf(-r, --recursive)) This tells rsync to copy directories
faa82484 620recursively. See also bf(--dirs) (bf(-d)).
41059f75 621
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622Beginning with rsync 3.0.0, the recursive algorithm used is now an
623incremental scan that uses much less memory than before and begins the
624transfer after the scanning of the first few directories have been
625completed. This incremental scan only affects our recursion algorithm, and
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626does not change a non-recursive transfer. It is also only possible when
627both ends of the transfer are at least version 3.0.0.
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628
629Some options require rsync to know the full file list, so these options
1e05b590 630disable the incremental recursion mode. These include: bf(--delete-before),
ba2d43d7 631bf(--delete-after), bf(--prune-empty-dirs), and bf(--delay-updates).
d9f46544 632Because of this, the default delete mode when you specify bf(--delete) is now
1e05b590
WD
633bf(--delete-during) when both ends of the connection are at least 3.0.0
634(use bf(--del) or bf(--delete-during) to request this improved deletion mode
d9f46544
WD
635explicitly). See also the bf(--delete-delay) option that is a better choice
636than using bf(--delete-after).
637
ba2d43d7 638Incremental recursion can be disabled using the bf(--no-inc-recursive)
27999aba 639option or its shorter bf(--no-i-r) alias.
ba2d43d7 640
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AT
641dit(bf(-R, --relative)) Use relative paths. This means that the full path
642names specified on the command line are sent to the server rather than
643just the last parts of the filenames. This is particularly useful when
14d43f1f 644you want to send several different directories at the same time. For
1dc42d12 645example, if you used this command:
41059f75 646
1dc42d12 647quote(tt( rsync -av /foo/bar/baz.c remote:/tmp/))
41059f75 648
58718881 649... this would create a file named baz.c in /tmp/ on the remote
41059f75
AT
650machine. If instead you used
651
1dc42d12 652quote(tt( rsync -avR /foo/bar/baz.c remote:/tmp/))
41059f75 653
58718881 654then a file named /tmp/foo/bar/baz.c would be created on the remote
0758b2db
WD
655machine, preserving its full path. These extra path elements are called
656"implied directories" (i.e. the "foo" and the "foo/bar" directories in the
657above example).
658
659Beginning with rsync 3.0.0, rsync always sends these implied directories as
660real directories in the file list, even if a path element is really a
661symlink on the sending side. This prevents some really unexpected
662behaviors when copying the full path of a file that you didn't realize had
663a symlink in its path. If you want to duplicate a server-side symlink,
664include both the symlink via its path, and referent directory via its real
665path. If you're dealing with an older rsync on the sending side, you may
666need to use the bf(--no-implied-dirs) option.
667
668It is also possible to limit the amount of path information that is sent as
669implied directories for each path you specify. With a modern rsync on the
670sending side (beginning with 2.6.7), you can insert a dot and a slash into
671the source path, like this:
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WD
672
673quote(tt( rsync -avR /foo/./bar/baz.c remote:/tmp/))
674
675That would create /tmp/bar/baz.c on the remote machine. (Note that the
f2ebbebe 676dot must be followed by a slash, so "/foo/." would not be abbreviated.)
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WD
677(2) For older rsync versions, you would need to use a chdir to limit the
678source path. For example, when pushing files:
679
53cf0b8b 680quote(tt( (cd /foo; rsync -avR bar/baz.c remote:/tmp/) ))
1dc42d12 681
53cf0b8b
WD
682(Note that the parens put the two commands into a sub-shell, so that the
683"cd" command doesn't remain in effect for future commands.)
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WD
684If you're pulling files from an older rsync, use this idiom (but only
685for a non-daemon transfer):
9bef934c 686
faa82484 687quote(
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WD
688tt( rsync -avR --rsync-path="cd /foo; rsync" \ )nl()
689tt( remote:bar/baz.c /tmp/)
faa82484 690)
9bef934c 691
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WD
692dit(bf(--no-implied-dirs)) This option affects the default behavior of the
693bf(--relative) option. When it is specified, the attributes of the implied
694directories from the source names are not included in the transfer. This
695means that the corresponding path elements on the destination system are
696left unchanged if they exist, and any missing implied directories are
697created with default attributes. This even allows these implied path
698elements to have big differences, such as being a symlink to a directory on
0758b2db 699the receiving side.
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WD
700
701For instance, if a command-line arg or a files-from entry told rsync to
702transfer the file "path/foo/file", the directories "path" and "path/foo"
703are implied when bf(--relative) is used. If "path/foo" is a symlink to
704"bar" on the destination system, the receiving rsync would ordinarily
705delete "path/foo", recreate it as a directory, and receive the file into
706the new directory. With bf(--no-implied-dirs), the receiving rsync updates
707"path/foo/file" using the existing path elements, which means that the file
708ends up being created in "path/bar". Another way to accomplish this link
709preservation is to use the bf(--keep-dirlinks) option (which will also
710affect symlinks to directories in the rest of the transfer).
711
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WD
712When pulling files from an rsync older than 3.0.0, you may need to use this
713option if the sending side has a symlink in the path you request and you
714wish the implied directories to be transferred as normal directories.
41059f75 715
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WD
716dit(bf(-b, --backup)) With this option, preexisting destination files are
717renamed as each file is transferred or deleted. You can control where the
718backup file goes and what (if any) suffix gets appended using the
faa82484 719bf(--backup-dir) and bf(--suffix) options.
4c72f27d
WD
720
721Note that if you don't specify bf(--backup-dir), (1) the
722bf(--omit-dir-times) option will be implied, and (2) if bf(--delete) is
2d5279ac 723also in effect (without bf(--delete-excluded)), rsync will add a "protect"
4c72f27d 724filter-rule for the backup suffix to the end of all your existing excludes
89cb4721 725(e.g. bf(-f "P *~")). This will prevent previously backed-up files from being
4c72f27d
WD
726deleted. Note that if you are supplying your own filter rules, you may
727need to manually insert your own exclude/protect rule somewhere higher up
728in the list so that it has a high enough priority to be effective (e.g., if
729your rules specify a trailing inclusion/exclusion of '*', the auto-added
730rule would never be reached).
41059f75 731
faa82484 732dit(bf(--backup-dir=DIR)) In combination with the bf(--backup) option, this
ad75d18d
WD
733tells rsync to store all backups in the specified directory on the receiving
734side. This can be used for incremental backups. You can additionally
faa82484 735specify a backup suffix using the bf(--suffix) option
759ac870
DD
736(otherwise the files backed up in the specified directory
737will keep their original filenames).
66203a98 738
b5679335 739dit(bf(--suffix=SUFFIX)) This option allows you to override the default
faa82484
WD
740backup suffix used with the bf(--backup) (bf(-b)) option. The default suffix is a ~
741if no -bf(-backup-dir) was specified, otherwise it is an empty string.
9ef53907 742
4539c0d7
WD
743dit(bf(-u, --update)) This forces rsync to skip any files which exist on
744the destination and have a modified time that is newer than the source
42b06481 745file. (If an existing destination file has a modification time equal to the
4539c0d7 746source file's, it will be updated if the sizes are different.)
41059f75 747
4a4622bb
WD
748Note that this does not affect the copying of symlinks or other special
749files. Also, a difference of file format between the sender and receiver
750is always considered to be important enough for an update, no matter what
751date is on the objects. In other words, if the source has a directory
752where the destination has a file, the transfer would occur regardless of
753the timestamps.
adddd075 754
adc4ebdd
WD
755dit(bf(--inplace)) This option changes how rsync transfers a file when the
756file's data needs to be updated: instead of the default method of creating
757a new copy of the file and moving it into place when it is complete, rsync
758instead writes the updated data directly to the destination file.
759
760This has several effects: (1) in-use binaries cannot be updated (either the
761OS will prevent this from happening, or binaries that attempt to swap-in
762their data will misbehave or crash), (2) the file's data will be in an
763inconsistent state during the transfer, (3) a file's data may be left in an
764inconsistent state after the transfer if the transfer is interrupted or if
765an update fails, (4) a file that does not have write permissions can not be
766updated, and (5) the efficiency of rsync's delta-transfer algorithm may be
767reduced if some data in the destination file is overwritten before it can
768be copied to a position later in the file (one exception to this is if you
769combine this option with bf(--backup), since rsync is smart enough to use
770the backup file as the basis file for the transfer).
771
772WARNING: you should not use this option to update files that are being
773accessed by others, so be careful when choosing to use this for a copy.
a3221d2a 774
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WD
775This option is useful for transfer of large files with block-based changes
776or appended data, and also on systems that are disk bound, not network
777bound.
778
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WD
779The option implies bf(--partial) (since an interrupted transfer does not delete
780the file), but conflicts with bf(--partial-dir) and bf(--delay-updates).
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WD
781Prior to rsync 2.6.4 bf(--inplace) was also incompatible with bf(--compare-dest)
782and bf(--link-dest).
a3221d2a 783
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WD
784dit(bf(--append)) This causes rsync to update a file by appending data onto
785the end of the file, which presumes that the data that already exists on
786the receiving side is identical with the start of the file on the sending
022dec7a
WD
787side. If a file needs to be transferred and its size on the receiver is
788the same or longer than the size on the sender, the file is skipped. This
789does not interfere with the updating of a file's non-content attributes
790(e.g. permissions, ownership, etc.) when the file does not need to be
791transferred, nor does it affect the updating of any non-regular files.
792Implies bf(--inplace),
07bbf870
WD
793but does not conflict with bf(--sparse) (since it is always extending a
794file's length).
795
796dit(bf(--append-verify)) This works just like the bf(--append) option, but
797the existing data on the receiving side is included in the full-file
798checksum verification step, which will cause a file to be resent if the
799final verification step fails (rsync uses a normal, non-appending
800bf(--inplace) transfer for the resend).
801
802Note: prior to rsync 3.0.0, the bf(--append) option worked like
803bf(--append-verify), so if you are interacting with an older rsync (or the
804transfer is using a protocol prior to 30), specifying either append option
805will initiate an bf(--append-verify) transfer.
94f20a9f 806
09ed3099 807dit(bf(-d, --dirs)) Tell the sending side to include any directories that
faa82484 808are encountered. Unlike bf(--recursive), a directory's contents are not copied
57b66a24
WD
809unless the directory name specified is "." or ends with a trailing slash
810(e.g. ".", "dir/.", "dir/", etc.). Without this option or the
faa82484 811bf(--recursive) option, rsync will skip all directories it encounters (and
f40aa6fb 812output a message to that effect for each one). If you specify both
6e6cc163 813bf(--dirs) and bf(--recursive), bf(--recursive) takes precedence.
09ed3099 814
73cb6738
WD
815The bf(--dirs) option is implied by the bf(--files-from) option
816or the bf(--list-only) option (including an implied
32b9011a
WD
817bf(--list-only) usage) if bf(--recursive) wasn't specified (so that
818directories are seen in the listing). Specify bf(--no-dirs) (or bf(--no-d))
73cb6738
WD
819if you want to turn this off.
820
821There is also a backward-compatibility helper option, bf(--old-dirs) (or
822bf(--old-d)) that tells rsync to use a hack of "-r --exclude='/*/*'" to get
823an older rsync to list a single directory without recursing.
32b9011a 824
eb06fa95
MP
825dit(bf(-l, --links)) When symlinks are encountered, recreate the
826symlink on the destination.
41059f75 827
f2ebbebe 828dit(bf(-L, --copy-links)) When symlinks are encountered, the item that
ef855d19
WD
829they point to (the referent) is copied, rather than the symlink. In older
830versions of rsync, this option also had the side-effect of telling the
831receiving side to follow symlinks, such as symlinks to directories. In a
faa82484 832modern rsync such as this one, you'll need to specify bf(--keep-dirlinks) (bf(-K))
ef855d19 833to get this extra behavior. The only exception is when sending files to
faa82484
WD
834an rsync that is too old to understand bf(-K) -- in that case, the bf(-L) option
835will still have the side-effect of bf(-K) on that older receiving rsync.
b5313607 836
eb06fa95 837dit(bf(--copy-unsafe-links)) This tells rsync to copy the referent of
7af4227a 838symbolic links that point outside the copied tree. Absolute symlinks
eb06fa95 839are also treated like ordinary files, and so are any symlinks in the
f2ebbebe
WD
840source path itself when bf(--relative) is used. This option has no
841additional effect if bf(--copy-links) was also specified.
41059f75 842
d310a212 843dit(bf(--safe-links)) This tells rsync to ignore any symbolic links
7af4227a 844which point outside the copied tree. All absolute symlinks are
faa82484
WD
845also ignored. Using this option in conjunction with bf(--relative) may
846give unexpected results.
d310a212 847
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WD
848dit(bf(--munge-links)) This option tells rsync to (1) modify all symlinks on
849the receiving side in a way that makes them unusable but recoverable (see
850below), or (2) to unmunge symlinks on the sending side that had been stored in
851a munged state. This is useful if you don't quite trust the source of the data
852to not try to slip in a symlink to a unexpected place.
853
854The way rsync disables the use of symlinks is to prefix each one with the
855string "/rsyncd-munged/". This prevents the links from being used as long as
856that directory does not exist. When this option is enabled, rsync will refuse
857to run if that path is a directory or a symlink to a directory.
858
859The option only affects the client side of the transfer, so if you need it to
860affect the server, specify it via bf(--remote-option). (Note that in a local
861transfer, the client side is the sender.)
862
863This option has no affect on a daemon, since the daemon configures whether it
864wants munged symlinks via its "munge symlinks" parameter. See also the
865"munge-symlinks" perl script in the support directory of the source code.
866
1a515b49 867dit(bf(-k, --copy-dirlinks)) This option causes the sending side to treat
f2ebbebe
WD
868a symlink to a directory as though it were a real directory. This is
869useful if you don't want symlinks to non-directories to be affected, as
870they would be using bf(--copy-links).
41059f75 871
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WD
872Without this option, if the sending side has replaced a directory with a
873symlink to a directory, the receiving side will delete anything that is in
874the way of the new symlink, including a directory hierarchy (as long as
875bf(--force) or bf(--delete) is in effect).
41059f75 876
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WD
877See also bf(--keep-dirlinks) for an analogous option for the receiving
878side.
41059f75 879
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WD
880dit(bf(-K, --keep-dirlinks)) This option causes the receiving side to treat
881a symlink to a directory as though it were a real directory, but only if it
882matches a real directory from the sender. Without this option, the
883receiver's symlink would be deleted and replaced with a real directory.
09ed3099 884
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885For example, suppose you transfer a directory "foo" that contains a file
886"file", but "foo" is a symlink to directory "bar" on the receiver. Without
887bf(--keep-dirlinks), the receiver deletes symlink "foo", recreates it as a
888directory, and receives the file into the new directory. With
889bf(--keep-dirlinks), the receiver keeps the symlink and "file" ends up in
890"bar".
891
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892One note of caution: if you use bf(--keep-dirlinks), you must trust all
893the symlinks in the copy! If it is possible for an untrusted user to
894create their own symlink to any directory, the user could then (on a
895subsequent copy) replace the symlink with a real directory and affect the
896content of whatever directory the symlink references. For backup copies,
897you are better off using something like a bind mount instead of a symlink
898to modify your receiving hierarchy.
899
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WD
900See also bf(--copy-dirlinks) for an analogous option for the sending side.
901
902dit(bf(-H, --hard-links)) This tells rsync to look for hard-linked files in
903the transfer and link together the corresponding files on the receiving
904side. Without this option, hard-linked files in the transfer are treated
905as though they were separate files.
906
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907When you are updating a non-empty destination, this option only ensures
908that files that are hard-linked together on the source are hard-linked
909together on the destination. It does NOT currently endeavor to break
910already existing hard links on the destination that do not exist between
911the source files. Note, however, that if one or more extra-linked files
912have content changes, they will become unlinked when updated (assuming you
913are not using the bf(--inplace) option).
914
915Note that rsync can only detect hard links between files that are inside
916the transfer set. If rsync updates a file that has extra hard-link
917connections to files outside the transfer, that linkage will be broken. If
918you are tempted to use the bf(--inplace) option to avoid this breakage, be
919very careful that you know how your files are being updated so that you are
920certain that no unintended changes happen due to lingering hard links (and
921see the bf(--inplace) option for more caveats).
41059f75 922
ba2d43d7 923If incremental recursion is active (see bf(--recursive)), rsync may transfer
5f0f2e08 924a missing hard-linked file before it finds that another link for that contents
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WD
925exists elsewhere in the hierarchy. This does not affect the accuracy of
926the transfer, just its efficiency. One way to avoid this is to disable
27999aba 927incremental recursion using the bf(--no-inc-recursive) option.
ba2d43d7 928
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929dit(bf(-p, --perms)) This option causes the receiving rsync to set the
930destination permissions to be the same as the source permissions. (See
931also the bf(--chmod) option for a way to modify what rsync considers to
932be the source permissions.)
8dc74608 933
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WD
934When this option is em(off), permissions are set as follows:
935
b8a6dae0 936quote(itemization(
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WD
937 it() Existing files (including updated files) retain their existing
938 permissions, though the bf(--executability) option might change just
939 the execute permission for the file.
77ed253c 940 it() New files get their "normal" permission bits set to the source
1c3344a1
WD
941 file's permissions masked with the receiving directory's default
942 permissions (either the receiving process's umask, or the permissions
943 specified via the destination directory's default ACL), and
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WD
944 their special permission bits disabled except in the case where a new
945 directory inherits a setgid bit from its parent directory.
2d5279ac 946))
77ed253c 947
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WD
948Thus, when bf(--perms) and bf(--executability) are both disabled,
949rsync's behavior is the same as that of other file-copy utilities,
950such as bf(cp)(1) and bf(tar)(1).
951
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WD
952In summary: to give destination files (both old and new) the source
953permissions, use bf(--perms). To give new files the destination-default
1f77038e 954permissions (while leaving existing files unchanged), make sure that the
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WD
955bf(--perms) option is off and use bf(--chmod=ugo=rwX) (which ensures that
956all non-masked bits get enabled). If you'd care to make this latter
957behavior easier to type, you could define a popt alias for it, such as
58b7b3d6 958putting this line in the file ~/.popt (the following defines the bf(-Z) option,
662127e6 959and includes --no-g to use the default group of the destination dir):
77ed253c 960
58b7b3d6 961quote(tt( rsync alias -Z --no-p --no-g --chmod=ugo=rwX))
77ed253c
WD
962
963You could then use this new option in a command such as this one:
964
58b7b3d6 965quote(tt( rsync -avZ src/ dest/))
77ed253c 966
58b7b3d6
WD
967(Caveat: make sure that bf(-a) does not follow bf(-Z), or it will re-enable
968the two "--no-*" options mentioned above.)
662127e6 969
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WD
970The preservation of the destination's setgid bit on newly-created
971directories when bf(--perms) is off was added in rsync 2.6.7. Older rsync
972versions erroneously preserved the three special permission bits for
973newly-created files when bf(--perms) was off, while overriding the
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WD
974destination's setgid bit setting on a newly-created directory. Default ACL
975observance was added to the ACL patch for rsync 2.6.7, so older (or
976non-ACL-enabled) rsyncs use the umask even if default ACLs are present.
977(Keep in mind that it is the version of the receiving rsync that affects
978these behaviors.)
77ed253c 979
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WD
980dit(bf(-E, --executability)) This option causes rsync to preserve the
981executability (or non-executability) of regular files when bf(--perms) is
982not enabled. A regular file is considered to be executable if at least one
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WD
983'x' is turned on in its permissions. When an existing destination file's
984executability differs from that of the corresponding source file, rsync
985modifies the destination file's permissions as follows:
2d5279ac 986
b8a6dae0 987quote(itemization(
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WD
988 it() To make a file non-executable, rsync turns off all its 'x'
989 permissions.
990 it() To make a file executable, rsync turns on each 'x' permission that
991 has a corresponding 'r' permission enabled.
992))
993
994If bf(--perms) is enabled, this option is ignored.
41059f75 995
1c3344a1 996dit(bf(-A, --acls)) This option causes rsync to update the destination
0f6b4909
WD
997ACLs to be the same as the source ACLs.
998The option also implies bf(--perms).
999
1000The source and destination systems must have compatible ACL entries for this
1001option to work properly. See the bf(--fake-super) option for a way to backup
1002and restore ACLs that are not compatible.
1c3344a1 1003
16edf865 1004dit(bf(-X, --xattrs)) This option causes rsync to update the remote
0f6b4909
WD
1005extended attributes to be the same as the local ones.
1006
1007For systems that support extended-attribute namespaces, a copy being done by a
1008super-user copies all namespaces except system.*. A normal user only copies
1009the user.* namespace. To be able to backup and restore non-user namespaces as
1010a normal user, see the bf(--fake-super) option.
16edf865 1011
9f822556
WD
1012dit(bf(--chmod)) This option tells rsync to apply one or more
1013comma-separated "chmod" strings to the permission of the files in the
1014transfer. The resulting value is treated as though it was the permissions
1015that the sending side supplied for the file, which means that this option
1016can seem to have no effect on existing files if bf(--perms) is not enabled.
1017
1018In addition to the normal parsing rules specified in the bf(chmod)(1)
1019manpage, you can specify an item that should only apply to a directory by
1020prefixing it with a 'D', or specify an item that should only apply to a
1021file by prefixing it with a 'F'. For example:
1022
1023quote(--chmod=Dg+s,ug+w,Fo-w,+X)
1024
1025It is also legal to specify multiple bf(--chmod) options, as each
1026additional option is just appended to the list of changes to make.
1027
1028See the bf(--perms) and bf(--executability) options for how the resulting
1029permission value can be applied to the files in the transfer.
1030
eb06fa95 1031dit(bf(-o, --owner)) This option causes rsync to set the owner of the
8641d287
WD
1032destination file to be the same as the source file, but only if the
1033receiving rsync is being run as the super-user (see also the bf(--super)
9439c0cb 1034and bf(--fake-super) options).
0f6b4909
WD
1035Without this option, the owner of new and/or transferred files are set to
1036the invoking user on the receiving side.
8641d287
WD
1037
1038The preservation of ownership will associate matching names by default, but
1039may fall back to using the ID number in some circumstances (see also the
1040bf(--numeric-ids) option for a full discussion).
41059f75 1041
eb06fa95
MP
1042dit(bf(-g, --group)) This option causes rsync to set the group of the
1043destination file to be the same as the source file. If the receiving
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WD
1044program is not running as the super-user (or if bf(--no-super) was
1045specified), only groups that the invoking user on the receiving side
1046is a member of will be preserved.
1047Without this option, the group is set to the default group of the invoking
1048user on the receiving side.
1049
1050The preservation of group information will associate matching names by
1051default, but may fall back to using the ID number in some circumstances
1052(see also the bf(--numeric-ids) option for a full discussion).
41059f75 1053
4e7d07c8 1054dit(bf(--devices)) This option causes rsync to transfer character and
d38772e0
WD
1055block device files to the remote system to recreate these devices.
1056This option has no effect if the receiving rsync is not run as the
9439c0cb 1057super-user (see also the bf(--super) and bf(--fake-super) options).
41059f75 1058
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WD
1059dit(bf(--specials)) This option causes rsync to transfer special files
1060such as named sockets and fifos.
1061
1062dit(bf(-D)) The bf(-D) option is equivalent to bf(--devices) bf(--specials).
1063
41059f75 1064dit(bf(-t, --times)) This tells rsync to transfer modification times along
baf3e504
DD
1065with the files and update them on the remote system. Note that if this
1066option is not used, the optimization that excludes files that have not been
faa82484
WD
1067modified cannot be effective; in other words, a missing bf(-t) or bf(-a) will
1068cause the next transfer to behave as if it used bf(-I), causing all files to be
adc4ebdd 1069updated (though rsync's delta-transfer algorithm will make the update fairly efficient
faa82484 1070if the files haven't actually changed, you're much better off using bf(-t)).
41059f75 1071
54e66f1d 1072dit(bf(-O, --omit-dir-times)) This tells rsync to omit directories when
faa82484
WD
1073it is preserving modification times (see bf(--times)). If NFS is sharing
1074the directories on the receiving side, it is a good idea to use bf(-O).
fbe5eeb8 1075This option is inferred if you use bf(--backup) without bf(--backup-dir).
54e66f1d 1076
d38772e0
WD
1077dit(bf(--super)) This tells the receiving side to attempt super-user
1078activities even if the receiving rsync wasn't run by the super-user. These
1079activities include: preserving users via the bf(--owner) option, preserving
1080all groups (not just the current user's groups) via the bf(--groups)
1081option, and copying devices via the bf(--devices) option. This is useful
1082for systems that allow such activities without being the super-user, and
1083also for ensuring that you will get errors if the receiving side isn't
1084being running as the super-user. To turn off super-user activities, the
1085super-user can use bf(--no-super).
1086
9439c0cb 1087dit(bf(--fake-super)) When this option is enabled, rsync simulates
0f6b4909
WD
1088super-user activities by saving/restoring the privileged attributes via
1089special extended attributes that are attached to each file (as needed). This
9439c0cb
WD
1090includes the file's owner and group (if it is not the default), the file's
1091device info (device & special files are created as empty text files), and
1092any permission bits that we won't allow to be set on the real file (e.g.
1093the real file gets u-s,g-s,o-t for safety) or that would limit the owner's
809724d7
WD
1094access (since the real super-user can always access/change a file, the
1095files we create can always be accessed/changed by the creating user).
0f6b4909
WD
1096This option also handles ACLs (if bf(--acls) was specified) and non-user
1097extended attributes (if bf(--xattrs) was specified).
1098
84e1a34e 1099This is a good way to backup data without using a super-user, and to store
0f6b4909 1100ACLs from incompatible systems.
9439c0cb
WD
1101
1102The bf(--fake-super) option only affects the side where the option is used.
7a2eca41
WD
1103To affect the remote side of a remote-shell connection, use the
1104bf(--remote-option) (bf(-M)) option:
9439c0cb 1105
7a2eca41 1106quote(tt( rsync -av -M--fake-super /src/ host:/dest/))
9439c0cb 1107
7a2eca41
WD
1108For a local copy, this option affects both the source and the destination.
1109If you wish a local copy to enable this option just for the destination
1110files, specify bf(-M--fake-super). If you wish a local copy to enable
1111this option just for the source files, combine bf(--fake-super) with
1112bf(-M--super).
9439c0cb
WD
1113
1114This option is overridden by both bf(--super) and bf(--no-super).
1115
1116See also the "fake super" setting in the daemon's rsyncd.conf file.
1117
41059f75 1118dit(bf(-S, --sparse)) Try to handle sparse files efficiently so they take
a8cbb57c
WD
1119up less space on the destination. Conflicts with bf(--inplace) because it's
1120not possible to overwrite data in a sparse fashion.
41059f75 1121
d310a212
AT
1122NOTE: Don't use this option when the destination is a Solaris "tmpfs"
1123filesystem. It doesn't seem to handle seeks over null regions
1124correctly and ends up corrupting the files.
1125
d100e733
WD
1126dit(bf(-n, --dry-run)) This makes rsync perform a trial run that doesn't
1127make any changes (and produces mostly the same output as a real run). It
1128is most commonly used in combination with the bf(-v, --verbose) and/or
1129bf(-i, --itemize-changes) options to see what an rsync command is going
1130to do before one actually runs it.
1131
1132The output of bf(--itemize-changes) is supposed to be exactly the same on a
1133dry run and a subsequent real run (barring intentional trickery and system
1134call failures); if it isn't, that's a bug. Other output is the same to the
1135extent practical, but may differ in some areas. Notably, a dry run does not
1136send the actual data for file transfers, so bf(--progress) has no effect,
1137the "bytes sent", "bytes received", "literal data", and "matched data"
1138statistics are too small, and the "speedup" value is equivalent to a run
1139where no file transfers are needed.
f2ebbebe 1140
adc4ebdd 1141dit(bf(-W, --whole-file)) With this option rsync's delta-transfer algorithm
f2ebbebe
WD
1142is not used and the whole file is sent as-is instead. The transfer may be
1143faster if this option is used when the bandwidth between the source and
1144destination machines is higher than the bandwidth to disk (especially when the
1145"disk" is actually a networked filesystem). This is the default when both
1146the source and destination are specified as local paths.
1147
4e5baafe
WD
1148dit(bf(-x, --one-file-system)) This tells rsync to avoid crossing a
1149filesystem boundary when recursing. This does not limit the user's ability
1150to specify items to copy from multiple filesystems, just rsync's recursion
1151through the hierarchy of each directory that the user specified, and also
1152the analogous recursion on the receiving side during deletion. Also keep
1153in mind that rsync treats a "bind" mount to the same device as being on the
77ed253c 1154same filesystem.
4e5baafe
WD
1155
1156If this option is repeated, rsync omits all mount-point directories from
1157the copy. Otherwise, it includes an empty directory at each mount-point it
1158encounters (using the attributes of the mounted directory because those of
1159the underlying mount-point directory are inaccessible).
1160
1161If rsync has been told to collapse symlinks (via bf(--copy-links) or
1162bf(--copy-unsafe-links)), a symlink to a directory on another device is
49140b27
WD
1163treated like a mount-point. Symlinks to non-directories are unaffected
1164by this option.
6d8c6bdb 1165
9639c718 1166dit(bf(--existing, --ignore-non-existing)) This tells rsync to skip
58a06312
WD
1167creating files (including directories) that do not exist
1168yet on the destination. If this option is
9639c718 1169combined with the bf(--ignore-existing) option, no files will be updated
8e3b627d 1170(which can be useful if all you want to do is delete extraneous files).
9639c718 1171
58a06312
WD
1172dit(bf(--ignore-existing)) This tells rsync to skip updating files that
1173already exist on the destination (this does em(not) ignore existing
c5b6e57a 1174directories, or nothing would get done). See also bf(--existing).
1347d512 1175
8e3b627d
WD
1176This option can be useful for those doing backups using the bf(--link-dest)
1177option when they need to continue a backup run that got interrupted. Since
1178a bf(--link-dest) run is copied into a new directory hierarchy (when it is
1179used properly), using bf(--ignore existing) will ensure that the
1180already-handled files don't get tweaked (which avoids a change in
1181permissions on the hard-linked files). This does mean that this option
1182is only looking at the existing files in the destination hierarchy itself.
1183
47c11975 1184dit(bf(--remove-source-files)) This tells rsync to remove from the sending
fb41a3c6
WD
1185side the files (meaning non-directories) that are a part of the transfer
1186and have been successfully duplicated on the receiving side.
96110304 1187
2c0fa6c5 1188dit(bf(--delete)) This tells rsync to delete extraneous files from the
e8b155a3
WD
1189receiving side (ones that aren't on the sending side), but only for the
1190directories that are being synchronized. You must have asked rsync to
1191send the whole directory (e.g. "dir" or "dir/") without using a wildcard
1192for the directory's contents (e.g. "dir/*") since the wildcard is expanded
ae76a740 1193by the shell and rsync thus gets a request to transfer individual files, not
d252e47d 1194the files' parent directory. Files that are excluded from the transfer are
0dfffb88
WD
1195also excluded from being deleted unless you use the bf(--delete-excluded)
1196option or mark the rules as only matching on the sending side (see the
1197include/exclude modifiers in the FILTER RULES section).
41059f75 1198
505ada14 1199Prior to rsync 2.6.7, this option would have no effect unless bf(--recursive)
d9f46544
WD
1200was enabled. Beginning with 2.6.7, deletions will also occur when bf(--dirs)
1201(bf(-d)) is enabled, but only for directories whose contents are being copied.
24986abd 1202
32b9011a
WD
1203This option can be dangerous if used incorrectly! It is a very good idea to
1204first try a run using the bf(--dry-run) option (bf(-n)) to see what files are
1205going to be deleted.
41059f75 1206
e8b155a3 1207If the sending side detects any I/O errors, then the deletion of any
3e578a19
AT
1208files at the destination will be automatically disabled. This is to
1209prevent temporary filesystem failures (such as NFS errors) on the
1210sending side causing a massive deletion of files on the
faa82484 1211destination. You can override this with the bf(--ignore-errors) option.
41059f75 1212
faa82484
WD
1213The bf(--delete) option may be combined with one of the --delete-WHEN options
1214without conflict, as well as bf(--delete-excluded). However, if none of the
d9f46544 1215--delete-WHEN options are specified, rsync will choose the
d252e47d 1216bf(--delete-during) algorithm when talking to rsync 3.0.0 or newer, and
d9f46544
WD
1217the bf(--delete-before) algorithm when talking to an older rsync. See also
1218bf(--delete-delay) and bf(--delete-after).
2c0fa6c5
WD
1219
1220dit(bf(--delete-before)) Request that the file-deletions on the receiving
d9f46544 1221side be done before the transfer starts.
faa82484 1222See bf(--delete) (which is implied) for more details on file-deletion.
2c0fa6c5
WD
1223
1224Deleting before the transfer is helpful if the filesystem is tight for space
aaca3daa 1225and removing extraneous files would help to make the transfer possible.
ae76a740 1226However, it does introduce a delay before the start of the transfer,
faa82484 1227and this delay might cause the transfer to timeout (if bf(--timeout) was
d9f46544
WD
1228specified). It also forces rsync to use the old, non-incremental recursion
1229algorithm that requires rsync to scan all the files in the transfer into
1230memory at once (see bf(--recursive)).
ae76a740 1231
2c0fa6c5 1232dit(bf(--delete-during, --del)) Request that the file-deletions on the
d252e47d
WD
1233receiving side be done incrementally as the transfer happens. The
1234per-directory delete scan is done right before each directory is checked
1235for updates, so it behaves like a more efficient bf(--delete-before),
1236including doing the deletions prior to any per-directory filter files
1237being updated. This option was first added in rsync version 2.6.4.
faa82484 1238See bf(--delete) (which is implied) for more details on file-deletion.
aaca3daa 1239
fd0a130c 1240dit(bf(--delete-delay)) Request that the file-deletions on the receiving
d252e47d
WD
1241side be computed during the transfer (like bf(--delete-during)), and then
1242removed after the transfer completes. This is useful when combined with
1243bf(--delay-updates) and/or bf(--fuzzy), and is more efficient than using
1244bf(--delete-after) (but can behave differently, since bf(--delete-after)
1245computes the deletions in a separate pass after all updates are done).
1246If the number of removed files overflows an internal buffer, a
d9f46544
WD
1247temporary file will be created on the receiving side to hold the names (it
1248is removed while open, so you shouldn't see it during the transfer). If
1249the creation of the temporary file fails, rsync will try to fall back to
1250using bf(--delete-after) (which it cannot do if bf(--recursive) is doing an
1251incremental scan).
d252e47d 1252See bf(--delete) (which is implied) for more details on file-deletion.
fd0a130c 1253
2c0fa6c5 1254dit(bf(--delete-after)) Request that the file-deletions on the receiving
ae76a740
WD
1255side be done after the transfer has completed. This is useful if you
1256are sending new per-directory merge files as a part of the transfer and
1257you want their exclusions to take effect for the delete phase of the
d9f46544
WD
1258current transfer. It also forces rsync to use the old, non-incremental
1259recursion algorithm that requires rsync to scan all the files in the
1260transfer into memory at once (see bf(--recursive)).
faa82484 1261See bf(--delete) (which is implied) for more details on file-deletion.
e8b155a3 1262
866925bf
WD
1263dit(bf(--delete-excluded)) In addition to deleting the files on the
1264receiving side that are not on the sending side, this tells rsync to also
faa82484 1265delete any files on the receiving side that are excluded (see bf(--exclude)).
0dfffb88
WD
1266See the FILTER RULES section for a way to make individual exclusions behave
1267this way on the receiver, and for a way to protect files from
1268bf(--delete-excluded).
faa82484 1269See bf(--delete) (which is implied) for more details on file-deletion.
866925bf 1270
42d8ec61
WD
1271dit(bf(--ignore-missing-args)) When rsync is first processing the explicitly
1272requested source files (e.g. command-line arguments or bf(--files-from)
1273entries), it is normally an error if the file cannot be found. This option
1274suppresses that error, and does not try to transfer the file. This does not
1275affect subsequent vanished-file errors if a file was initially found to be
1276present and later is no longer there.
1277
1278dit(bf(--delete-missing-args)) This option takes the behavior of (the implied)
1279bf(--ignore-missing-args) option a step farther: each missing arg will become
1280a deletion request of the corresponding destination file on the receiving side
1281(should it exist). If the destination file is a non-empty directory, it will
1282only be successfully deleted if --force or --delete are in effect. Other than
1283that, this option is independent of any other type of delete processing.
1284
1285The missing source files are represented by special file-list entries which
1286display as a "*missing" entry in the bf(--list-only) output.
ce66f417 1287
faa82484 1288dit(bf(--ignore-errors)) Tells bf(--delete) to go ahead and delete files
b5accaba 1289even when there are I/O errors.
2c5548d2 1290
b3964d1d
WD
1291dit(bf(--force)) This option tells rsync to delete a non-empty directory
1292when it is to be replaced by a non-directory. This is only relevant if
1293deletions are not active (see bf(--delete) for details).
1294
1295Note for older rsync versions: bf(--force) used to still be required when
1296using bf(--delete-after), and it used to be non-functional unless the
1297bf(--recursive) option was also enabled.
41059f75 1298
e2124620 1299dit(bf(--max-delete=NUM)) This tells rsync not to delete more than NUM
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1300files or directories. If that limit is exceeded, a warning is output
1301and rsync exits with an error code of 25 (new for 3.0.0).
1302
1303Also new for version 3.0.0, you may specify bf(--max-delete=0) to be warned
1304about any extraneous files in the destination without removing any of them.
1305Older clients interpreted this as "unlimited", so if you don't know what
1306version the client is, you can use the less obvious bf(--max-delete=-1) as
1307a backward-compatible way to specify that no deletions be allowed (though
1308older versions didn't warn when the limit was exceeded).
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WD
1309
1310dit(bf(--max-size=SIZE)) This tells rsync to avoid transferring any
1311file that is larger than the specified SIZE. The SIZE value can be
926d86d1 1312suffixed with a string to indicate a size multiplier, and
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1313may be a fractional value (e.g. "bf(--max-size=1.5m)").
1314
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1315The suffixes are as follows: "K" (or "KiB") is a kibibyte (1024),
1316"M" (or "MiB") is a mebibyte (1024*1024), and "G" (or "GiB") is a
1317gibibyte (1024*1024*1024).
1318If you want the multiplier to be 1000 instead of 1024, use "KB",
1319"MB", or "GB". (Note: lower-case is also accepted for all values.)
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1320Finally, if the suffix ends in either "+1" or "-1", the value will
1321be offset by one byte in the indicated direction.
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1322
1323Examples: --max-size=1.5mb-1 is 1499999 bytes, and --max-size=2g+1 is
926d86d1
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13242147483649 bytes.
1325
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WD
1326dit(bf(--min-size=SIZE)) This tells rsync to avoid transferring any
1327file that is smaller than the specified SIZE, which can help in not
1328transferring small, junk files.
1329See the bf(--max-size) option for a description of SIZE.
1330
3ed8eb3f 1331dit(bf(-B, --block-size=BLOCKSIZE)) This forces the block size used in
adc4ebdd 1332rsync's delta-transfer algorithm to a fixed value. It is normally selected based on
3ed8eb3f 1333the size of each file being updated. See the technical report for details.
41059f75 1334
b5679335 1335dit(bf(-e, --rsh=COMMAND)) This option allows you to choose an alternative
41059f75 1336remote shell program to use for communication between the local and
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1337remote copies of rsync. Typically, rsync is configured to use ssh by
1338default, but you may prefer to use rsh on a local network.
41059f75 1339
bef49340 1340If this option is used with bf([user@]host::module/path), then the
5a727522 1341remote shell em(COMMAND) will be used to run an rsync daemon on the
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1342remote host, and all data will be transmitted through that remote
1343shell connection, rather than through a direct socket connection to a
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1344running rsync daemon on the remote host. See the section "USING
1345RSYNC-DAEMON FEATURES VIA A REMOTE-SHELL CONNECTION" above.
bef49340 1346
ea7f8108 1347Command-line arguments are permitted in COMMAND provided that COMMAND is
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1348presented to rsync as a single argument. You must use spaces (not tabs
1349or other whitespace) to separate the command and args from each other,
1350and you can use single- and/or double-quotes to preserve spaces in an
1351argument (but not backslashes). Note that doubling a single-quote
1352inside a single-quoted string gives you a single-quote; likewise for
1353double-quotes (though you need to pay attention to which quotes your
1354shell is parsing and which quotes rsync is parsing). Some examples:
98393ae2 1355
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1356quote(
1357tt( -e 'ssh -p 2234')nl()
1358tt( -e 'ssh -o "ProxyCommand nohup ssh firewall nc -w1 %h %p"')nl()
1359)
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WD
1360
1361(Note that ssh users can alternately customize site-specific connect
1362options in their .ssh/config file.)
1363
41059f75 1364You can also choose the remote shell program using the RSYNC_RSH
faa82484 1365environment variable, which accepts the same range of values as bf(-e).
41059f75 1366
faa82484 1367See also the bf(--blocking-io) option which is affected by this option.
735a816e 1368
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1369dit(bf(--rsync-path=PROGRAM)) Use this to specify what program is to be run
1370on the remote machine to start-up rsync. Often used when rsync is not in
1371the default remote-shell's path (e.g. --rsync-path=/usr/local/bin/rsync).
1372Note that PROGRAM is run with the help of a shell, so it can be any
1373program, script, or command sequence you'd care to run, so long as it does
1374not corrupt the standard-in & standard-out that rsync is using to
1375communicate.
1376
1377One tricky example is to set a different default directory on the remote
1378machine for use with the bf(--relative) option. For instance:
1379
c5b6e57a 1380quote(tt( rsync -avR --rsync-path="cd /a/b && rsync" host:c/d /e/))
41059f75 1381
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WD
1382dit(bf(-M, --remote-option=OPTION)) This option is used for more advanced
1383situations where you want certain effects to be limited to one side of the
1384transfer only. For instance, if you want to pass bf(--log-file=FILE) and
1385bf(--fake-super) to the remote system, specify it like this:
1386
1387quote(tt( rsync -av -M --log-file=foo -M--fake-super src/ dest/))
1388
1389If you want to have an option affect only the local side of a transfer when
1390it normally affects both sides, send its negation to the remote side. Like
1391this:
1392
1393quote(tt( rsync -av -x -M--no-x src/ dest/))
1394
1395Be cautious using this, as it is possible to toggle an option that will cause
1396rsync to have a different idea about what data to expect next over the socket,
1397and that will make it fail in a cryptic fashion.
1398
1399Note that it is best to use a separate bf(--remote-option) for each option you
1400want to pass. This makes your useage compatible with the bf(--protect-args)
1401option. If that option is off, any spaces in your remote options will be split
1402by the remote shell unless you take steps to protect them.
1403
1404When performing a local transfer, the "local" side is the sender and the
1405"remote" side is the receiver.
1406
1407Note some versions of the popt option-parsing library have a bug in them that
1408prevents you from using an adjacent arg with an equal in it next to a short
1409option letter (e.g. tt(-M--log-file=/tmp/foo). If this bug affects your
1410version of popt, you can use the version of popt that is included with rsync.
1411
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1412dit(bf(-C, --cvs-exclude)) This is a useful shorthand for excluding a
1413broad range of files that you often don't want to transfer between
c575f8ce 1414systems. It uses a similar algorithm to CVS to determine if
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1415a file should be ignored.
1416
c575f8ce
WD
1417The exclude list is initialized to exclude the following items (these
1418initial items are marked as perishable -- see the FILTER RULES section):
f177b7cc 1419
faa82484 1420quote(quote(tt(RCS SCCS CVS CVS.adm RCSLOG cvslog.* tags TAGS .make.state
9520ce4b
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1421.nse_depinfo *~ #* .#* ,* _$* *$ *.old *.bak *.BAK *.orig *.rej .del-*
1422*.a *.olb *.o *.obj *.so *.exe *.Z *.elc *.ln core .svn/ .git/ .bzr/)))
f177b7cc 1423
c575f8ce 1424then, files listed in a $HOME/.cvsignore are added to the list and any
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1425files listed in the CVSIGNORE environment variable (all cvsignore names
1426are delimited by whitespace).
1427
f177b7cc 1428Finally, any file is ignored if it is in the same directory as a
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1429.cvsignore file and matches one of the patterns listed therein. Unlike
1430rsync's filter/exclude files, these patterns are split on whitespace.
49f4cfdf 1431See the bf(cvs)(1) manual for more information.
f177b7cc 1432
bafa4875
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1433If you're combining bf(-C) with your own bf(--filter) rules, you should
1434note that these CVS excludes are appended at the end of your own rules,
3753975f 1435regardless of where the bf(-C) was placed on the command-line. This makes them
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WD
1436a lower priority than any rules you specified explicitly. If you want to
1437control where these CVS excludes get inserted into your filter rules, you
1438should omit the bf(-C) as a command-line option and use a combination of
1439bf(--filter=:C) and bf(--filter=-C) (either on your command-line or by
1440putting the ":C" and "-C" rules into a filter file with your other rules).
1441The first option turns on the per-directory scanning for the .cvsignore
1442file. The second option does a one-time import of the CVS excludes
1443mentioned above.
1444
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1445dit(bf(-f, --filter=RULE)) This option allows you to add rules to selectively
1446exclude certain files from the list of files to be transferred. This is
1447most useful in combination with a recursive transfer.
41059f75 1448
faa82484 1449You may use as many bf(--filter) options on the command line as you like
5f0f2e08
WD
1450to build up the list of files to exclude. If the filter contains whitespace,
1451be sure to quote it so that the shell gives the rule to rsync as a single
1452argument. The text below also mentions that you can use an underscore to
1453replace the space that separates a rule from its arg.
41059f75 1454
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WD
1455See the FILTER RULES section for detailed information on this option.
1456
faa82484 1457dit(bf(-F)) The bf(-F) option is a shorthand for adding two bf(--filter) rules to
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1458your command. The first time it is used is a shorthand for this rule:
1459
78be8e0f 1460quote(tt( --filter='dir-merge /.rsync-filter'))
16e5de84
WD
1461
1462This tells rsync to look for per-directory .rsync-filter files that have
1463been sprinkled through the hierarchy and use their rules to filter the
faa82484 1464files in the transfer. If bf(-F) is repeated, it is a shorthand for this
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WD
1465rule:
1466
78be8e0f 1467quote(tt( --filter='exclude .rsync-filter'))
16e5de84
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1468
1469This filters out the .rsync-filter files themselves from the transfer.
1470
1471See the FILTER RULES section for detailed information on how these options
1472work.
1473
1474dit(bf(--exclude=PATTERN)) This option is a simplified form of the
faa82484 1475bf(--filter) option that defaults to an exclude rule and does not allow
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1476the full rule-parsing syntax of normal filter rules.
1477
1478See the FILTER RULES section for detailed information on this option.
41059f75 1479
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WD
1480dit(bf(--exclude-from=FILE)) This option is related to the bf(--exclude)
1481option, but it specifies a FILE that contains exclude patterns (one per line).
1482Blank lines in the file and lines starting with ';' or '#' are ignored.
1483If em(FILE) is bf(-), the list will be read from standard input.
f8a94f0d 1484
16e5de84 1485dit(bf(--include=PATTERN)) This option is a simplified form of the
faa82484 1486bf(--filter) option that defaults to an include rule and does not allow
16e5de84 1487the full rule-parsing syntax of normal filter rules.
43bd68e5 1488
16e5de84 1489See the FILTER RULES section for detailed information on this option.
43bd68e5 1490
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WD
1491dit(bf(--include-from=FILE)) This option is related to the bf(--include)
1492option, but it specifies a FILE that contains include patterns (one per line).
1493Blank lines in the file and lines starting with ';' or '#' are ignored.
1494If em(FILE) is bf(-), the list will be read from standard input.
f8a94f0d 1495
f177b7cc 1496dit(bf(--files-from=FILE)) Using this option allows you to specify the
78be8e0f 1497exact list of files to transfer (as read from the specified FILE or bf(-)
c769702f 1498for standard input). It also tweaks the default behavior of rsync to make
faa82484
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1499transferring just the specified files and directories easier:
1500
b8a6dae0 1501quote(itemization(
faa82484
WD
1502 it() The bf(--relative) (bf(-R)) option is implied, which preserves the path
1503 information that is specified for each item in the file (use
f40aa6fb 1504 bf(--no-relative) or bf(--no-R) if you want to turn that off).
faa82484
WD
1505 it() The bf(--dirs) (bf(-d)) option is implied, which will create directories
1506 specified in the list on the destination rather than noisily skipping
f40aa6fb 1507 them (use bf(--no-dirs) or bf(--no-d) if you want to turn that off).
faa82484
WD
1508 it() The bf(--archive) (bf(-a)) option's behavior does not imply bf(--recursive)
1509 (bf(-r)), so specify it explicitly, if you want it.
f40aa6fb
WD
1510 it() These side-effects change the default state of rsync, so the position
1511 of the bf(--files-from) option on the command-line has no bearing on how
1512 other options are parsed (e.g. bf(-a) works the same before or after
1513 bf(--files-from), as does bf(--no-R) and all other options).
faa82484 1514))
f177b7cc 1515
809724d7 1516The filenames that are read from the FILE are all relative to the
f177b7cc
WD
1517source dir -- any leading slashes are removed and no ".." references are
1518allowed to go higher than the source dir. For example, take this
1519command:
1520
faa82484 1521quote(tt( rsync -a --files-from=/tmp/foo /usr remote:/backup))
f177b7cc
WD
1522
1523If /tmp/foo contains the string "bin" (or even "/bin"), the /usr/bin
51cc96e4
WD
1524directory will be created as /backup/bin on the remote host. If it
1525contains "bin/" (note the trailing slash), the immediate contents of
1526the directory would also be sent (without needing to be explicitly
1527mentioned in the file -- this began in version 2.6.4). In both cases,
1528if the bf(-r) option was enabled, that dir's entire hierarchy would
1529also be transferred (keep in mind that bf(-r) needs to be specified
1530explicitly with bf(--files-from), since it is not implied by bf(-a)).
1531Also note
faa82484 1532that the effect of the (enabled by default) bf(--relative) option is to
f177b7cc
WD
1533duplicate only the path info that is read from the file -- it does not
1534force the duplication of the source-spec path (/usr in this case).
1535
faa82484 1536In addition, the bf(--files-from) file can be read from the remote host
f177b7cc
WD
1537instead of the local host if you specify a "host:" in front of the file
1538(the host must match one end of the transfer). As a short-cut, you can
1539specify just a prefix of ":" to mean "use the remote end of the
1540transfer". For example:
1541
faa82484 1542quote(tt( rsync -a --files-from=:/path/file-list src:/ /tmp/copy))
f177b7cc
WD
1543
1544This would copy all the files specified in the /path/file-list file that
1545was located on the remote "src" host.
1546
fa92818a 1547dit(bf(-0, --from0)) This tells rsync that the rules/filenames it reads from a
f177b7cc 1548file are terminated by a null ('\0') character, not a NL, CR, or CR+LF.
faa82484
WD
1549This affects bf(--exclude-from), bf(--include-from), bf(--files-from), and any
1550merged files specified in a bf(--filter) rule.
1551It does not affect bf(--cvs-exclude) (since all names read from a .cvsignore
f01b6368 1552file are split on whitespace).
41059f75 1553
82f37486
WD
1554If the bf(--iconv) and bf(--protect-args) options are specified and the
1555bf(--files-from) filenames are being sent from one host to another, the
1556filenames will be translated from the sending host's charset to the
1557receiving host's charset.
1558
1559dit(bf(-s, --protect-args)) This option sends all filenames and some options to
1560the remote rsync without allowing the remote shell to interpret them. This
1561means that spaces are not split in names, and any non-wildcard special
1562characters are not translated (such as ~, $, ;, &, etc.). Wildcards are
1563expanded on the remote host by rsync (instead of the shell doing it).
1564
1565If you use this option with bf(--iconv), the args will also be translated
0b52f94d 1566from the local to the remote character-set. The translation happens before
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WD
1567wild-cards are expanded. See also the bf(--files-from) option.
1568
b5679335 1569dit(bf(-T, --temp-dir=DIR)) This option instructs rsync to use DIR as a
a9af5d8e
WD
1570scratch directory when creating temporary copies of the files transferred
1571on the receiving side. The default behavior is to create each temporary
1572file in the same directory as the associated destination file.
41059f75 1573
9ec1ef25
WD
1574This option is most often used when the receiving disk partition does not
1575have enough free space to hold a copy of the largest file in the transfer.
d770837e 1576In this case (i.e. when the scratch directory is on a different disk
9ec1ef25
WD
1577partition), rsync will not be able to rename each received temporary file
1578over the top of the associated destination file, but instead must copy it
1579into place. Rsync does this by copying the file over the top of the
1580destination file, which means that the destination file will contain
a9af5d8e
WD
1581truncated data during this copy. If this were not done this way (even if
1582the destination file were first removed, the data locally copied to a
1583temporary file in the destination directory, and then renamed into place)
1584it would be possible for the old file to continue taking up disk space (if
1585someone had it open), and thus there might not be enough room to fit the
1586new version on the disk at the same time.
9ec1ef25
WD
1587
1588If you are using this option for reasons other than a shortage of disk
1589space, you may wish to combine it with the bf(--delay-updates) option,
a0d9819f
WD
1590which will ensure that all copied files get put into subdirectories in the
1591destination hierarchy, awaiting the end of the transfer. If you don't
1592have enough room to duplicate all the arriving files on the destination
1593partition, another way to tell rsync that you aren't overly concerned
1594about disk space is to use the bf(--partial-dir) option with a relative
1595path; because this tells rsync that it is OK to stash off a copy of a
1596single file in a subdir in the destination hierarchy, rsync will use the
1597partial-dir as a staging area to bring over the copied file, and then
1598rename it into place from there. (Specifying a bf(--partial-dir) with
1599an absolute path does not have this side-effect.)
9ec1ef25 1600
5b483755
WD
1601dit(bf(-y, --fuzzy)) This option tells rsync that it should look for a
1602basis file for any destination file that is missing. The current algorithm
1603looks in the same directory as the destination file for either a file that
1604has an identical size and modified-time, or a similarly-named file. If
1605found, rsync uses the fuzzy basis file to try to speed up the transfer.
1606
1607Note that the use of the bf(--delete) option might get rid of any potential
1608fuzzy-match files, so either use bf(--delete-after) or specify some
1609filename exclusions if you need to prevent this.
1610
b127c1dc 1611dit(bf(--compare-dest=DIR)) This option instructs rsync to use em(DIR) on
e49f61f5
WD
1612the destination machine as an additional hierarchy to compare destination
1613files against doing transfers (if the files are missing in the destination
1614directory). If a file is found in em(DIR) that is identical to the
1615sender's file, the file will NOT be transferred to the destination
1616directory. This is useful for creating a sparse backup of just files that
1617have changed from an earlier backup.
1618
faa82484 1619Beginning in version 2.6.4, multiple bf(--compare-dest) directories may be
99eb41b2
WD
1620provided, which will cause rsync to search the list in the order specified
1621for an exact match.
2f03ce67
WD
1622If a match is found that differs only in attributes, a local copy is made
1623and the attributes updated.
99eb41b2
WD
1624If a match is not found, a basis file from one of the em(DIR)s will be
1625selected to try to speed up the transfer.
e49f61f5
WD
1626
1627If em(DIR) is a relative path, it is relative to the destination directory.
2f03ce67 1628See also bf(--copy-dest) and bf(--link-dest).
b127c1dc 1629
2f03ce67
WD
1630dit(bf(--copy-dest=DIR)) This option behaves like bf(--compare-dest), but
1631rsync will also copy unchanged files found in em(DIR) to the destination
1632directory using a local copy.
1633This is useful for doing transfers to a new destination while leaving
1634existing files intact, and then doing a flash-cutover when all files have
1635been successfully transferred.
1636
1637Multiple bf(--copy-dest) directories may be provided, which will cause
1638rsync to search the list in the order specified for an unchanged file.
1639If a match is not found, a basis file from one of the em(DIR)s will be
1640selected to try to speed up the transfer.
1641
1642If em(DIR) is a relative path, it is relative to the destination directory.
1643See also bf(--compare-dest) and bf(--link-dest).
1644
1645dit(bf(--link-dest=DIR)) This option behaves like bf(--copy-dest), but
e49f61f5
WD
1646unchanged files are hard linked from em(DIR) to the destination directory.
1647The files must be identical in all preserved attributes (e.g. permissions,
1648possibly ownership) in order for the files to be linked together.
8429aa9e
WD
1649An example:
1650
faa82484 1651quote(tt( rsync -av --link-dest=$PWD/prior_dir host:src_dir/ new_dir/))
59c95e42 1652
45c37e73
WD
1653If file's aren't linking, double-check their attributes. Also check if some
1654attributes are getting forced outside of rsync's control, such a mount option
1655that squishes root to a single user, or mounts a removable drive with generic
1656ownership (such as OS X's "Ignore ownership on this volume" option).
1657
99eb41b2
WD
1658Beginning in version 2.6.4, multiple bf(--link-dest) directories may be
1659provided, which will cause rsync to search the list in the order specified
1660for an exact match.
2f03ce67
WD
1661If a match is found that differs only in attributes, a local copy is made
1662and the attributes updated.
99eb41b2
WD
1663If a match is not found, a basis file from one of the em(DIR)s will be
1664selected to try to speed up the transfer.
e49f61f5 1665
33689f48
WD
1666This option works best when copying into an empty destination hierarchy, as
1667rsync treats existing files as definitive (so it never looks in the link-dest
1668dirs when a destination file already exists), and as malleable (so it might
1669change the attributes of a destination file, which affects all the hard-linked
1670versions).
1671
d04e95e9
WD
1672Note that if you combine this option with bf(--ignore-times), rsync will not
1673link any files together because it only links identical files together as a
1674substitute for transferring the file, never as an additional check after the
1675file is updated.
1676
e49f61f5 1677If em(DIR) is a relative path, it is relative to the destination directory.
2f03ce67 1678See also bf(--compare-dest) and bf(--copy-dest).
b127c1dc 1679
e0204f56 1680Note that rsync versions prior to 2.6.1 had a bug that could prevent
d38772e0
WD
1681bf(--link-dest) from working properly for a non-super-user when bf(-o) was
1682specified (or implied by bf(-a)). You can work-around this bug by avoiding
1683the bf(-o) option when sending to an old rsync.
e0204f56 1684
32a5edf4
WD
1685dit(bf(-z, --compress)) With this option, rsync compresses the file data
1686as it is sent to the destination machine, which reduces the amount of data
1687being transmitted -- something that is useful over a slow connection.
41059f75 1688
02184920 1689Note that this option typically achieves better compression ratios than can
32a5edf4
WD
1690be achieved by using a compressing remote shell or a compressing transport
1691because it takes advantage of the implicit information in the matching data
1692blocks that are not explicitly sent over the connection.
41059f75 1693
2b967218
WD
1694See the bf(--skip-compress) option for the default list of file suffixes
1695that will not be compressed.
1696
bad01106
WD
1697dit(bf(--compress-level=NUM)) Explicitly set the compression level to use
1698(see bf(--compress)) instead of letting it default. If NUM is non-zero,
1699the bf(--compress) option is implied.
1700
2b967218
WD
1701dit(bf(--skip-compress=LIST)) Override the list of file suffixes that will
1702not be compressed. The bf(LIST) should be one or more file suffixes
1703(without the dot) separated by slashes (/).
1704
1705You may specify an empty string to indicate that no file should be skipped.
1706
1707Simple character-class matching is supported: each must consist of a list
1708of letters inside the square brackets (e.g. no special classes, such as
1709"[:alpha:]", are supported).
1710
1711The characters asterisk (*) and question-mark (?) have no special meaning.
1712
1713Here's an example that specifies 6 suffixes to skip (since 1 of the 5 rules
1714matches 2 suffixes):
1715
1716verb( --skip-compress=gz/jpg/mp[34]/7z/bz2)
1717
1718The default list of suffixes that will not be compressed is this (several
1719of these are newly added for 3.0.0):
1720
1721verb( gz/zip/z/rpm/deb/iso/bz2/t[gb]z/7z/mp[34]/mov/avi/ogg/jpg/jpeg)
1722
1723This list will be replaced by your bf(--skip-compress) list in all but one
1724situation: a copy from a daemon rsync will add your skipped suffixes to
1725its list of non-compressing files (and its list may be configured to a
1726different default).
1727
41059f75 1728dit(bf(--numeric-ids)) With this option rsync will transfer numeric group
4d888108 1729and user IDs rather than using user and group names and mapping them
41059f75
AT
1730at both ends.
1731
4d888108 1732By default rsync will use the username and groupname to determine
41059f75 1733what ownership to give files. The special uid 0 and the special group
faa82484 17340 are never mapped via user/group names even if the bf(--numeric-ids)
41059f75
AT
1735option is not specified.
1736
ec40899b
WD
1737If a user or group has no name on the source system or it has no match
1738on the destination system, then the numeric ID
1739from the source system is used instead. See also the comments on the
a2b0471f
WD
1740"use chroot" setting in the rsyncd.conf manpage for information on how
1741the chroot setting affects rsync's ability to look up the names of the
1742users and groups and what you can do about it.
41059f75 1743
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WD
1744dit(bf(--usermap=STRING, --groupmap=STRING)) These options allow you to
1745specify users and groups that should be mapped to other values by the
1746receiving side. The bf(STRING) is one or more bf(FROM):bf(TO) pairs of
1747values separated by commas. Any matching bf(FROM) value from the sender is
1748replaced with a bf(TO) value from the receiver. You may specify usernames
1749or user IDs for the bf(FROM) and bf(TO) values, and the bf(FROM) value may
1750also be a wild-card string, which will be matched against the sender's
1751names (wild-cards do NOT match against ID numbers, though see below for
1752why a '*' matches everything). You may instead specify a range of ID
1753numbers via an inclusive range: LOW-HIGH. For example:
1754
1755verb( --usermap=0-99:nobody,wayne:admin,*:normal --groupmap=usr:1,1:usr)
1756
1757The first match in the list is the one that is used. You should specify
1758all your user mappings using a single bf(--usermap) option, and/or all
1759your group mappings using a single bf(--groupmap) option.
1760
1761Note that the sender's name for the 0 user and group are not transmitted
1762to the receiver, so you should either match these values using a 0, or use
1763the names in effect on the receiving side (typically "root"). All other
1764bf(FROM) names match those in use on the sending side. All bf(TO) names
1765match those in use on the receiving side.
1766
1767Any IDs that do not have a name on the sending side are treated as having an
1768empty name for the purpose of matching. This allows them to be matched via
1769a "*" or using an empty name. For instance:
1770
1771verb( --usermap=:nobody --groupmap=*:nobody)
1772
1773When the bf(--numeric-ids) option is used, the sender does not send any
1774names, so all the IDs are treated as having an empty name. This means that
1775you will need to specify numeric bf(FROM) values if you want to map these
1776nameless IDs to different values.
1777
1778For the bf(--usermap) option to have any effect, the bf(-o) (bf(--owner))
1779option must be used (or implied), and the receiver will need to be running
1780as a super-user (see also the bf(--fake-super) option). For the bf(--groupmap)
1781option to have any effect, the bf(-g) (bf(--groups)) option must be used
1782(or implied), and the receiver will need to have permissions to set that
1783group.
1784
1785dit(bf(--chown=USER:GROUP)) This option forces all files to be owned by USER
1786with group GROUP. This is a simpler interface than using bf(--usermap) and
1787bf(--groupmap) directly, but it is implemented using those options internally,
1788so you cannot mix them. If either the USER or GROUP is empty, no mapping for
1789the omitted user/group will occur. If GROUP is empty, the trailing colon may
1790be omitted, but if USER is empty, a leading colon must be supplied.
1791
1792If you specify "--chown=foo:bar, this is exactly the same as specifying
1793"--usermap=*:foo --groupmap=*:bar", only easier.
1794
b5accaba 1795dit(bf(--timeout=TIMEOUT)) This option allows you to set a maximum I/O
de2fd20e
AT
1796timeout in seconds. If no data is transferred for the specified time
1797then rsync will exit. The default is 0, which means no timeout.
41059f75 1798
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1799dit(bf(--contimeout)) This option allows you to set the amount of time
1800that rsync will wait for its connection to an rsync daemon to succeed.
1801If the timeout is reached, rsync exits with an error.
1802
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1803dit(bf(--address)) By default rsync will bind to the wildcard address when
1804connecting to an rsync daemon. The bf(--address) option allows you to
1805specify a specific IP address (or hostname) to bind to. See also this
1806option in the bf(--daemon) mode section.
1807
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WD
1808dit(bf(--port=PORT)) This specifies an alternate TCP port number to use
1809rather than the default of 873. This is only needed if you are using the
1810double-colon (::) syntax to connect with an rsync daemon (since the URL
1811syntax has a way to specify the port as a part of the URL). See also this
faa82484 1812option in the bf(--daemon) mode section.
c259892c 1813
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WD
1814dit(bf(--sockopts)) This option can provide endless fun for people
1815who like to tune their systems to the utmost degree. You can set all
1816sorts of socket options which may make transfers faster (or
49f4cfdf 1817slower!). Read the man page for the code(setsockopt()) system call for
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1818details on some of the options you may be able to set. By default no
1819special socket options are set. This only affects direct socket
1820connections to a remote rsync daemon. This option also exists in the
1821bf(--daemon) mode section.
1822
b5accaba 1823dit(bf(--blocking-io)) This tells rsync to use blocking I/O when launching
314a74d7
WD
1824a remote shell transport. If the remote shell is either rsh or remsh,
1825rsync defaults to using
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WD
1826blocking I/O, otherwise it defaults to using non-blocking I/O. (Note that
1827ssh prefers non-blocking I/O.)
64c704f0 1828
0cfdf226 1829dit(bf(-i, --itemize-changes)) Requests a simple itemized list of the
4f90eb43 1830changes that are being made to each file, including attribute changes.
4b90820d 1831This is exactly the same as specifying bf(--out-format='%i %n%L').
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1832If you repeat the option, unchanged files will also be output, but only
1833if the receiving rsync is at least version 2.6.7 (you can use bf(-vv)
1834with older versions of rsync, but that also turns on the output of other
1835verbose messages).
ea67c715 1836
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WD
1837The "%i" escape has a cryptic output that is 11 letters long. The general
1838format is like the string bf(YXcstpoguax), where bf(Y) is replaced by the
4f417448 1839type of update being done, bf(X) is replaced by the file-type, and the
a314f7c1 1840other letters represent attributes that may be output if they are being
ee171c6d 1841modified.
ea67c715 1842
2d5279ac 1843The update types that replace the bf(Y) are as follows:
ea67c715 1844
b8a6dae0 1845quote(itemization(
cc3e0770 1846 it() A bf(<) means that a file is being transferred to the remote host
a314f7c1 1847 (sent).
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WD
1848 it() A bf(>) means that a file is being transferred to the local host
1849 (received).
c48cff9f 1850 it() A bf(c) means that a local change/creation is occurring for the item
ee171c6d 1851 (such as the creation of a directory or the changing of a symlink, etc.).
02184920 1852 it() A bf(h) means that the item is a hard link to another item (requires
b4875de4 1853 bf(--hard-links)).
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WD
1854 it() A bf(.) means that the item is not being updated (though it might
1855 have attributes that are being modified).
59658acf
WD
1856 it() A bf(*) means that the rest of the itemized-output area contains
1857 a message (e.g. "deleting").
a314f7c1 1858))
ea67c715 1859
a314f7c1 1860The file-types that replace the bf(X) are: bf(f) for a file, a bf(d) for a
4e7d07c8
WD
1861directory, an bf(L) for a symlink, a bf(D) for a device, and a bf(S) for a
1862special file (e.g. named sockets and fifos).
ea67c715 1863
a314f7c1 1864The other letters in the string above are the actual letters that
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WD
1865will be output if the associated attribute for the item is being updated or
1866a "." for no change. Three exceptions to this are: (1) a newly created
b9f0ca72
WD
1867item replaces each letter with a "+", (2) an identical item replaces the
1868dots with spaces, and (3) an unknown attribute replaces each letter with
81c453b1 1869a "?" (this can happen when talking to an older rsync).
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WD
1870
1871The attribute that is associated with each letter is as follows:
1872
b8a6dae0 1873quote(itemization(
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WD
1874 it() A bf(c) means either that a regular file has a different checksum
1875 (requires bf(--checksum)) or that a symlink, device, or special file has
1876 a changed value.
600b56b3 1877 Note that if you are sending files to an rsync prior to 3.0.1, this
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WD
1878 change flag will be present only for checksum-differing regular files.
1879 it() A bf(s) means the size of a regular file is different and will be updated
ea67c715
WD
1880 by the file transfer.
1881 it() A bf(t) means the modification time is different and is being updated
5a727522 1882 to the sender's value (requires bf(--times)). An alternate value of bf(T)
42b06481 1883 means that the modification time will be set to the transfer time, which happens
1ed56a05
WD
1884 when a file/symlink/device is updated without bf(--times) and when a
1885 symlink is changed and the receiver can't set its time.
1ed9018e
WD
1886 (Note: when using an rsync 3.0.0 client, you might see the bf(s) flag combined
1887 with bf(t) instead of the proper bf(T) flag for this time-setting failure.)
ea67c715 1888 it() A bf(p) means the permissions are different and are being updated to
5a727522 1889 the sender's value (requires bf(--perms)).
4dc67d5e 1890 it() An bf(o) means the owner is different and is being updated to the
d38772e0 1891 sender's value (requires bf(--owner) and super-user privileges).
4dc67d5e 1892 it() A bf(g) means the group is different and is being updated to the
5a727522 1893 sender's value (requires bf(--group) and the authority to set the group).
7869953b 1894 it() The bf(u) slot is reserved for future use.
1c3344a1 1895 it() The bf(a) means that the ACL information changed.
7869953b 1896 it() The bf(x) means that the extended attribute information changed.
ea67c715
WD
1897))
1898
1899One other output is possible: when deleting files, the "%i" will output
ee171c6d 1900the string "*deleting" for each item that is being removed (assuming that
ea67c715
WD
1901you are talking to a recent enough rsync that it logs deletions instead of
1902outputting them as a verbose message).
dc0f2497 1903
4b90820d 1904dit(bf(--out-format=FORMAT)) This allows you to specify exactly what the
951e826b
WD
1905rsync client outputs to the user on a per-update basis. The format is a
1906text string containing embedded single-character escape sequences prefixed
1907with a percent (%) character. A default format of "%n%L" is assumed if
1908either bf(--info=name) or bf(-v) is specified (this tells you just the name
1909of the file and, if the item is a link, where it points). For a full list
1910of the possible escape characters, see the "log format" setting in the
1911rsyncd.conf manpage.
1912
1913Specifying the bf(--out-format) option implies the bf(--info=name) option,
1914which will mention each file, dir, etc. that gets updated in a significant
1915way (a transferred file, a recreated symlink/device, or a touched
1916directory). In addition, if the itemize-changes escape (%i) is included in
1917the string (e.g. if the bf(--itemize-changes) option was used), the logging
1918of names increases to mention any item that is changed in any way (as long
1919as the receiving side is at least 2.6.4). See the bf(--itemize-changes)
1920option for a description of the output of "%i".
ea67c715 1921
4b90820d 1922Rsync will output the out-format string prior to a file's transfer unless
ea67c715
WD
1923one of the transfer-statistic escapes is requested, in which case the
1924logging is done at the end of the file's transfer. When this late logging
1925is in effect and bf(--progress) is also specified, rsync will also output
1926the name of the file being transferred prior to its progress information
4b90820d
WD
1927(followed, of course, by the out-format output).
1928
1929dit(bf(--log-file=FILE)) This option causes rsync to log what it is doing
1930to a file. This is similar to the logging that a daemon does, but can be
1931requested for the client side and/or the server side of a non-daemon
1932transfer. If specified as a client option, transfer logging will be
1933enabled with a default format of "%i %n%L". See the bf(--log-file-format)
1934option if you wish to override this.
1935
1936Here's a example command that requests the remote side to log what is
1937happening:
1938
7a2eca41 1939verb( rsync -av --remote-option=--log-file=/tmp/rlog src/ dest/)
4b90820d
WD
1940
1941This is very useful if you need to debug why a connection is closing
1942unexpectedly.
1943
1944dit(bf(--log-file-format=FORMAT)) This allows you to specify exactly what
1945per-update logging is put into the file specified by the bf(--log-file) option
1946(which must also be specified for this option to have any effect). If you
1947specify an empty string, updated files will not be mentioned in the log file.
1948For a list of the possible escape characters, see the "log format" setting
1949in the rsyncd.conf manpage.
b6062654 1950
e129500c
WD
1951The default FORMAT used if bf(--log-file) is specified and this option is not
1952is '%i %n%L'.
1953
b72f24c7 1954dit(bf(--stats)) This tells rsync to print a verbose set of statistics
adc4ebdd 1955on the file transfer, allowing you to tell how effective rsync's delta-transfer
951e826b
WD
1956algorithm is for your data. This option is equivalent to bf(--info=stats2)
1957if combined with 0 or 1 bf(-v) options, or bf(--info=stats3) if combined
1958with 2 or more bf(-v) options.
b72f24c7 1959
b8a6dae0 1960The current statistics are as follows: quote(itemization(
7b13ff97
WD
1961 it() bf(Number of files) is the count of all "files" (in the generic
1962 sense), which includes directories, symlinks, etc.
1963 it() bf(Number of files transferred) is the count of normal files that
adc4ebdd 1964 were updated via rsync's delta-transfer algorithm, which does not include created
7b13ff97
WD
1965 dirs, symlinks, etc.
1966 it() bf(Total file size) is the total sum of all file sizes in the transfer.
1967 This does not count any size for directories or special files, but does
1968 include the size of symlinks.
1969 it() bf(Total transferred file size) is the total sum of all files sizes
1970 for just the transferred files.
1971 it() bf(Literal data) is how much unmatched file-update data we had to
1972 send to the receiver for it to recreate the updated files.
1973 it() bf(Matched data) is how much data the receiver got locally when
1974 recreating the updated files.
1975 it() bf(File list size) is how big the file-list data was when the sender
1976 sent it to the receiver. This is smaller than the in-memory size for the
1977 file list due to some compressing of duplicated data when rsync sends the
1978 list.
1979 it() bf(File list generation time) is the number of seconds that the
1980 sender spent creating the file list. This requires a modern rsync on the
1981 sending side for this to be present.
1982 it() bf(File list transfer time) is the number of seconds that the sender
1983 spent sending the file list to the receiver.
1984 it() bf(Total bytes sent) is the count of all the bytes that rsync sent
1985 from the client side to the server side.
1986 it() bf(Total bytes received) is the count of all non-message bytes that
1987 rsync received by the client side from the server side. "Non-message"
1988 bytes means that we don't count the bytes for a verbose message that the
1989 server sent to us, which makes the stats more consistent.
38a4b9c2 1990))
7b13ff97 1991
a6a27602 1992dit(bf(-8, --8-bit-output)) This tells rsync to leave all high-bit characters
d0022dd9
WD
1993unescaped in the output instead of trying to test them to see if they're
1994valid in the current locale and escaping the invalid ones. All control
1995characters (but never tabs) are always escaped, regardless of this option's
1996setting.
1997
1998The escape idiom that started in 2.6.7 is to output a literal backslash (\)
1999and a hash (#), followed by exactly 3 octal digits. For example, a newline
2000would output as "\#012". A literal backslash that is in a filename is not
2001escaped unless it is followed by a hash and 3 digits (0-9).
2002
955c3145 2003dit(bf(-h, --human-readable)) Output numbers in a more human-readable format.
adc2476f
WD
2004There are 3 possible levels: (1) output numbers with a separator between each
2005set of 3 digits (either a comma or a period, depending on if the decimal point
2006is represented by a period or a comma); (2) output numbers in units of 1000
2007(with a character suffix for larger units -- see below); (3) output numbers in
2008units of 1024.
2009
2010The default is human-readable level 1. Each bf(-h) option increases the level
2011by one. You can take the level down to 0 (to output numbers as pure digits) by
2012specifing the bf(--no-human-readable) (bf(--no-h)) option.
2013
2014The unit letters that are appended in levels 2 and 3 are: K (kilo), M (mega),
2015G (giga), or T (tera). For example, a 1234567-byte file would output as 1.23M
2016in level-2 (assuming that a period is your local decimal point).
2017
2018Backward compatibility note: versions of rsync prior to 3.1.0 do not support
2019human-readable level 1, and they default to level 0. Thus, specifying one or
2020two bf(-h) options behaves the same in old and new versions as long as you
2021didn't specify a bf(--no-h) option prior to one or more bf(-h) options.
3b4ecc6b 2022
d9fcc198
AT
2023dit(bf(--partial)) By default, rsync will delete any partially
2024transferred file if the transfer is interrupted. In some circumstances
2025it is more desirable to keep partially transferred files. Using the
faa82484 2026bf(--partial) option tells rsync to keep the partial file which should
d9fcc198
AT
2027make a subsequent transfer of the rest of the file much faster.
2028
c2582307
WD
2029dit(bf(--partial-dir=DIR)) A better way to keep partial files than the
2030bf(--partial) option is to specify a em(DIR) that will be used to hold the
2031partial data (instead of writing it out to the destination file).
2032On the next transfer, rsync will use a file found in this
9ec1ef25 2033dir as data to speed up the resumption of the transfer and then delete it
c2582307 2034after it has served its purpose.
9ec1ef25 2035
c2582307
WD
2036Note that if bf(--whole-file) is specified (or implied), any partial-dir
2037file that is found for a file that is being updated will simply be removed
2038(since
adc4ebdd 2039rsync is sending files without using rsync's delta-transfer algorithm).
44cad59f 2040
c2582307
WD
2041Rsync will create the em(DIR) if it is missing (just the last dir -- not
2042the whole path). This makes it easy to use a relative path (such as
2043"bf(--partial-dir=.rsync-partial)") to have rsync create the
2044partial-directory in the destination file's directory when needed, and then
2045remove it again when the partial file is deleted.
44cad59f 2046
ee554411
WD
2047If the partial-dir value is not an absolute path, rsync will add an exclude
2048rule at the end of all your existing excludes. This will prevent the
2049sending of any partial-dir files that may exist on the sending side, and
2050will also prevent the untimely deletion of partial-dir items on the
2051receiving side. An example: the above bf(--partial-dir) option would add
f49c8376 2052the equivalent of "bf(-f '-p .rsync-partial/')" at the end of any other
ee554411
WD
2053filter rules.
2054
2055If you are supplying your own exclude rules, you may need to add your own
2056exclude/hide/protect rule for the partial-dir because (1) the auto-added
2057rule may be ineffective at the end of your other rules, or (2) you may wish
2058to override rsync's exclude choice. For instance, if you want to make
2059rsync clean-up any left-over partial-dirs that may be lying around, you
2060should specify bf(--delete-after) and add a "risk" filter rule, e.g.
2061bf(-f 'R .rsync-partial/'). (Avoid using bf(--delete-before) or
2062bf(--delete-during) unless you don't need rsync to use any of the
2063left-over partial-dir data during the current run.)
44cad59f 2064
faa82484 2065IMPORTANT: the bf(--partial-dir) should not be writable by other users or it
b4d1e854
WD
2066is a security risk. E.g. AVOID "/tmp".
2067
2068You can also set the partial-dir value the RSYNC_PARTIAL_DIR environment
faa82484 2069variable. Setting this in the environment does not force bf(--partial) to be
02184920 2070enabled, but rather it affects where partial files go when bf(--partial) is
faa82484
WD
2071specified. For instance, instead of using bf(--partial-dir=.rsync-tmp)
2072along with bf(--progress), you could set RSYNC_PARTIAL_DIR=.rsync-tmp in your
2073environment and then just use the bf(-P) option to turn on the use of the
9ec1ef25
WD
2074.rsync-tmp dir for partial transfers. The only times that the bf(--partial)
2075option does not look for this environment value are (1) when bf(--inplace) was
2076specified (since bf(--inplace) conflicts with bf(--partial-dir)), and (2) when
faa82484 2077bf(--delay-updates) was specified (see below).
01b835c2 2078
5a727522 2079For the purposes of the daemon-config's "refuse options" setting,
c2582307
WD
2080bf(--partial-dir) does em(not) imply bf(--partial). This is so that a
2081refusal of the bf(--partial) option can be used to disallow the overwriting
2082of destination files with a partial transfer, while still allowing the
2083safer idiom provided by bf(--partial-dir).
2084
01b835c2 2085dit(bf(--delay-updates)) This option puts the temporary file from each
c2582307 2086updated file into a holding directory until the end of the
01b835c2
WD
2087transfer, at which time all the files are renamed into place in rapid
2088succession. This attempts to make the updating of the files a little more
c2582307 2089atomic. By default the files are placed into a directory named ".~tmp~" in
64318670 2090each file's destination directory, but if you've specified the
ee554411
WD
2091bf(--partial-dir) option, that directory will be used instead. See the
2092comments in the bf(--partial-dir) section for a discussion of how this
2093".~tmp~" dir will be excluded from the transfer, and what you can do if
c5b6e57a 2094you want rsync to cleanup old ".~tmp~" dirs that might be lying around.
64318670 2095Conflicts with bf(--inplace) and bf(--append).
01b835c2
WD
2096
2097This option uses more memory on the receiving side (one bit per file
2098transferred) and also requires enough free disk space on the receiving
2099side to hold an additional copy of all the updated files. Note also that
5efbddba
WD
2100you should not use an absolute path to bf(--partial-dir) unless (1)
2101there is no
01b835c2
WD
2102chance of any of the files in the transfer having the same name (since all
2103the updated files will be put into a single directory if the path is
5efbddba
WD
2104absolute)
2105and (2) there are no mount points in the hierarchy (since the
2106delayed updates will fail if they can't be renamed into place).
01b835c2
WD
2107
2108See also the "atomic-rsync" perl script in the "support" subdir for an
faa82484 2109update algorithm that is even more atomic (it uses bf(--link-dest) and a
01b835c2 2110parallel hierarchy of files).
44cad59f 2111
a272ff8c 2112dit(bf(-m, --prune-empty-dirs)) This option tells the receiving rsync to get
fb72aaba
WD
2113rid of empty directories from the file-list, including nested directories
2114that have no non-directory children. This is useful for avoiding the
2115creation of a bunch of useless directories when the sending rsync is
2116recursively scanning a hierarchy of files using include/exclude/filter
a272ff8c
WD
2117rules.
2118
2119Because the file-list is actually being pruned, this option also affects
2120what directories get deleted when a delete is active. However, keep in
2121mind that excluded files and directories can prevent existing items from
2122being deleted (because an exclude hides source files and protects
2123destination files).
2124
2125You can prevent the pruning of certain empty directories from the file-list
2126by using a global "protect" filter. For instance, this option would ensure
2127that the directory "emptydir" was kept in the file-list:
2128
2129quote( --filter 'protect emptydir/')
fb72aaba
WD
2130
2131Here's an example that copies all .pdf files in a hierarchy, only creating
2132the necessary destination directories to hold the .pdf files, and ensures
2133that any superfluous files and directories in the destination are removed
a272ff8c
WD
2134(note the hide filter of non-directories being used instead of an exclude):
2135
58718881 2136quote( rsync -avm --del --include='*.pdf' -f 'hide,! */' src/ dest)
fb72aaba 2137
a272ff8c 2138If you didn't want to remove superfluous destination files, the more
4743f0f4 2139time-honored options of "bf(--include='*/' --exclude='*')" would work fine
a272ff8c 2140in place of the hide-filter (if that is more natural to you).
fb72aaba 2141
eb86d661
AT
2142dit(bf(--progress)) This option tells rsync to print information
2143showing the progress of the transfer. This gives a bored user
2144something to watch.
951e826b
WD
2145With a modern rsync this is the same as specifying
2146bf(--info=flist2,name,progress), but any user-supplied settings for those
2147info flags takes precedence (e.g. "--info=flist0 --progress").
7b10f91d 2148
5e1f082d
WD
2149While rsync is transferring a regular file, it updates a progress line that
2150looks like this:
68f9910d 2151
faa82484 2152verb( 782448 63% 110.64kB/s 0:00:04)
68f9910d 2153
5e1f082d
WD
2154In this example, the receiver has reconstructed 782448 bytes or 63% of the
2155sender's file, which is being reconstructed at a rate of 110.64 kilobytes
2156per second, and the transfer will finish in 4 seconds if the current rate
2157is maintained until the end.
2158
adc4ebdd 2159These statistics can be misleading if rsync's delta-transfer algorithm is
5e1f082d
WD
2160in use. For example, if the sender's file consists of the basis file
2161followed by additional data, the reported rate will probably drop
2162dramatically when the receiver gets to the literal data, and the transfer
2163will probably take much longer to finish than the receiver estimated as it
2164was finishing the matched part of the file.
2165
2166When the file transfer finishes, rsync replaces the progress line with a
2167summary line that looks like this:
2168
8d10cbfc 2169verb( 1,238,099 100% 146.38kB/s 0:00:08 (xfr#5, to-chk=169/396))
5e1f082d 2170
8d10cbfc 2171In this example, the file was 1,238,099 bytes long in total, the average rate
5e1f082d
WD
2172of transfer for the whole file was 146.38 kilobytes per second over the 8
2173seconds that it took to complete, it was the 5th transfer of a regular file
2174during the current rsync session, and there are 169 more files for the
2175receiver to check (to see if they are up-to-date or not) remaining out of
2176the 396 total files in the file-list.
68f9910d 2177
8d10cbfc
WD
2178In an incremental recursion scan, rsync won't know the total number of files
2179in the file-list until it reaches the ends of the scan, but since it starts to
2180transfer files during the scan, it will display a line with the text "ir-chk"
2181(for incremental recursion check) instead of "to-chk" until the point that it
2182knows the full size of the list, at which point it will switch to using
2183"to-chk". Thus, seeing "ir-chk" lets you know that the total count of files
2184in the file list is still going to increase (and each time it does, the count
2185of files left to check will increase by the number of the files added to the
2186list).
2187
faa82484 2188dit(bf(-P)) The bf(-P) option is equivalent to bf(--partial) bf(--progress). Its
183150b7
WD
2189purpose is to make it much easier to specify these two options for a long
2190transfer that may be interrupted.
d9fcc198 2191
951e826b
WD
2192There is also a bf(--info=progress2) option that outputs statistics based
2193on the whole transfer, rather than individual files. Use this flag without
2194outputting a filename (e.g. avoid bf(-v) or specify bf(--info=name0) if you
2195want to see how the transfer is doing without scrolling the screen with a
2196lot of names. (You don't need to specify the bf(--progress) option in
2197order to use bf(--info=progress2).)
2198
9586e593
WD
2199dit(bf(--password-file)) This option allows you to provide a password in a
2200file for accessing an rsync daemon. The file must not be world readable.
6437b817
WD
2201It should contain just the password as the first line of the file (all
2202other lines are ignored).
9586e593 2203
b2057d38
WD
2204This option does not supply a password to a remote shell transport such as
2205ssh; to learn how to do that, consult the remote shell's documentation.
9586e593
WD
2206When accessing an rsync daemon using a remote shell as the transport, this
2207option only comes into effect after the remote shell finishes its
2208authentication (i.e. if you have also specified a password in the daemon's
2209config file).
65575e96 2210
09ed3099 2211dit(bf(--list-only)) This option will cause the source files to be listed
b4c7c1ca
WD
2212instead of transferred. This option is inferred if there is a single source
2213arg and no destination specified, so its main uses are: (1) to turn a copy
2214command that includes a
32b9011a
WD
2215destination arg into a file-listing command, or (2) to be able to specify
2216more than one source arg (note: be sure to include the destination).
2217Caution: keep in mind that a source arg with a wild-card is expanded by the
2218shell into multiple args, so it is never safe to try to list such an arg
b4c7c1ca
WD
2219without using this option. For example:
2220
2221verb( rsync -av --list-only foo* dest/)
09ed3099 2222
32b9011a
WD
2223Compatibility note: when requesting a remote listing of files from an rsync
2224that is version 2.6.3 or older, you may encounter an error if you ask for a
2225non-recursive listing. This is because a file listing implies the bf(--dirs)
2226option w/o bf(--recursive), and older rsyncs don't have that option. To
2227avoid this problem, either specify the bf(--no-dirs) option (if you don't
2228need to expand a directory's content), or turn on recursion and exclude
2229the content of subdirectories: bf(-r --exclude='/*/*').
2230
ef5d23eb
DD
2231dit(bf(--bwlimit=KBPS)) This option allows you to specify a maximum
2232transfer rate in kilobytes per second. This option is most effective when
2233using rsync with large files (several megabytes and up). Due to the nature
2234of rsync transfers, blocks of data are sent, then if rsync determines the
2235transfer was too fast, it will wait before sending the next data block. The
4d888108 2236result is an average transfer rate equaling the specified limit. A value
ef5d23eb
DD
2237of zero specifies no limit.
2238
b9f592fb 2239dit(bf(--write-batch=FILE)) Record a file that can later be applied to
faa82484 2240another identical destination with bf(--read-batch). See the "BATCH MODE"
32c7f91a 2241section for details, and also the bf(--only-write-batch) option.
6902ed17 2242
326bb56e
WD
2243dit(bf(--only-write-batch=FILE)) Works like bf(--write-batch), except that
2244no updates are made on the destination system when creating the batch.
2245This lets you transport the changes to the destination system via some
32c7f91a
WD
2246other means and then apply the changes via bf(--read-batch).
2247
2248Note that you can feel free to write the batch directly to some portable
2249media: if this media fills to capacity before the end of the transfer, you
2250can just apply that partial transfer to the destination and repeat the
2251whole process to get the rest of the changes (as long as you don't mind a
2252partially updated destination system while the multi-update cycle is
2253happening).
2254
2255Also note that you only save bandwidth when pushing changes to a remote
2256system because this allows the batched data to be diverted from the sender
2257into the batch file without having to flow over the wire to the receiver
2258(when pulling, the sender is remote, and thus can't write the batch).
326bb56e 2259
b9f592fb 2260dit(bf(--read-batch=FILE)) Apply all of the changes stored in FILE, a
faa82484 2261file previously generated by bf(--write-batch).
78be8e0f 2262If em(FILE) is bf(-), the batch data will be read from standard input.
c769702f 2263See the "BATCH MODE" section for details.
6902ed17 2264
0b941479
WD
2265dit(bf(--protocol=NUM)) Force an older protocol version to be used. This
2266is useful for creating a batch file that is compatible with an older
2267version of rsync. For instance, if rsync 2.6.4 is being used with the
2268bf(--write-batch) option, but rsync 2.6.3 is what will be used to run the
81c453b1
WD
2269bf(--read-batch) option, you should use "--protocol=28" when creating the
2270batch file to force the older protocol version to be used in the batch
2271file (assuming you can't upgrade the rsync on the reading system).
0b941479 2272
332cf6df
WD
2273dit(bf(--iconv=CONVERT_SPEC)) Rsync can convert filenames between character
2274sets using this option. Using a CONVERT_SPEC of "." tells rsync to look up
2275the default character-set via the locale setting. Alternately, you can
2276fully specify what conversion to do by giving a local and a remote charset
0b52f94d
WD
2277separated by a comma in the order bf(--iconv=LOCAL,REMOTE), e.g.
2278bf(--iconv=utf8,iso88591). This order ensures that the option
2279will stay the same whether you're pushing or pulling files.
2280Finally, you can specify either bf(--no-iconv) or a CONVERT_SPEC of "-"
2281to turn off any conversion.
332cf6df
WD
2282The default setting of this option is site-specific, and can also be
2283affected via the RSYNC_ICONV environment variable.
2284
0b52f94d
WD
2285For a list of what charset names your local iconv library supports, you can
2286run "iconv --list".
2287
82f37486
WD
2288If you specify the bf(--protect-args) option (bf(-s)), rsync will translate
2289the filenames you specify on the command-line that are being sent to the
2290remote host. See also the bf(--files-from) option.
2291
332cf6df 2292Note that rsync does not do any conversion of names in filter files
82f37486
WD
2293(including include/exclude files). It is up to you to ensure that you're
2294specifying matching rules that can match on both sides of the transfer.
2295For instance, you can specify extra include/exclude rules if there are
2296filename differences on the two sides that need to be accounted for.
332cf6df 2297
0b52f94d
WD
2298When you pass an bf(--iconv) option to an rsync daemon that allows it, the
2299daemon uses the charset specified in its "charset" configuration parameter
2300regardless of the remote charset you actually pass. Thus, you may feel free to
2301specify just the local charset for a daemon transfer (e.g. bf(--iconv=utf8)).
2302
e40a46de
WD
2303dit(bf(-4, --ipv4) or bf(-6, --ipv6)) Tells rsync to prefer IPv4/IPv6
2304when creating sockets. This only affects sockets that rsync has direct
2305control over, such as the outgoing socket when directly contacting an
faa82484 2306rsync daemon. See also these options in the bf(--daemon) mode section.
e40a46de 2307
24d677fc
WD
2308If rsync was complied without support for IPv6, the bf(--ipv6) option
2309will have no effect. The bf(--version) output will tell you if this
2310is the case.
2311
e129500c 2312dit(bf(--checksum-seed=NUM)) Set the checksum seed to the integer
c8d895de 2313NUM. This 4 byte checksum seed is included in each block and file
e129500c 2314checksum calculation. By default the checksum seed is generated
49f4cfdf 2315by the server and defaults to the current code(time()). This option
c8d895de
WD
2316is used to set a specific checksum seed, which is useful for
2317applications that want repeatable block and file checksums, or
2318in the case where the user wants a more random checksum seed.
886df221 2319Setting NUM to 0 causes rsync to use the default of code(time())
b9f592fb 2320for checksum seed.
41059f75
AT
2321enddit()
2322
faa82484
WD
2323manpagesection(DAEMON OPTIONS)
2324
bdf278f7
WD
2325The options allowed when starting an rsync daemon are as follows:
2326
2327startdit()
bdf278f7 2328dit(bf(--daemon)) This tells rsync that it is to run as a daemon. The
62f27e3c
WD
2329daemon you start running may be accessed using an rsync client using
2330the bf(host::module) or bf(rsync://host/module/) syntax.
bdf278f7
WD
2331
2332If standard input is a socket then rsync will assume that it is being
2333run via inetd, otherwise it will detach from the current terminal and
2334become a background daemon. The daemon will read the config file
2335(rsyncd.conf) on each connect made by a client and respond to
49f4cfdf 2336requests accordingly. See the bf(rsyncd.conf)(5) man page for more
bdf278f7
WD
2337details.
2338
3ae5367f
WD
2339dit(bf(--address)) By default rsync will bind to the wildcard address when
2340run as a daemon with the bf(--daemon) option. The bf(--address) option
2341allows you to specify a specific IP address (or hostname) to bind to. This
2342makes virtual hosting possible in conjunction with the bf(--config) option.
2343See also the "address" global option in the rsyncd.conf manpage.
bdf278f7 2344
1f69bec4
WD
2345dit(bf(--bwlimit=KBPS)) This option allows you to specify a maximum
2346transfer rate in kilobytes per second for the data the daemon sends.
faa82484 2347The client can still specify a smaller bf(--bwlimit) value, but their
1f69bec4
WD
2348requested value will be rounded down if they try to exceed it. See the
2349client version of this option (above) for some extra details.
2350
bdf278f7 2351dit(bf(--config=FILE)) This specifies an alternate config file than
faa82484 2352the default. This is only relevant when bf(--daemon) is specified.
bdf278f7 2353The default is /etc/rsyncd.conf unless the daemon is running over
d38772e0 2354a remote shell program and the remote user is not the super-user; in that case
bdf278f7
WD
2355the default is rsyncd.conf in the current directory (typically $HOME).
2356
2206abf8
WD
2357dit(bf(-M, --dparam=OVERRIDE)) This option can be used to set a daemon-config
2358parameter when starting up rsync in daemon mode. It is equivalent to adding
2359the parameter at the end of the global settings prior to the first module's
2360definition. The parameter names can be specified without spaces, if you so
2361desire. For instance:
2362
2363verb( rsync --daemon -M pidfile=/path/rsync.pid )
2364
bdf278f7
WD
2365dit(bf(--no-detach)) When running as a daemon, this option instructs
2366rsync to not detach itself and become a background process. This
2367option is required when running as a service on Cygwin, and may also
2368be useful when rsync is supervised by a program such as
2369bf(daemontools) or AIX's bf(System Resource Controller).
2370bf(--no-detach) is also recommended when rsync is run under a
2371debugger. This option has no effect if rsync is run from inetd or
2372sshd.
2373
c259892c
WD
2374dit(bf(--port=PORT)) This specifies an alternate TCP port number for the
2375daemon to listen on rather than the default of 873. See also the "port"
2376global option in the rsyncd.conf manpage.
bdf278f7 2377
a2ed5801
WD
2378dit(bf(--log-file=FILE)) This option tells the rsync daemon to use the
2379given log-file name instead of using the "log file" setting in the config
2380file.
2381
4b90820d
WD
2382dit(bf(--log-file-format=FORMAT)) This option tells the rsync daemon to use the
2383given FORMAT string instead of using the "log format" setting in the config
2384file. It also enables "transfer logging" unless the string is empty, in which
2385case transfer logging is turned off.
2386
04f48837
WD
2387dit(bf(--sockopts)) This overrides the bf(socket options) setting in the
2388rsyncd.conf file and has the same syntax.
2389
24b0922b
WD
2390dit(bf(-v, --verbose)) This option increases the amount of information the
2391daemon logs during its startup phase. After the client connects, the
2392daemon's verbosity level will be controlled by the options that the client
2393used and the "max verbosity" setting in the module's config section.
2394
bdf278f7
WD
2395dit(bf(-4, --ipv4) or bf(-6, --ipv6)) Tells rsync to prefer IPv4/IPv6
2396when creating the incoming sockets that the rsync daemon will use to
2397listen for connections. One of these options may be required in older
2398versions of Linux to work around an IPv6 bug in the kernel (if you see
2399an "address already in use" error when nothing else is using the port,
faa82484 2400try specifying bf(--ipv6) or bf(--ipv4) when starting the daemon).
bdf278f7 2401
24d677fc
WD
2402If rsync was complied without support for IPv6, the bf(--ipv6) option
2403will have no effect. The bf(--version) output will tell you if this
2404is the case.
2405
faa82484 2406dit(bf(-h, --help)) When specified after bf(--daemon), print a short help
bdf278f7 2407page describing the options available for starting an rsync daemon.
bdf278f7
WD
2408enddit()
2409
16e5de84 2410manpagesection(FILTER RULES)
43bd68e5 2411
16e5de84
WD
2412The filter rules allow for flexible selection of which files to transfer
2413(include) and which files to skip (exclude). The rules either directly
2414specify include/exclude patterns or they specify a way to acquire more
2415include/exclude patterns (e.g. to read them from a file).
43bd68e5 2416
16e5de84
WD
2417As the list of files/directories to transfer is built, rsync checks each
2418name to be transferred against the list of include/exclude patterns in
2419turn, and the first matching pattern is acted on: if it is an exclude
2420pattern, then that file is skipped; if it is an include pattern then that
2421filename is not skipped; if no matching pattern is found, then the
43bd68e5
AT
2422filename is not skipped.
2423
16e5de84
WD
2424Rsync builds an ordered list of filter rules as specified on the
2425command-line. Filter rules have the following syntax:
2426
faa82484 2427quote(
d91de046
WD
2428tt(RULE [PATTERN_OR_FILENAME])nl()
2429tt(RULE,MODIFIERS [PATTERN_OR_FILENAME])nl()
16e5de84
WD
2430)
2431
d91de046
WD
2432You have your choice of using either short or long RULE names, as described
2433below. If you use a short-named rule, the ',' separating the RULE from the
2434MODIFIERS is optional. The PATTERN or FILENAME that follows (when present)
2435must come after either a single space or an underscore (_).
2436Here are the available rule prefixes:
16e5de84 2437
faa82484 2438quote(
d91de046
WD
2439bf(exclude, -) specifies an exclude pattern. nl()
2440bf(include, +) specifies an include pattern. nl()
2441bf(merge, .) specifies a merge-file to read for more rules. nl()
2442bf(dir-merge, :) specifies a per-directory merge-file. nl()
0dfffb88
WD
2443bf(hide, H) specifies a pattern for hiding files from the transfer. nl()
2444bf(show, S) files that match the pattern are not hidden. nl()
2445bf(protect, P) specifies a pattern for protecting files from deletion. nl()
2446bf(risk, R) files that match the pattern are not protected. nl()
d91de046 2447bf(clear, !) clears the current include/exclude list (takes no arg) nl()
16e5de84
WD
2448)
2449
d91de046
WD
2450When rules are being read from a file, empty lines are ignored, as are
2451comment lines that start with a "#".
2452
faa82484 2453Note that the bf(--include)/bf(--exclude) command-line options do not allow the
16e5de84 2454full range of rule parsing as described above -- they only allow the
d91de046
WD
2455specification of include/exclude patterns plus a "!" token to clear the
2456list (and the normal comment parsing when rules are read from a file).
2457If a pattern
16e5de84
WD
2458does not begin with "- " (dash, space) or "+ " (plus, space), then the
2459rule will be interpreted as if "+ " (for an include option) or "- " (for
faa82484 2460an exclude option) were prefixed to the string. A bf(--filter) option, on
d91de046
WD
2461the other hand, must always contain either a short or long rule name at the
2462start of the rule.
16e5de84 2463
faa82484 2464Note also that the bf(--filter), bf(--include), and bf(--exclude) options take one
16e5de84 2465rule/pattern each. To add multiple ones, you can repeat the options on
faa82484
WD
2466the command-line, use the merge-file syntax of the bf(--filter) option, or
2467the bf(--include-from)/bf(--exclude-from) options.
16e5de84 2468
16e5de84
WD
2469manpagesection(INCLUDE/EXCLUDE PATTERN RULES)
2470
0dfffb88
WD
2471You can include and exclude files by specifying patterns using the "+",
2472"-", etc. filter rules (as introduced in the FILTER RULES section above).
bb5f4e72
WD
2473The include/exclude rules each specify a pattern that is matched against
2474the names of the files that are going to be transferred. These patterns
2475can take several forms:
16e5de84 2476
b8a6dae0 2477itemization(
16e5de84
WD
2478 it() if the pattern starts with a / then it is anchored to a
2479 particular spot in the hierarchy of files, otherwise it is matched
2480 against the end of the pathname. This is similar to a leading ^ in
2481 regular expressions.
809724d7 2482 Thus "/foo" would match a name of "foo" at either the "root of the
16e5de84
WD
2483 transfer" (for a global rule) or in the merge-file's directory (for a
2484 per-directory rule).
809724d7
WD
2485 An unqualified "foo" would match a name of "foo" anywhere in the
2486 tree because the algorithm is applied recursively from the
16e5de84 2487 top down; it behaves as if each path component gets a turn at being the
809724d7 2488 end of the filename. Even the unanchored "sub/foo" would match at
16e5de84
WD
2489 any point in the hierarchy where a "foo" was found within a directory
2490 named "sub". See the section on ANCHORING INCLUDE/EXCLUDE PATTERNS for
2491 a full discussion of how to specify a pattern that matches at the root
2492 of the transfer.
16e5de84 2493 it() if the pattern ends with a / then it will only match a
809724d7 2494 directory, not a regular file, symlink, or device.
9639c718
WD
2495 it() rsync chooses between doing a simple string match and wildcard
2496 matching by checking if the pattern contains one of these three wildcard
2497 characters: '*', '?', and '[' .
7fdb3bda 2498 it() a '*' matches any path component, but it stops at slashes.
9639c718
WD
2499 it() use '**' to match anything, including slashes.
2500 it() a '?' matches any character except a slash (/).
2501 it() a '[' introduces a character class, such as [a-z] or [[:alpha:]].
2502 it() in a wildcard pattern, a backslash can be used to escape a wildcard
2503 character, but it is matched literally when no wildcards are present.
2504 it() if the pattern contains a / (not counting a trailing /) or a "**",
16e5de84
WD
2505 then it is matched against the full pathname, including any leading
2506 directories. If the pattern doesn't contain a / or a "**", then it is
2507 matched only against the final component of the filename.
2508 (Remember that the algorithm is applied recursively so "full filename"
ae283632 2509 can actually be any portion of a path from the starting directory on
16e5de84 2510 down.)
d3db3eef 2511 it() a trailing "dir_name/***" will match both the directory (as if
809724d7 2512 "dir_name/" had been specified) and everything in the directory
c575f8ce
WD
2513 (as if "dir_name/**" had been specified). This behavior was added in
2514 version 2.6.7.
16e5de84
WD
2515)
2516
faa82484
WD
2517Note that, when using the bf(--recursive) (bf(-r)) option (which is implied by
2518bf(-a)), every subcomponent of every path is visited from the top down, so
16e5de84
WD
2519include/exclude patterns get applied recursively to each subcomponent's
2520full name (e.g. to include "/foo/bar/baz" the subcomponents "/foo" and
2521"/foo/bar" must not be excluded).
2522The exclude patterns actually short-circuit the directory traversal stage
2523when rsync finds the files to send. If a pattern excludes a particular
2524parent directory, it can render a deeper include pattern ineffectual
2525because rsync did not descend through that excluded section of the
2526hierarchy. This is particularly important when using a trailing '*' rule.
2527For instance, this won't work:
2528
faa82484
WD
2529quote(
2530tt(+ /some/path/this-file-will-not-be-found)nl()
2531tt(+ /file-is-included)nl()
2532tt(- *)nl()
16e5de84
WD
2533)
2534
2535This fails because the parent directory "some" is excluded by the '*'
2536rule, so rsync never visits any of the files in the "some" or "some/path"
2537directories. One solution is to ask for all directories in the hierarchy
a5a26484 2538to be included by using a single rule: "+ */" (put it somewhere before the
58718881
WD
2539"- *" rule), and perhaps use the bf(--prune-empty-dirs) option. Another
2540solution is to add specific include rules for all
16e5de84
WD
2541the parent dirs that need to be visited. For instance, this set of rules
2542works fine:
2543
faa82484
WD
2544quote(
2545tt(+ /some/)nl()
2546tt(+ /some/path/)nl()
2547tt(+ /some/path/this-file-is-found)nl()
2548tt(+ /file-also-included)nl()
2549tt(- *)nl()
16e5de84
WD
2550)
2551
2552Here are some examples of exclude/include matching:
2553
b8a6dae0 2554itemization(
809724d7 2555 it() "- *.o" would exclude all names matching *.o
58718881
WD
2556 it() "- /foo" would exclude a file (or directory) named foo in the
2557 transfer-root directory
2558 it() "- foo/" would exclude any directory named foo
2559 it() "- /foo/*/bar" would exclude any file named bar which is at two
2560 levels below a directory named foo in the transfer-root directory
2561 it() "- /foo/**/bar" would exclude any file named bar two
2562 or more levels below a directory named foo in the transfer-root directory
faa82484 2563 it() The combination of "+ */", "+ *.c", and "- *" would include all
58718881
WD
2564 directories and C source files but nothing else (see also the
2565 bf(--prune-empty-dirs) option)
16e5de84
WD
2566 it() The combination of "+ foo/", "+ foo/bar.c", and "- *" would include
2567 only the foo directory and foo/bar.c (the foo directory must be
2568 explicitly included or it would be excluded by the "*")
2569)
2570
2571manpagesection(MERGE-FILE FILTER RULES)
2572
2573You can merge whole files into your filter rules by specifying either a
d91de046
WD
2574merge (.) or a dir-merge (:) filter rule (as introduced in the FILTER RULES
2575section above).
16e5de84
WD
2576
2577There are two kinds of merged files -- single-instance ('.') and
2578per-directory (':'). A single-instance merge file is read one time, and
2579its rules are incorporated into the filter list in the place of the "."
2580rule. For per-directory merge files, rsync will scan every directory that
2581it traverses for the named file, merging its contents when the file exists
2582into the current list of inherited rules. These per-directory rule files
2583must be created on the sending side because it is the sending side that is
2584being scanned for the available files to transfer. These rule files may
2585also need to be transferred to the receiving side if you want them to
2586affect what files don't get deleted (see PER-DIRECTORY RULES AND DELETE
2587below).
2588
2589Some examples:
2590
faa82484 2591quote(
d91de046 2592tt(merge /etc/rsync/default.rules)nl()
faa82484 2593tt(. /etc/rsync/default.rules)nl()
d91de046
WD
2594tt(dir-merge .per-dir-filter)nl()
2595tt(dir-merge,n- .non-inherited-per-dir-excludes)nl()
faa82484 2596tt(:n- .non-inherited-per-dir-excludes)nl()
16e5de84
WD
2597)
2598
d91de046 2599The following modifiers are accepted after a merge or dir-merge rule:
16e5de84 2600
b8a6dae0 2601itemization(
62bf783f 2602 it() A bf(-) specifies that the file should consist of only exclude
d91de046 2603 patterns, with no other rule-parsing except for in-file comments.
62bf783f 2604 it() A bf(+) specifies that the file should consist of only include
d91de046
WD
2605 patterns, with no other rule-parsing except for in-file comments.
2606 it() A bf(C) is a way to specify that the file should be read in a
2607 CVS-compatible manner. This turns on 'n', 'w', and '-', but also
2608 allows the list-clearing token (!) to be specified. If no filename is
2609 provided, ".cvsignore" is assumed.
2610 it() A bf(e) will exclude the merge-file name from the transfer; e.g.
a5a26484 2611 "dir-merge,e .rules" is like "dir-merge .rules" and "- .rules".
62bf783f
WD
2612 it() An bf(n) specifies that the rules are not inherited by subdirectories.
2613 it() A bf(w) specifies that the rules are word-split on whitespace instead
16e5de84
WD
2614 of the normal line-splitting. This also turns off comments. Note: the
2615 space that separates the prefix from the rule is treated specially, so
d91de046
WD
2616 "- foo + bar" is parsed as two rules (assuming that prefix-parsing wasn't
2617 also disabled).
2618 it() You may also specify any of the modifiers for the "+" or "-" rules
467688dc 2619 (below) in order to have the rules that are read in from the file
a5a26484 2620 default to having that modifier set. For instance, "merge,-/ .excl" would
0dfffb88
WD
2621 treat the contents of .excl as absolute-path excludes,
2622 while "dir-merge,s .filt" and ":sC" would each make all their
5a727522 2623 per-directory rules apply only on the sending side.
16e5de84
WD
2624)
2625
44d60d5f 2626The following modifiers are accepted after a "+" or "-":
dc1488ae 2627
b8a6dae0 2628itemization(
c575f8ce 2629 it() A bf(/) specifies that the include/exclude rule should be matched
82360c6b 2630 against the absolute pathname of the current item. For example,
a5a26484 2631 "-/ /etc/passwd" would exclude the passwd file any time the transfer
82360c6b
WD
2632 was sending files from the "/etc" directory, and "-/ subdir/foo"
2633 would always exclude "foo" when it is in a dir named "subdir", even
2634 if "foo" is at the root of the current transfer.
c575f8ce 2635 it() A bf(!) specifies that the include/exclude should take effect if
44d60d5f
WD
2636 the pattern fails to match. For instance, "-! */" would exclude all
2637 non-directories.
397a3443
WD
2638 it() A bf(C) is used to indicate that all the global CVS-exclude rules
2639 should be inserted as excludes in place of the "-C". No arg should
2640 follow.
0dfffb88
WD
2641 it() An bf(s) is used to indicate that the rule applies to the sending
2642 side. When a rule affects the sending side, it prevents files from
2643 being transferred. The default is for a rule to affect both sides
2644 unless bf(--delete-excluded) was specified, in which case default rules
2645 become sender-side only. See also the hide (H) and show (S) rules,
5a727522 2646 which are an alternate way to specify sending-side includes/excludes.
0dfffb88
WD
2647 it() An bf(r) is used to indicate that the rule applies to the receiving
2648 side. When a rule affects the receiving side, it prevents files from
2649 being deleted. See the bf(s) modifier for more info. See also the
2650 protect (P) and risk (R) rules, which are an alternate way to
2651 specify receiver-side includes/excludes.
c575f8ce
WD
2652 it() A bf(p) indicates that a rule is perishable, meaning that it is
2653 ignored in directories that are being deleted. For instance, the bf(-C)
2654 option's default rules that exclude things like "CVS" and "*.o" are
2655 marked as perishable, and will not prevent a directory that was removed
2656 on the source from being deleted on the destination.
0dfffb88 2657)
dc1488ae 2658
16e5de84
WD
2659Per-directory rules are inherited in all subdirectories of the directory
2660where the merge-file was found unless the 'n' modifier was used. Each
2661subdirectory's rules are prefixed to the inherited per-directory rules
2662from its parents, which gives the newest rules a higher priority than the
d91de046 2663inherited rules. The entire set of dir-merge rules are grouped together in
16e5de84 2664the spot where the merge-file was specified, so it is possible to override
d91de046 2665dir-merge rules via a rule that got specified earlier in the list of global
16e5de84
WD
2666rules. When the list-clearing rule ("!") is read from a per-directory
2667file, it only clears the inherited rules for the current merge file.
2668
d91de046 2669Another way to prevent a single rule from a dir-merge file from being inherited is to
16e5de84
WD
2670anchor it with a leading slash. Anchored rules in a per-directory
2671merge-file are relative to the merge-file's directory, so a pattern "/foo"
d91de046 2672would only match the file "foo" in the directory where the dir-merge filter
16e5de84
WD
2673file was found.
2674
faa82484 2675Here's an example filter file which you'd specify via bf(--filter=". file":)
16e5de84 2676
faa82484 2677quote(
d91de046 2678tt(merge /home/user/.global-filter)nl()
faa82484 2679tt(- *.gz)nl()
d91de046 2680tt(dir-merge .rules)nl()
faa82484
WD
2681tt(+ *.[ch])nl()
2682tt(- *.o)nl()
16e5de84
WD
2683)
2684
2685This will merge the contents of the /home/user/.global-filter file at the
2686start of the list and also turns the ".rules" filename into a per-directory
467688dc 2687filter file. All rules read in prior to the start of the directory scan
16e5de84
WD
2688follow the global anchoring rules (i.e. a leading slash matches at the root
2689of the transfer).
2690
2691If a per-directory merge-file is specified with a path that is a parent
2692directory of the first transfer directory, rsync will scan all the parent
2693dirs from that starting point to the transfer directory for the indicated
faa82484 2694per-directory file. For instance, here is a common filter (see bf(-F)):
16e5de84 2695
faa82484 2696quote(tt(--filter=': /.rsync-filter'))
16e5de84
WD
2697
2698That rule tells rsync to scan for the file .rsync-filter in all
2699directories from the root down through the parent directory of the
2700transfer prior to the start of the normal directory scan of the file in
2701the directories that are sent as a part of the transfer. (Note: for an
2702rsync daemon, the root is always the same as the module's "path".)
2703
2704Some examples of this pre-scanning for per-directory files:
2705
faa82484
WD
2706quote(
2707tt(rsync -avF /src/path/ /dest/dir)nl()
2708tt(rsync -av --filter=': ../../.rsync-filter' /src/path/ /dest/dir)nl()
2709tt(rsync -av --filter=': .rsync-filter' /src/path/ /dest/dir)nl()
16e5de84
WD
2710)
2711
2712The first two commands above will look for ".rsync-filter" in "/" and
2713"/src" before the normal scan begins looking for the file in "/src/path"
2714and its subdirectories. The last command avoids the parent-dir scan
2715and only looks for the ".rsync-filter" files in each directory that is
2716a part of the transfer.
2717
2718If you want to include the contents of a ".cvsignore" in your patterns,
d91de046
WD
2719you should use the rule ":C", which creates a dir-merge of the .cvsignore
2720file, but parsed in a CVS-compatible manner. You can
faa82484 2721use this to affect where the bf(--cvs-exclude) (bf(-C)) option's inclusion of the
d91de046 2722per-directory .cvsignore file gets placed into your rules by putting the
16e5de84 2723":C" wherever you like in your filter rules. Without this, rsync would
d91de046 2724add the dir-merge rule for the .cvsignore file at the end of all your other
16e5de84
WD
2725rules (giving it a lower priority than your command-line rules). For
2726example:
2727
faa82484
WD
2728quote(
2729tt(cat <<EOT | rsync -avC --filter='. -' a/ b)nl()
2730tt(+ foo.o)nl()
2731tt(:C)nl()
2732tt(- *.old)nl()
2733tt(EOT)nl()
2734tt(rsync -avC --include=foo.o -f :C --exclude='*.old' a/ b)nl()
16e5de84
WD
2735)
2736
2737Both of the above rsync commands are identical. Each one will merge all
2738the per-directory .cvsignore rules in the middle of the list rather than
2739at the end. This allows their dir-specific rules to supersede the rules
bafa4875
WD
2740that follow the :C instead of being subservient to all your rules. To
2741affect the other CVS exclude rules (i.e. the default list of exclusions,
2742the contents of $HOME/.cvsignore, and the value of $CVSIGNORE) you should
2743omit the bf(-C) command-line option and instead insert a "-C" rule into
4743f0f4 2744your filter rules; e.g. "bf(--filter=-C)".
16e5de84
WD
2745
2746manpagesection(LIST-CLEARING FILTER RULE)
2747
2748You can clear the current include/exclude list by using the "!" filter
2749rule (as introduced in the FILTER RULES section above). The "current"
2750list is either the global list of rules (if the rule is encountered while
2751parsing the filter options) or a set of per-directory rules (which are
2752inherited in their own sub-list, so a subdirectory can use this to clear
2753out the parent's rules).
2754
2755manpagesection(ANCHORING INCLUDE/EXCLUDE PATTERNS)
2756
2757As mentioned earlier, global include/exclude patterns are anchored at the
2758"root of the transfer" (as opposed to per-directory patterns, which are
2759anchored at the merge-file's directory). If you think of the transfer as
2760a subtree of names that are being sent from sender to receiver, the
2761transfer-root is where the tree starts to be duplicated in the destination
2762directory. This root governs where patterns that start with a / match.
a4b6f305
WD
2763
2764Because the matching is relative to the transfer-root, changing the
faa82484 2765trailing slash on a source path or changing your use of the bf(--relative)
a4b6f305
WD
2766option affects the path you need to use in your matching (in addition to
2767changing how much of the file tree is duplicated on the destination
16e5de84 2768host). The following examples demonstrate this.
a4b6f305 2769
b5ebe6d9
WD
2770Let's say that we want to match two source files, one with an absolute
2771path of "/home/me/foo/bar", and one with a path of "/home/you/bar/baz".
2772Here is how the various command choices differ for a 2-source transfer:
a4b6f305 2773
faa82484
WD
2774quote(
2775 Example cmd: rsync -a /home/me /home/you /dest nl()
2776 +/- pattern: /me/foo/bar nl()
2777 +/- pattern: /you/bar/baz nl()
2778 Target file: /dest/me/foo/bar nl()
2779 Target file: /dest/you/bar/baz nl()
2780)
2781
2782quote(
2783 Example cmd: rsync -a /home/me/ /home/you/ /dest nl()
2784 +/- pattern: /foo/bar (note missing "me") nl()
2785 +/- pattern: /bar/baz (note missing "you") nl()
2786 Target file: /dest/foo/bar nl()
2787 Target file: /dest/bar/baz nl()
2788)
2789
2790quote(
2791 Example cmd: rsync -a --relative /home/me/ /home/you /dest nl()
2792 +/- pattern: /home/me/foo/bar (note full path) nl()
2793 +/- pattern: /home/you/bar/baz (ditto) nl()
2794 Target file: /dest/home/me/foo/bar nl()
2795 Target file: /dest/home/you/bar/baz nl()
2796)
2797
2798quote(
2799 Example cmd: cd /home; rsync -a --relative me/foo you/ /dest nl()
2800 +/- pattern: /me/foo/bar (starts at specified path) nl()
2801 +/- pattern: /you/bar/baz (ditto) nl()
2802 Target file: /dest/me/foo/bar nl()
2803 Target file: /dest/you/bar/baz nl()
a4b6f305
WD
2804)
2805
16e5de84 2806The easiest way to see what name you should filter is to just
faa82484
WD
2807look at the output when using bf(--verbose) and put a / in front of the name
2808(use the bf(--dry-run) option if you're not yet ready to copy any files).
d1cce1dd 2809
16e5de84 2810manpagesection(PER-DIRECTORY RULES AND DELETE)
43bd68e5 2811
16e5de84
WD
2812Without a delete option, per-directory rules are only relevant on the
2813sending side, so you can feel free to exclude the merge files themselves
2814without affecting the transfer. To make this easy, the 'e' modifier adds
2815this exclude for you, as seen in these two equivalent commands:
27b9a19b 2816
faa82484
WD
2817quote(
2818tt(rsync -av --filter=': .excl' --exclude=.excl host:src/dir /dest)nl()
2819tt(rsync -av --filter=':e .excl' host:src/dir /dest)nl()
43bd68e5
AT
2820)
2821
16e5de84
WD
2822However, if you want to do a delete on the receiving side AND you want some
2823files to be excluded from being deleted, you'll need to be sure that the
2824receiving side knows what files to exclude. The easiest way is to include
faa82484 2825the per-directory merge files in the transfer and use bf(--delete-after),
16e5de84
WD
2826because this ensures that the receiving side gets all the same exclude
2827rules as the sending side before it tries to delete anything:
43bd68e5 2828
faa82484 2829quote(tt(rsync -avF --delete-after host:src/dir /dest))
20af605e 2830
16e5de84
WD
2831However, if the merge files are not a part of the transfer, you'll need to
2832either specify some global exclude rules (i.e. specified on the command
2833line), or you'll need to maintain your own per-directory merge files on
2834the receiving side. An example of the first is this (assume that the
2835remote .rules files exclude themselves):
20af605e 2836
faa82484
WD
2837verb(rsync -av --filter=': .rules' --filter='. /my/extra.rules'
2838 --delete host:src/dir /dest)
20af605e 2839
16e5de84
WD
2840In the above example the extra.rules file can affect both sides of the
2841transfer, but (on the sending side) the rules are subservient to the rules
2842merged from the .rules files because they were specified after the
2843per-directory merge rule.
43bd68e5 2844
16e5de84
WD
2845In one final example, the remote side is excluding the .rsync-filter
2846files from the transfer, but we want to use our own .rsync-filter files
2847to control what gets deleted on the receiving side. To do this we must
2848specifically exclude the per-directory merge files (so that they don't get
2849deleted) and then put rules into the local files to control what else
2850should not get deleted. Like one of these commands:
2851
faa82484
WD
2852verb( rsync -av --filter=':e /.rsync-filter' --delete \
2853 host:src/dir /dest
2854 rsync -avFF --delete host:src/dir /dest)
43bd68e5 2855
6902ed17
MP
2856manpagesection(BATCH MODE)
2857
088aac85
DD
2858Batch mode can be used to apply the same set of updates to many
2859identical systems. Suppose one has a tree which is replicated on a
2860number of hosts. Now suppose some changes have been made to this
2861source tree and those changes need to be propagated to the other
2862hosts. In order to do this using batch mode, rsync is run with the
2863write-batch option to apply the changes made to the source tree to one
2864of the destination trees. The write-batch option causes the rsync
b9f592fb
WD
2865client to store in a "batch file" all the information needed to repeat
2866this operation against other, identical destination trees.
2867
b9f592fb
WD
2868Generating the batch file once saves having to perform the file
2869status, checksum, and data block generation more than once when
088aac85 2870updating multiple destination trees. Multicast transport protocols can
b9f592fb
WD
2871be used to transfer the batch update files in parallel to many hosts
2872at once, instead of sending the same data to every host individually.
088aac85 2873
7f2591ea
WD
2874To apply the recorded changes to another destination tree, run rsync
2875with the read-batch option, specifying the name of the same batch
2876file, and the destination tree. Rsync updates the destination tree
2877using the information stored in the batch file.
2878
2879For your convenience, a script file is also created when the write-batch
2880option is used: it will be named the same as the batch file with ".sh"
2881appended. This script file contains a command-line suitable for updating a
2882destination tree using the associated batch file. It can be executed using
2883a Bourne (or Bourne-like) shell, optionally passing in an alternate
2884destination tree pathname which is then used instead of the original
2885destination path. This is useful when the destination tree path on the
2886current host differs from the one used to create the batch file.
2887
4602eafa 2888Examples:
088aac85 2889
faa82484
WD
2890quote(
2891tt($ rsync --write-batch=foo -a host:/source/dir/ /adest/dir/)nl()
2892tt($ scp foo* remote:)nl()
2893tt($ ssh remote ./foo.sh /bdest/dir/)nl()
4602eafa
WD
2894)
2895
faa82484
WD
2896quote(
2897tt($ rsync --write-batch=foo -a /source/dir/ /adest/dir/)nl()
2898tt($ ssh remote rsync --read-batch=- -a /bdest/dir/ <foo)nl()
4602eafa
WD
2899)
2900
98f51bfb
WD
2901In these examples, rsync is used to update /adest/dir/ from /source/dir/
2902and the information to repeat this operation is stored in "foo" and
2903"foo.sh". The host "remote" is then updated with the batched data going
2904into the directory /bdest/dir. The differences between the two examples
2905reveals some of the flexibility you have in how you deal with batches:
2906
b8a6dae0 2907itemization(
98f51bfb
WD
2908 it() The first example shows that the initial copy doesn't have to be
2909 local -- you can push or pull data to/from a remote host using either the
2910 remote-shell syntax or rsync daemon syntax, as desired.
98f51bfb
WD
2911 it() The first example uses the created "foo.sh" file to get the right
2912 rsync options when running the read-batch command on the remote host.
98f51bfb
WD
2913 it() The second example reads the batch data via standard input so that
2914 the batch file doesn't need to be copied to the remote machine first.
2915 This example avoids the foo.sh script because it needed to use a modified
faa82484 2916 bf(--read-batch) option, but you could edit the script file if you wished to
98f51bfb 2917 make use of it (just be sure that no other option is trying to use
faa82484 2918 standard input, such as the "bf(--exclude-from=-)" option).
98f51bfb 2919)
088aac85
DD
2920
2921Caveats:
2922
98f51bfb 2923The read-batch option expects the destination tree that it is updating
088aac85
DD
2924to be identical to the destination tree that was used to create the
2925batch update fileset. When a difference between the destination trees
0b941479 2926is encountered the update might be discarded with a warning (if the file
7432ccf4
WD
2927appears to be up-to-date already) or the file-update may be attempted
2928and then, if the file fails to verify, the update discarded with an
2929error. This means that it should be safe to re-run a read-batch operation
59d73bf3 2930if the command got interrupted. If you wish to force the batched-update to
faa82484 2931always be attempted regardless of the file's size and date, use the bf(-I)
59d73bf3
WD
2932option (when reading the batch).
2933If an error occurs, the destination tree will probably be in a
7432ccf4 2934partially updated state. In that case, rsync can
088aac85
DD
2935be used in its regular (non-batch) mode of operation to fix up the
2936destination tree.
2937
b9f592fb 2938The rsync version used on all destinations must be at least as new as the
59d73bf3
WD
2939one used to generate the batch file. Rsync will die with an error if the
2940protocol version in the batch file is too new for the batch-reading rsync
0b941479
WD
2941to handle. See also the bf(--protocol) option for a way to have the
2942creating rsync generate a batch file that an older rsync can understand.
2943(Note that batch files changed format in version 2.6.3, so mixing versions
2944older than that with newer versions will not work.)
088aac85 2945
7432ccf4
WD
2946When reading a batch file, rsync will force the value of certain options
2947to match the data in the batch file if you didn't set them to the same
2948as the batch-writing command. Other options can (and should) be changed.
bb5f4e72
WD
2949For instance bf(--write-batch) changes to bf(--read-batch),
2950bf(--files-from) is dropped, and the
2951bf(--filter)/bf(--include)/bf(--exclude) options are not needed unless
2952one of the bf(--delete) options is specified.
b9f592fb 2953
faa82484 2954The code that creates the BATCH.sh file transforms any filter/include/exclude
98f51bfb
WD
2955options into a single list that is appended as a "here" document to the
2956shell script file. An advanced user can use this to modify the exclude
faa82484 2957list if a change in what gets deleted by bf(--delete) is desired. A normal
98f51bfb 2958user can ignore this detail and just use the shell script as an easy way
faa82484 2959to run the appropriate bf(--read-batch) command for the batched data.
98f51bfb 2960
59d73bf3
WD
2961The original batch mode in rsync was based on "rsync+", but the latest
2962version uses a new implementation.
6902ed17 2963
eb06fa95
MP
2964manpagesection(SYMBOLIC LINKS)
2965
f28bd833 2966Three basic behaviors are possible when rsync encounters a symbolic
eb06fa95
MP
2967link in the source directory.
2968
2969By default, symbolic links are not transferred at all. A message
2970"skipping non-regular" file is emitted for any symlinks that exist.
2971
2972If bf(--links) is specified, then symlinks are recreated with the same
2973target on the destination. Note that bf(--archive) implies
2974bf(--links).
2975
2976If bf(--copy-links) is specified, then symlinks are "collapsed" by
2977copying their referent, rather than the symlink.
2978
2979rsync also distinguishes "safe" and "unsafe" symbolic links. An
2980example where this might be used is a web site mirror that wishes
2981ensure the rsync module they copy does not include symbolic links to
2982bf(/etc/passwd) in the public section of the site. Using
2983bf(--copy-unsafe-links) will cause any links to be copied as the file
2984they point to on the destination. Using bf(--safe-links) will cause
6efe9416
WD
2985unsafe links to be omitted altogether. (Note that you must specify
2986bf(--links) for bf(--safe-links) to have any effect.)
eb06fa95 2987
7bd0cf5b 2988Symbolic links are considered unsafe if they are absolute symlinks
4743f0f4 2989(start with bf(/)), empty, or if they contain enough ".."
7bd0cf5b
MP
2990components to ascend from the directory being copied.
2991
6efe9416
WD
2992Here's a summary of how the symlink options are interpreted. The list is
2993in order of precedence, so if your combination of options isn't mentioned,
2994use the first line that is a complete subset of your options:
2995
2996dit(bf(--copy-links)) Turn all symlinks into normal files (leaving no
2997symlinks for any other options to affect).
2998
2999dit(bf(--links --copy-unsafe-links)) Turn all unsafe symlinks into files
3000and duplicate all safe symlinks.
3001
3002dit(bf(--copy-unsafe-links)) Turn all unsafe symlinks into files, noisily
3003skip all safe symlinks.
3004
02184920 3005dit(bf(--links --safe-links)) Duplicate safe symlinks and skip unsafe
6efe9416
WD
3006ones.
3007
3008dit(bf(--links)) Duplicate all symlinks.
3009
faa82484 3010manpagediagnostics()
d310a212 3011
14d43f1f 3012rsync occasionally produces error messages that may seem a little
d310a212 3013cryptic. The one that seems to cause the most confusion is "protocol
faa82484 3014version mismatch -- is your shell clean?".
d310a212
AT
3015
3016This message is usually caused by your startup scripts or remote shell
3017facility producing unwanted garbage on the stream that rsync is using
14d43f1f 3018for its transport. The way to diagnose this problem is to run your
d310a212
AT
3019remote shell like this:
3020
faa82484
WD
3021quote(tt(ssh remotehost /bin/true > out.dat))
3022
d310a212 3023then look at out.dat. If everything is working correctly then out.dat
2cfeab21 3024should be a zero length file. If you are getting the above error from
d310a212
AT
3025rsync then you will probably find that out.dat contains some text or
3026data. Look at the contents and try to work out what is producing
14d43f1f 3027it. The most common cause is incorrectly configured shell startup
d310a212
AT
3028scripts (such as .cshrc or .profile) that contain output statements
3029for non-interactive logins.
3030
16e5de84 3031If you are having trouble debugging filter patterns, then
faa82484 3032try specifying the bf(-vv) option. At this level of verbosity rsync will
e6c64e79
MP
3033show why each individual file is included or excluded.
3034
55b64e4b
MP
3035manpagesection(EXIT VALUES)
3036
3037startdit()
a73de5f3 3038dit(bf(0)) Success
faa82484
WD
3039dit(bf(1)) Syntax or usage error
3040dit(bf(2)) Protocol incompatibility
a73de5f3
WD
3041dit(bf(3)) Errors selecting input/output files, dirs
3042dit(bf(4)) Requested action not supported: an attempt
8212336a 3043was made to manipulate 64-bit files on a platform that cannot support
f28bd833 3044them; or an option was specified that is supported by the client and
8212336a 3045not by the server.
a73de5f3 3046dit(bf(5)) Error starting client-server protocol
124f349e 3047dit(bf(6)) Daemon unable to append to log-file
faa82484
WD
3048dit(bf(10)) Error in socket I/O
3049dit(bf(11)) Error in file I/O
3050dit(bf(12)) Error in rsync protocol data stream
3051dit(bf(13)) Errors with program diagnostics
3052dit(bf(14)) Error in IPC code
3053dit(bf(20)) Received SIGUSR1 or SIGINT
49f4cfdf 3054dit(bf(21)) Some error returned by code(waitpid())
faa82484 3055dit(bf(22)) Error allocating core memory buffers
3c1e2ad9
WD
3056dit(bf(23)) Partial transfer due to error
3057dit(bf(24)) Partial transfer due to vanished source files
124f349e 3058dit(bf(25)) The --max-delete limit stopped deletions
faa82484 3059dit(bf(30)) Timeout in data send/receive
ba22c9e2 3060dit(bf(35)) Timeout waiting for daemon connection
55b64e4b
MP
3061enddit()
3062
de2fd20e
AT
3063manpagesection(ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES)
3064
3065startdit()
de2fd20e 3066dit(bf(CVSIGNORE)) The CVSIGNORE environment variable supplements any
faa82484 3067ignore patterns in .cvsignore files. See the bf(--cvs-exclude) option for
de2fd20e 3068more details.
332cf6df
WD
3069dit(bf(RSYNC_ICONV)) Specify a default bf(--iconv) setting using this
3070environment variable.
de2fd20e 3071dit(bf(RSYNC_RSH)) The RSYNC_RSH environment variable allows you to
ea7f8108 3072override the default shell used as the transport for rsync. Command line
faa82484 3073options are permitted after the command name, just as in the bf(-e) option.
4c3b4b25
AT
3074dit(bf(RSYNC_PROXY)) The RSYNC_PROXY environment variable allows you to
3075redirect your rsync client to use a web proxy when connecting to a
3076rsync daemon. You should set RSYNC_PROXY to a hostname:port pair.
de2fd20e 3077dit(bf(RSYNC_PASSWORD)) Setting RSYNC_PASSWORD to the required
bb18e755 3078password allows you to run authenticated rsync connections to an rsync
de2fd20e 3079daemon without user intervention. Note that this does not supply a
b2057d38
WD
3080password to a remote shell transport such as ssh; to learn how to do that,
3081consult the remote shell's documentation.
de2fd20e 3082dit(bf(USER) or bf(LOGNAME)) The USER or LOGNAME environment variables
5a727522 3083are used to determine the default username sent to an rsync daemon.
4b2f6a7c 3084If neither is set, the username defaults to "nobody".
14d43f1f 3085dit(bf(HOME)) The HOME environment variable is used to find the user's
de2fd20e 3086default .cvsignore file.
de2fd20e
AT
3087enddit()
3088
41059f75
AT
3089manpagefiles()
3090
30e8c8e1 3091/etc/rsyncd.conf or rsyncd.conf
41059f75
AT
3092
3093manpageseealso()
3094
49f4cfdf 3095bf(rsyncd.conf)(5)
41059f75 3096
41059f75
AT
3097manpagebugs()
3098
02184920 3099times are transferred as *nix time_t values
41059f75 3100
f28bd833 3101When transferring to FAT filesystems rsync may re-sync
38843171 3102unmodified files.
faa82484 3103See the comments on the bf(--modify-window) option.
38843171 3104
b5accaba 3105file permissions, devices, etc. are transferred as native numerical
41059f75
AT
3106values
3107
faa82484 3108see also the comments on the bf(--delete) option
41059f75 3109
b553a3dd 3110Please report bugs! See the web site at
38843171 3111url(http://rsync.samba.org/)(http://rsync.samba.org/)
41059f75 3112
15997547
WD
3113manpagesection(VERSION)
3114
db8f3f73 3115This man page is current for version 3.0.3 of rsync.
15997547 3116
4e0bf977
WD
3117manpagesection(INTERNAL OPTIONS)
3118
3119The options bf(--server) and bf(--sender) are used internally by rsync,
3120and should never be typed by a user under normal circumstances. Some
3121awareness of these options may be needed in certain scenarios, such as
3122when setting up a login that can only run an rsync command. For instance,
3123the support directory of the rsync distribution has an example script
3124named rrsync (for restricted rsync) that can be used with a restricted
3125ssh login.
3126
41059f75
AT
3127manpagesection(CREDITS)
3128
3129rsync is distributed under the GNU public license. See the file
3130COPYING for details.
3131
41059f75 3132A WEB site is available at
3cd5eb3b
MP
3133url(http://rsync.samba.org/)(http://rsync.samba.org/). The site
3134includes an FAQ-O-Matic which may cover questions unanswered by this
3135manual page.
9e3c856a
AT
3136
3137The primary ftp site for rsync is
3138url(ftp://rsync.samba.org/pub/rsync)(ftp://rsync.samba.org/pub/rsync).
41059f75
AT
3139
3140We would be delighted to hear from you if you like this program.
03646b49 3141Please contact the mailing-list at rsync@lists.samba.org.
41059f75 3142
9e3c856a
AT
3143This program uses the excellent zlib compression library written by
3144Jean-loup Gailly and Mark Adler.
41059f75
AT
3145
3146manpagesection(THANKS)
3147
03646b49
WD
3148Especial thanks go out to: John Van Essen, Matt McCutchen, Wesley W. Terpstra,
3149David Dykstra, Jos Backus, Sebastian Krahmer, Martin Pool, and our
3150gone-but-not-forgotten compadre, J.W. Schultz.
7ff701e8 3151
03646b49
WD
3152Thanks also to Richard Brent, Brendan Mackay, Bill Waite, Stephen Rothwell
3153and David Bell. I've probably missed some people, my apologies if I have.
41059f75
AT
3154
3155manpageauthor()
3156
ce5f2732 3157rsync was originally written by Andrew Tridgell and Paul Mackerras.
03646b49
WD
3158Many people have later contributed to it. It is currently maintained
3159by Wayne Davison.
3cd5eb3b 3160
a5d74a18 3161Mailing lists for support and development are available at
faa82484 3162url(http://lists.samba.org)(lists.samba.org)