- Moved file-deletion code into generator.c.
[rsync/rsync.git] / NEWS
... / ...
CommitLineData
1NEWS for rsync 2.6.4 (UNRELEASED)
2Protocol: 29 (changed)
3Changes since 2.6.3:
4
5 OUTPUT CHANGES:
6
7 - When rsync deletes a directory and outputs a verbose message about
8 it, it now appends a trailing slash to the name instead of (only
9 sometimes) outputting a preceding "directory " string.
10
11 - The --stats output will contain file-list time-statistics if both
12 sides are 2.6.4, or if the local side is 2.6.4 and the files are
13 being pushed (since the stats come from the sending side).
14 (Requires protocol 29 for a pull.)
15
16 - The "%o" (operation) log-format escape now has a third value (besides
17 "send" and "recv"): "del." (with trailing dot to make it 4 chars).
18 This changes the way deletions are logged in the daemon's log file.
19
20 - When the --log-format option is combined with --verbose, rsync now
21 avoids outputting the name of the file twice in most circumstances.
22 As long as the --log-format item does not refer to any post-transfer
23 items (such as %b or %c), the --log-format message is output prior to
24 the transfer with --verbose being the equivalent of a --log-format of
25 '%n%L' (which outputs the name and any symlink info). If the log
26 output must occur after the transfer to be complete, the only time
27 the name is also output prior to the transfer is when --progress was
28 specified (so that the name will precede the progress stats, and the
29 full --log-format output will come after).
30
31 BUG FIXES:
32
33 - Restore the list-clearing behavior of "!" in a .cvsignore file (2.6.3
34 was only treating it as a special token in an rsync include/exclude
35 file).
36
37 - The combination of --verbose and --dry-run now mentions the full list
38 of changes that would be output without --dry-run.
39
40 - Avoid a mkdir warning when removing a directory in the destination
41 that already exists in the --backup-dir.
42
43 - An OS that has a binary mode for its files (such as cygwin) needed
44 setmode(fd, O_BINARY) called on the temp-file we opened with
45 mkstemp(). (Fix derived from the cygwin's 2.6.3 rsync package.)
46
47 - Fixed a potential hang when verbosity is high, the client side is
48 the sender, and the file-list is large.
49
50 - We now check if the OS doesn't support using mknod() for creating
51 FIFOs and sockets, and compile-in using mkfifo() and socket() when
52 necessary.
53
54 - Fixed an off-by-one error in the handling of --max-delete=N.
55
56 - One place in the code wasn't checking if fork() failed.
57
58 - The "ignore nonreadable" daemon parameter used to erroneously affect
59 symlinks that pointed to a non-existent file. This has been fixed.
60
61 - If the OS does not have lchown() and a chown() of a symlink will
62 affect the referent of a symlink (as it should), we no longer try
63 to set the user and group of a symlink.
64
65 - The generator now properly runs the hard-link loop and the dir-time
66 rewriting loop after we're sure that the redo phase is complete.
67
68 - When --backup was specified with --partial-dir=DIR (where DIR is a
69 relative path), the backup code was erroneously trying to backup a
70 file that was put into the partial-dir.
71
72 - One call to flush_write_file() was not being checked for an error.
73
74 - The --no-relative option was not being sent from the client to a
75 server sender.
76
77 - If an rsync daemon specified "dont compress = ..." for a file and the
78 client tried to specify --compress, the libz code was not handling a
79 compression level of 0 properly. This could cause a transfer failure
80 if the block-size for a file was large enough (e.g. rsync might have
81 exited with an error for large files).
82
83 - Fixed a bug that would sometimes surface when using --compress and
84 sending a file with a block-size larger than 64K (either manually
85 specified, or computed due to the file being really large). Prior
86 versions of rsync would sometimes fail to decompress the data
87 properly, and thus the transferred file would fail its verification.
88
89 - If a daemon can't open the specified log file (i.e. syslog is not
90 being used), die without crashing. We also output an error about
91 the failure on stderr (which will only be seen if --no-detach was
92 specified).
93
94 - A local transfer no longer duplicates all its include/exclude options
95 (since the forked process already has a copy of the exclude list,
96 there's no need to send them a set of duplicates).
97
98 - When --progress is specified, the output of items that the generator
99 is creating (e.g. dirs, symlinks) is now integrated into the progress
100 output without overlapping it. (Requires protocol 29.)
101
102 ENHANCEMENTS:
103
104 - Rsync now supports popt's option aliases, which means that you can
105 use /etc/popt and/or ~/.popt to create your own option aliases.
106
107 - Added the --delete-during (--del) option which will delete files
108 from the receiving side incrementally as each directory in the
109 transfer is being processed. This makes it more efficient than the
110 default, before-the-transfer behavior, which is now available as
111 --delete-before (and is still the default --delete-WHEN option that
112 will be chosen if --delete or --delete-excluded is specified without
113 a --delete-WHEN choice). All the --del* options infer --delete, so
114 an rsync daemon that refuses "delete" will still refuse to allow any
115 file-deleting options.
116
117 - All the --delete-WHEN options are now more memory efficient:
118 Previously an entire duplicate set of file-list objects was created
119 on the receiving side for the entire destination hierarchy. The new
120 algorithm only creates one directory of objects at a time (for files
121 inside the transfer).
122
123 - Added support for specifying multiple --compare-dest or --link-dest
124 options, but only of a single type. (Promoted from the patches dir
125 and enhanced.)
126
127 - Added the --max-size option. (Promoted from the patches dir.)
128
129 - The daemon-mode options were separated from the normal rsync options
130 so that they can't be mixed together. This makes it impossible to
131 start a daemon that had improper default option values that could
132 cause problems when a client connects (e.g. a hang or an abort).
133
134 - The --bwlimit option may now be used in combination with --daemon
135 to specify both a default value for the daemon side and a value
136 that cannot be exceeded by a user-specified --bwlimit option.
137
138 - Added the "port" parameter to the rsyncd.conf file. (Promoted from
139 the patches dir.) Also added "address". A command-line option
140 will take precedence over a config-file option, as expected.
141
142 - In _exit_cleanup(): when we are exiting with a partially-received
143 file, we now flush any data in the write-cache before closing the
144 partial file.
145
146 - The --inplace support was enhanced to work with --compare-dest and
147 --link-dest. (Requires protocol 29.)
148
149 - Added the --dirs (-d) option for an easier way to copy directories
150 without recursion.
151
152 - Added the --list-only option, which is mainly a way for the client to
153 put the server into listing mode without needing to resort to any
154 internal option kluges (e.g. the age-old use of "-r --exclude="/*/*"
155 for a non-recursive listing). This option is used automatically
156 (behind the scenes) when a modern rsync speaks to a modern daemon,
157 but may also be specified manually if you want to force the use of
158 the --list-only option over a remote-shell connection.
159
160 - Added the --omit-dir-times (-O) option, which will avoid updating
161 the modified time for directories when --times was specified. This
162 option will avoid an extra pass through the file-list at the end of
163 the transfer (to tweak all the directory times), which can result in
164 an appreciable speedup for a really large transfer. (Promoted from
165 the patches dir.)
166
167 - Added the --filter (-f) option and its helper option, -F. Filter
168 rules are an extension to the existing include/exclude handling
169 that also supports nested filter files as well as per-directory
170 filter files (like .cvsignore, but with full filter-rule parsing).
171 This new option was chosen in order to ensure that all existing
172 include/exclude processing remained 100% compatible with older
173 versions. Protocol 29 is needed for full filter-rule support, but
174 backward-compatible rules work with earlier protocol versions.
175 (Promoted from the patches dir and enhanced.)
176
177 - Added the --delay-updates option that puts all updated files into
178 a temporary directory (by default ".~tmp~", but settable via the
179 --partial-dir=DIR option) until the end of the transfer. This
180 makes the updates a little more atomic for a large transfer.
181
182 - If rsync is put into the background, any output from --progress is
183 reduced.
184
185 - Documented the "max verbosity" setting for rsyncd.conf. (This
186 setting was added a couple releases ago, but left undocumented.)
187
188 - The sender and the generator now double-check the file-list index
189 they are given, and refuse to try to do a file transfer on a
190 non-file index (since that would indicate that something had gone
191 very wrong).
192
193 - Added the --itemize-changes (-i) option, which is a way to output a
194 more detailed list of what files changed in any way and how they
195 changed. The effect is the same as specifying a --log-format of
196 "%i %n%L" (see the rsyncd.conf manpage). Works with --dry-run too.
197
198 - Added the --fuzzy option, which attempts to find a basis file for a
199 file that is being created from scratch. The current algorithm
200 only looks in the destination directory for the created file, but
201 it does attempt to find a match based on size/mod-time (in case the
202 file was renamed with no other changes) as well as based on a fuzzy
203 name-matching algorithm. This option requires protocol 29 because
204 it needs the new file-sorting order. (Promoted from patches dir
205 and enhanced.)
206
207 - Added the --remove-sent-files option, which lets you move files
208 between systems.
209
210 - When building under windows, the default for --daemon is now to
211 avoid detaching, requiring the new --detach option to force rsync
212 to detach.
213
214 - Improved the option descriptions in the --help text.
215
216 SUPPORT FILES:
217
218 - Added atomic-rsync to the support dir: a perl script that will
219 transfer some files using rsync, and then move the updated files into
220 place all at once at the end of the transfer. Only works when
221 pulling, and uses --link-dest and a parallel hierarchy of files to
222 effect its update.
223
224 - Added mnt-excl to the support dir: a perl script that takes the
225 /proc/mounts file and translates it into a set of excludes that will
226 exclude all mount points (even mapped mounts to the same disk). The
227 excludes are made relative to the specified source dir and properly
228 anchored.
229
230 - Added savetransfer.c to the support dir: a C program that can make
231 a copy of all the data that flows over the wire. This lets you test
232 for data corruption (by saving the data on both the sending side and
233 the receiving side) or provides a way to help debug a protocol error.
234
235 - Added rrsync to the support dir: this is my version of Joe Smith's
236 restricted rsync perl script. This helps to ensure that only certain
237 rsync commands can be run by an ssh invocation.
238
239 INTERNAL:
240
241 - Added better checking of the checksum-header values that come over
242 the socket.
243
244 - Merged a variety of file-deleting functions into a single function so
245 that it is easier to maintain.
246
247 - Improved the type of some variables (particularly blocksize vars) for
248 consistency and proper size.
249
250 - Got rid of the uint64 type (which we didn't need).
251
252 - Use a slightly more compatible set of core #include directives.
253
254 - Defined int32 in a way that ensures that the build dies if we can't
255 find a variable with at least 32 bits.
256
257 - The daemon's "read only" config item now sets an internal read_only
258 variable that makes extra sure that no write/delete calls on the
259 read-only side can succeed.
260
261 PROTOCOL DIFFERENCES FOR VERSION 29:
262
263 - A 16-bit flag-word is transmitted after every file-list index. This
264 indicates what is changing between the sender and the receiver. The
265 generator now transmits an index and a flag-word to indicate when
266 dirs and symlinks have changed (instead of producing a message),
267 which makes the outputting of the information more consistent and
268 less prone to screen corruption (because either the receiver or the
269 sender is now outputting all the file-change info).
270
271 - If --inplace is specified, the generator flags any transfer that is
272 using an alternate basis file so that the sender can use the entire
273 file in the rsync algorithm (unlike a normal --inplace update).
274
275 - The sending of exclude names is done using filter-rule syntax. This
276 means that all names have a prefixed rule indicator, even excludes
277 (which used to be sent as a bare pattern, when possible). The -C
278 option will include the per-dir .cvsignore merge file in the list of
279 filter rules so it is positioned correctly (unlike in some older
280 transfer scenarios).
281
282 - Rsync sorts the filename list in a different way: it sorts the subdir
283 names after the non-subdir names for each dir's contents, and it
284 always puts a dir's contents immediately after the dir's name in the
285 list. (Previously an item named "foo.txt" would sort in between
286 directory "foo/" and "foo/bar".)
287
288 - When talking to a protocol 29 rsync daemon, a list-only request
289 is able to note this before the options are sent over the wire and
290 the new --list-only option is included in the options.
291
292 - When the --stats bytes are sent over the wire (or stored in a batch),
293 they now include two elapsed-time values: one for how long it took to
294 build the file-list, and one for how long it took to send it over the
295 wire (each expressed in thousandths of a second).
296
297 - When --delete-excluded is specified with some filter excludes, a
298 client sender will now initiate a send of the filter rules to the
299 receiver (older protocols used to omit the sending of excludes in
300 this situation since there were no receiver-specific rules that
301 survived --delete-excluded back then). Note that, as with all the
302 filter-list sending, only items that are significant to the other
303 side will actually be sent over the wire, so the filter-rule list
304 is often empty in this scenario.
305
306 - A protocol-29 batch file includes a bit for the setting of the --dirs
307 option. Also, the shell script created by --write-batch will use the
308 --filter option instead of --exclude-from to capture any filter rules.
309
310 BUILD CHANGES:
311
312 - Handle an operating system that use mkdev() in place of makedev().
313
314 - Improved configure to better handle cross-compiling.