Allow itemize() to flag ITEM_REPORT_PERMS anytime the permissions
[rsync/rsync.git] / rsync.yo
... / ...
CommitLineData
1mailto(rsync-bugs@samba.org)
2manpage(rsync)(1)(28 Jul 2005)()()
3manpagename(rsync)(faster, flexible replacement for rcp)
4manpagesynopsis()
5
6rsync [OPTION]... SRC [SRC]... DEST
7
8rsync [OPTION]... SRC [SRC]... [USER@]HOST:DEST
9
10rsync [OPTION]... SRC [SRC]... [USER@]HOST::DEST
11
12rsync [OPTION]... SRC [SRC]... rsync://[USER@]HOST[:PORT]/DEST
13
14rsync [OPTION]... [USER@]HOST:SRC [DEST]
15
16rsync [OPTION]... [USER@]HOST::SRC [DEST]
17
18rsync [OPTION]... rsync://[USER@]HOST[:PORT]/SRC [DEST]
19
20manpagedescription()
21
22rsync is a program that behaves in much the same way that rcp does,
23but has many more options and uses the rsync remote-update protocol to
24greatly speed up file transfers when the destination file is being
25updated.
26
27The rsync remote-update protocol allows rsync to transfer just the
28differences between two sets of files across the network connection, using
29an efficient checksum-search algorithm described in the technical
30report that accompanies this package.
31
32Some of the additional features of rsync are:
33
34itemize(
35 it() support for copying links, devices, owners, groups, and permissions
36 it() exclude and exclude-from options similar to GNU tar
37 it() a CVS exclude mode for ignoring the same files that CVS would ignore
38 it() can use any transparent remote shell, including ssh or rsh
39 it() does not require super-user privileges
40 it() pipelining of file transfers to minimize latency costs
41 it() support for anonymous or authenticated rsync daemons (ideal for
42 mirroring)
43)
44
45manpagesection(GENERAL)
46
47Rsync copies files either to or from a remote host, or locally on the
48current host (it does not support copying files between two remote hosts).
49
50There are two different ways for rsync to contact a remote system: using a
51remote-shell program as the transport (such as ssh or rsh) or contacting an
52rsync daemon directly via TCP. The remote-shell transport is used whenever
53the source or destination path contains a single colon (:) separator after
54a host specification. Contacting an rsync daemon directly happens when the
55source or destination path contains a double colon (::) separator after a
56host specification, OR when an rsync:// URL is specified (see also the
57"USING RSYNC-DAEMON FEATURES VIA A REMOTE-SHELL CONNECTION" section for
58an exception to this latter rule).
59
60As a special case, if a remote source is specified without a destination,
61the remote files are listed in an output format similar to "ls -l".
62
63As expected, if neither the source or destination path specify a remote
64host, the copy occurs locally (see also the bf(--list-only) option).
65
66manpagesection(SETUP)
67
68See the file README for installation instructions.
69
70Once installed, you can use rsync to any machine that you can access via
71a remote shell (as well as some that you can access using the rsync
72daemon-mode protocol). For remote transfers, a modern rsync uses ssh
73for its communications, but it may have been configured to use a
74different remote shell by default, such as rsh or remsh.
75
76You can also specify any remote shell you like, either by using the bf(-e)
77command line option, or by setting the RSYNC_RSH environment variable.
78
79Note that rsync must be installed on both the source and destination
80machines.
81
82manpagesection(USAGE)
83
84You use rsync in the same way you use rcp. You must specify a source
85and a destination, one of which may be remote.
86
87Perhaps the best way to explain the syntax is with some examples:
88
89quote(tt(rsync -t *.c foo:src/))
90
91This would transfer all files matching the pattern *.c from the
92current directory to the directory src on the machine foo. If any of
93the files already exist on the remote system then the rsync
94remote-update protocol is used to update the file by sending only the
95differences. See the tech report for details.
96
97quote(tt(rsync -avz foo:src/bar /data/tmp))
98
99This would recursively transfer all files from the directory src/bar on the
100machine foo into the /data/tmp/bar directory on the local machine. The
101files are transferred in "archive" mode, which ensures that symbolic
102links, devices, attributes, permissions, ownerships, etc. are preserved
103in the transfer. Additionally, compression will be used to reduce the
104size of data portions of the transfer.
105
106quote(tt(rsync -avz foo:src/bar/ /data/tmp))
107
108A trailing slash on the source changes this behavior to avoid creating an
109additional directory level at the destination. You can think of a trailing
110/ on a source as meaning "copy the contents of this directory" as opposed
111to "copy the directory by name", but in both cases the attributes of the
112containing directory are transferred to the containing directory on the
113destination. In other words, each of the following commands copies the
114files in the same way, including their setting of the attributes of
115/dest/foo:
116
117quote(
118tt(rsync -av /src/foo /dest)nl()
119tt(rsync -av /src/foo/ /dest/foo)nl()
120)
121
122Note also that host and module references don't require a trailing slash to
123copy the contents of the default directory. For example, both of these
124copy the remote directory's contents into "/dest":
125
126quote(
127tt(rsync -av host: /dest)nl()
128tt(rsync -av host::module /dest)nl()
129)
130
131You can also use rsync in local-only mode, where both the source and
132destination don't have a ':' in the name. In this case it behaves like
133an improved copy command.
134
135Finally, you can list all the (listable) modules available from a
136particular rsync daemon by leaving off the module name:
137
138quote(tt(rsync somehost.mydomain.com::))
139
140See the following section for more details.
141
142manpagesection(ADVANCED USAGE)
143
144The syntax for requesting multiple files from a remote host involves using
145quoted spaces in the SRC. Some examples:
146
147quote(tt(rsync host::'modname/dir1/file1 modname/dir2/file2' /dest))
148
149This would copy file1 and file2 into /dest from an rsync daemon. Each
150additional arg must include the same "modname/" prefix as the first one,
151and must be preceded by a single space. All other spaces are assumed
152to be a part of the filenames.
153
154quote(tt(rsync -av host:'dir1/file1 dir2/file2' /dest))
155
156This would copy file1 and file2 into /dest using a remote shell. This
157word-splitting is done by the remote shell, so if it doesn't work it means
158that the remote shell isn't configured to split its args based on
159whitespace (a very rare setting, but not unknown). If you need to transfer
160a filename that contains whitespace, you'll need to either escape the
161whitespace in a way that the remote shell will understand, or use wildcards
162in place of the spaces. Two examples of this are:
163
164quote(
165tt(rsync -av host:'file\ name\ with\ spaces' /dest)nl()
166tt(rsync -av host:file?name?with?spaces /dest)nl()
167)
168
169This latter example assumes that your shell passes through unmatched
170wildcards. If it complains about "no match", put the name in quotes.
171
172manpagesection(CONNECTING TO AN RSYNC DAEMON)
173
174It is also possible to use rsync without a remote shell as the transport.
175In this case you will directly connect to a remote rsync daemon, typically
176using TCP port 873. (This obviously requires the daemon to be running on
177the remote system, so refer to the STARTING AN RSYNC DAEMON TO ACCEPT
178CONNECTIONS section below for information on that.)
179
180Using rsync in this way is the same as using it with a remote shell except
181that:
182
183itemize(
184 it() you either use a double colon :: instead of a single colon to
185 separate the hostname from the path, or you use an rsync:// URL.
186 it() the first word of the "path" is actually a module name.
187 it() the remote daemon may print a message of the day when you
188 connect.
189 it() if you specify no path name on the remote daemon then the
190 list of accessible paths on the daemon will be shown.
191 it() if you specify no local destination then a listing of the
192 specified files on the remote daemon is provided.
193 it() you must not specify the bf(--rsh) (bf(-e)) option.
194)
195
196An example that copies all the files in a remote module named "src":
197
198verb( rsync -av host::src /dest)
199
200Some modules on the remote daemon may require authentication. If so,
201you will receive a password prompt when you connect. You can avoid the
202password prompt by setting the environment variable RSYNC_PASSWORD to
203the password you want to use or using the bf(--password-file) option. This
204may be useful when scripting rsync.
205
206WARNING: On some systems environment variables are visible to all
207users. On those systems using bf(--password-file) is recommended.
208
209You may establish the connection via a web proxy by setting the
210environment variable RSYNC_PROXY to a hostname:port pair pointing to
211your web proxy. Note that your web proxy's configuration must support
212proxy connections to port 873.
213
214manpagesection(USING RSYNC-DAEMON FEATURES VIA A REMOTE-SHELL CONNECTION)
215
216It is sometimes useful to use various features of an rsync daemon (such as
217named modules) without actually allowing any new socket connections into a
218system (other than what is already required to allow remote-shell access).
219Rsync supports connecting to a host using a remote shell and then spawning
220a single-use "daemon" server that expects to read its config file in the
221home dir of the remote user. This can be useful if you want to encrypt a
222daemon-style transfer's data, but since the daemon is started up fresh by
223the remote user, you may not be able to use features such as chroot or
224change the uid used by the daemon. (For another way to encrypt a daemon
225transfer, consider using ssh to tunnel a local port to a remote machine and
226configure a normal rsync daemon on that remote host to only allow
227connections from "localhost".)
228
229From the user's perspective, a daemon transfer via a remote-shell
230connection uses nearly the same command-line syntax as a normal
231rsync-daemon transfer, with the only exception being that you must
232explicitly set the remote shell program on the command-line with the
233bf(--rsh=COMMAND) option. (Setting the RSYNC_RSH in the environment
234will not turn on this functionality.) For example:
235
236verb( rsync -av --rsh=ssh host::module /dest)
237
238If you need to specify a different remote-shell user, keep in mind that the
239user@ prefix in front of the host is specifying the rsync-user value (for a
240module that requires user-based authentication). This means that you must
241give the '-l user' option to ssh when specifying the remote-shell:
242
243verb( rsync -av -e "ssh -l ssh-user" rsync-user@host::module /dest)
244
245The "ssh-user" will be used at the ssh level; the "rsync-user" will be
246used to log-in to the "module".
247
248manpagesection(STARTING AN RSYNC DAEMON TO ACCEPT CONNECTIONS)
249
250In order to connect to an rsync daemon, the remote system needs to have a
251daemon already running (or it needs to have configured something like inetd
252to spawn an rsync daemon for incoming connections on a particular port).
253For full information on how to start a daemon that will handling incoming
254socket connections, see the rsyncd.conf(5) man page -- that is the config
255file for the daemon, and it contains the full details for how to run the
256daemon (including stand-alone and inetd configurations).
257
258If you're using one of the remote-shell transports for the transfer, there is
259no need to manually start an rsync daemon.
260
261manpagesection(EXAMPLES)
262
263Here are some examples of how I use rsync.
264
265To backup my wife's home directory, which consists of large MS Word
266files and mail folders, I use a cron job that runs
267
268quote(tt(rsync -Cavz . arvidsjaur:backup))
269
270each night over a PPP connection to a duplicate directory on my machine
271"arvidsjaur".
272
273To synchronize my samba source trees I use the following Makefile
274targets:
275
276verb( get:
277 rsync -avuzb --exclude '*~' samba:samba/ .
278 put:
279 rsync -Cavuzb . samba:samba/
280 sync: get put)
281
282this allows me to sync with a CVS directory at the other end of the
283connection. I then do CVS operations on the remote machine, which saves a
284lot of time as the remote CVS protocol isn't very efficient.
285
286I mirror a directory between my "old" and "new" ftp sites with the
287command:
288
289tt(rsync -az -e ssh --delete ~ftp/pub/samba nimbus:"~ftp/pub/tridge")
290
291This is launched from cron every few hours.
292
293manpagesection(OPTIONS SUMMARY)
294
295Here is a short summary of the options available in rsync. Please refer
296to the detailed description below for a complete description. verb(
297 -v, --verbose increase verbosity
298 -q, --quiet suppress non-error messages
299 -c, --checksum skip based on checksum, not mod-time & size
300 -a, --archive archive mode; same as -rlptgoD (no -H)
301 --no-OPTION turn off an implied OPTION (e.g. --no-D)
302 -r, --recursive recurse into directories
303 -R, --relative use relative path names
304 --no-implied-dirs don't send implied dirs with --relative
305 -b, --backup make backups (see --suffix & --backup-dir)
306 --backup-dir=DIR make backups into hierarchy based in DIR
307 --suffix=SUFFIX backup suffix (default ~ w/o --backup-dir)
308 -u, --update skip files that are newer on the receiver
309 --inplace update destination files in-place
310 --append append data onto shorter files
311 -d, --dirs transfer directories without recursing
312 -l, --links copy symlinks as symlinks
313 -L, --copy-links transform symlink into referent file/dir
314 --copy-unsafe-links only "unsafe" symlinks are transformed
315 --safe-links ignore symlinks that point outside the tree
316 -H, --hard-links preserve hard links
317 -K, --keep-dirlinks treat symlinked dir on receiver as dir
318 -p, --perms preserve permissions
319 -E, --executability preserve executability
320 --chmod=CHMOD change destination permissions
321 -o, --owner preserve owner (super-user only)
322 -g, --group preserve group
323 --devices preserve device files (super-user only)
324 --specials preserve special files
325 -D same as --devices --specials
326 -t, --times preserve times
327 -O, --omit-dir-times omit directories when preserving times
328 --super receiver attempts super-user activities
329 -S, --sparse handle sparse files efficiently
330 -n, --dry-run show what would have been transferred
331 -W, --whole-file copy files whole (without rsync algorithm)
332 -x, --one-file-system don't cross filesystem boundaries
333 -B, --block-size=SIZE force a fixed checksum block-size
334 -e, --rsh=COMMAND specify the remote shell to use
335 --rsync-path=PROGRAM specify the rsync to run on remote machine
336 --existing ignore non-existing files on receiving side
337 --ignore-existing ignore files that already exist on receiver
338 --remove-sent-files sent files/symlinks are removed from sender
339 --del an alias for --delete-during
340 --delete delete files that don't exist on sender
341 --delete-before receiver deletes before transfer (default)
342 --delete-during receiver deletes during xfer, not before
343 --delete-after receiver deletes after transfer, not before
344 --delete-excluded also delete excluded files on receiver
345 --ignore-errors delete even if there are I/O errors
346 --force force deletion of dirs even if not empty
347 --max-delete=NUM don't delete more than NUM files
348 --max-size=SIZE don't transfer any file larger than SIZE
349 --min-size=SIZE don't transfer any file smaller than SIZE
350 --partial keep partially transferred files
351 --partial-dir=DIR put a partially transferred file into DIR
352 --delay-updates put all updated files into place at end
353 -m, --prune-empty-dirs prune empty directory chains from file-list
354 --numeric-ids don't map uid/gid values by user/group name
355 --timeout=TIME set I/O timeout in seconds
356 -I, --ignore-times don't skip files that match size and time
357 --size-only skip files that match in size
358 --modify-window=NUM compare mod-times with reduced accuracy
359 -T, --temp-dir=DIR create temporary files in directory DIR
360 -y, --fuzzy find similar file for basis if no dest file
361 --compare-dest=DIR also compare received files relative to DIR
362 --copy-dest=DIR ... and include copies of unchanged files
363 --link-dest=DIR hardlink to files in DIR when unchanged
364 -z, --compress compress file data during the transfer
365 --compress-level=NUM explicitly set compression level
366 -C, --cvs-exclude auto-ignore files in the same way CVS does
367 -f, --filter=RULE add a file-filtering RULE
368 -F same as --filter='dir-merge /.rsync-filter'
369 repeated: --filter='- .rsync-filter'
370 --exclude=PATTERN exclude files matching PATTERN
371 --exclude-from=FILE read exclude patterns from FILE
372 --include=PATTERN don't exclude files matching PATTERN
373 --include-from=FILE read include patterns from FILE
374 --files-from=FILE read list of source-file names from FILE
375 -0, --from0 all *from/filter files are delimited by 0s
376 --address=ADDRESS bind address for outgoing socket to daemon
377 --port=PORT specify double-colon alternate port number
378 --sockopts=OPTIONS specify custom TCP options
379 --blocking-io use blocking I/O for the remote shell
380 --stats give some file-transfer stats
381 -h, --human-readable output numbers in a human-readable format
382 --si like human-readable, but use powers of 1000
383 --progress show progress during transfer
384 -P same as --partial --progress
385 -i, --itemize-changes output a change-summary for all updates
386 --log-format=FORMAT output filenames using the specified format
387 --password-file=FILE read password from FILE
388 --list-only list the files instead of copying them
389 --bwlimit=KBPS limit I/O bandwidth; KBytes per second
390 --write-batch=FILE write a batched update to FILE
391 --only-write-batch=FILE like --write-batch but w/o updating dest
392 --read-batch=FILE read a batched update from FILE
393 --protocol=NUM force an older protocol version to be used
394 --checksum-seed=NUM set block/file checksum seed (advanced)
395 -4, --ipv4 prefer IPv4
396 -6, --ipv6 prefer IPv6
397 --version print version number
398 --help show this help screen)
399
400Rsync can also be run as a daemon, in which case the following options are
401accepted: verb(
402 --daemon run as an rsync daemon
403 --address=ADDRESS bind to the specified address
404 --bwlimit=KBPS limit I/O bandwidth; KBytes per second
405 --config=FILE specify alternate rsyncd.conf file
406 --no-detach do not detach from the parent
407 --port=PORT listen on alternate port number
408 --sockopts=OPTIONS specify custom TCP options
409 -v, --verbose increase verbosity
410 -4, --ipv4 prefer IPv4
411 -6, --ipv6 prefer IPv6
412 --help show this help screen)
413
414manpageoptions()
415
416rsync uses the GNU long options package. Many of the command line
417options have two variants, one short and one long. These are shown
418below, separated by commas. Some options only have a long variant.
419The '=' for options that take a parameter is optional; whitespace
420can be used instead.
421
422startdit()
423dit(bf(--help)) Print a short help page describing the options
424available in rsync and exit. For backward-compatibility with older
425versions of rsync, the same help output can also be requested by using
426the bf(-h) option without any other args.
427
428dit(bf(--version)) print the rsync version number and exit.
429
430dit(bf(-v, --verbose)) This option increases the amount of information you
431are given during the transfer. By default, rsync works silently. A
432single bf(-v) will give you information about what files are being
433transferred and a brief summary at the end. Two bf(-v) flags will give you
434information on what files are being skipped and slightly more
435information at the end. More than two bf(-v) flags should only be used if
436you are debugging rsync.
437
438Note that the names of the transferred files that are output are done using
439a default bf(--log-format) of "%n%L", which tells you just the name of the
440file and, if the item is a link, where it points. At the single bf(-v)
441level of verbosity, this does not mention when a file gets its attributes
442changed. If you ask for an itemized list of changed attributes (either
443bf(--itemize-changes) or adding "%i" to the bf(--log-format) setting), the
444output (on the client) increases to mention all items that are changed in
445any way. See the bf(--log-format) option for more details.
446
447dit(bf(-q, --quiet)) This option decreases the amount of information you
448are given during the transfer, notably suppressing information messages
449from the remote server. This flag is useful when invoking rsync from
450cron.
451
452dit(bf(-I, --ignore-times)) Normally rsync will skip any files that are
453already the same size and have the same modification time-stamp.
454This option turns off this "quick check" behavior.
455
456dit(bf(--size-only)) Normally rsync will not transfer any files that are
457already the same size and have the same modification time-stamp. With the
458bf(--size-only) option, files will not be transferred if they have the same size,
459regardless of timestamp. This is useful when starting to use rsync
460after using another mirroring system which may not preserve timestamps
461exactly.
462
463dit(bf(--modify-window)) When comparing two timestamps, rsync treats the
464timestamps as being equal if they differ by no more than the modify-window
465value. This is normally 0 (for an exact match), but you may find it useful
466to set this to a larger value in some situations. In particular, when
467transferring to or from an MS Windows FAT filesystem (which represents
468times with a 2-second resolution), bf(--modify-window=1) is useful
469(allowing times to differ by up to 1 second).
470
471dit(bf(-c, --checksum)) This forces the sender to checksum all files using
472a 128-bit MD4 checksum before transfer. The checksum is then
473explicitly checked on the receiver and any files of the same name
474which already exist and have the same checksum and size on the
475receiver are not transferred. This option can be quite slow.
476
477dit(bf(-a, --archive)) This is equivalent to bf(-rlptgoD). It is a quick
478way of saying you want recursion and want to preserve almost
479everything (with -H being a notable omission).
480The only exception to the above equivalence is when bf(--files-from) is
481specified, in which case bf(-r) is not implied.
482
483Note that bf(-a) bf(does not preserve hardlinks), because
484finding multiply-linked files is expensive. You must separately
485specify bf(-H).
486
487dit(--no-OPTION) You may turn off one or more implied options by prefixing
488the option name with "no-". Not all options may be prefixed with a "no-":
489only options that are implied by other options (e.g. bf(--no-D),
490bf(--no-perms)) or have different defaults in various circumstances
491(e.g. bf(--no-whole-file), bf(--no-blocking-io), bf(--no-dirs)). You may
492specify either the short or the long option name after the "no-" prefix
493(e.g. bf(--no-R) is the same as bf(--no-relative)).
494
495For example: if you want to use bf(-a) (bf(--archive)) but don't want
496bf(-o) (bf(--owner)), instead of converting bf(-a) into bf(-rlptgD), you
497could specify bf(-a --no-o) (or bf(-a --no-owner)).
498
499The order of the options is important: if you specify bf(--no-r -a), the
500bf(-r) option would end up being turned on, the opposite of bf(-a --no-r).
501Note also that the side-effects of the bf(--files-from) option are NOT
502positional, as it affects the default state of several options and slightly
503changes the meaning of bf(-a) (see the bf(--files-from) option for more
504details).
505
506dit(bf(-r, --recursive)) This tells rsync to copy directories
507recursively. See also bf(--dirs) (bf(-d)).
508
509dit(bf(-R, --relative)) Use relative paths. This means that the full path
510names specified on the command line are sent to the server rather than
511just the last parts of the filenames. This is particularly useful when
512you want to send several different directories at the same time. For
513example, if you used this command:
514
515quote(tt( rsync -av /foo/bar/baz.c remote:/tmp/))
516
517... this would create a file called baz.c in /tmp/ on the remote
518machine. If instead you used
519
520quote(tt( rsync -avR /foo/bar/baz.c remote:/tmp/))
521
522then a file called /tmp/foo/bar/baz.c would be created on the remote
523machine -- the full path name is preserved. To limit the amount of
524path information that is sent, you have a couple options: (1) With
525a modern rsync on the sending side (beginning with 2.6.7), you can
526insert a dot dir into the source path, like this:
527
528quote(tt( rsync -avR /foo/./bar/baz.c remote:/tmp/))
529
530That would create /tmp/bar/baz.c on the remote machine. (Note that the
531dot dir must followed by a slash, so "/foo/." would not be abbreviated.)
532(2) For older rsync versions, you would need to use a chdir to limit the
533source path. For example, when pushing files:
534
535quote(tt( (cd /foo; rsync -avR bar/baz.c remote:/tmp/) ))
536
537(Note that the parens put the two commands into a sub-shell, so that the
538"cd" command doesn't remain in effect for future commands.)
539If you're pulling files, use this idiom (which doesn't work with an
540rsync daemon):
541
542quote(
543tt( rsync -avR --rsync-path="cd /foo; rsync" \ )nl()
544tt( remote:bar/baz.c /tmp/)
545)
546
547dit(bf(--no-implied-dirs)) When combined with the bf(--relative) option, the
548implied directories in each path are not explicitly duplicated as part
549of the transfer. This makes the transfer more optimal and also allows
550the two sides to have non-matching symlinks in the implied part of the
551path. For instance, if you transfer the file "/path/foo/file" with bf(-R),
552the default is for rsync to ensure that "/path" and "/path/foo" on the
553destination exactly match the directories/symlinks of the source. Using
554the bf(--no-implied-dirs) option would omit both of these implied dirs,
555which means that if "/path" was a real directory on one machine and a
556symlink of the other machine, rsync would not try to change this.
557
558dit(bf(-b, --backup)) With this option, preexisting destination files are
559renamed as each file is transferred or deleted. You can control where the
560backup file goes and what (if any) suffix gets appended using the
561bf(--backup-dir) and bf(--suffix) options.
562
563Note that if you don't specify bf(--backup-dir), (1) the
564bf(--omit-dir-times) option will be implied, and (2) if bf(--delete) is
565also in effect (without bf(--delete-excluded)), rsync will add a "protect"
566filter-rule for the backup suffix to the end of all your existing excludes
567(e.g. -f "P *~"). This will prevent previously backed-up files from being
568deleted. Note that if you are supplying your own filter rules, you may
569need to manually insert your own exclude/protect rule somewhere higher up
570in the list so that it has a high enough priority to be effective (e.g., if
571your rules specify a trailing inclusion/exclusion of '*', the auto-added
572rule would never be reached).
573
574dit(bf(--backup-dir=DIR)) In combination with the bf(--backup) option, this
575tells rsync to store all backups in the specified directory. This is
576very useful for incremental backups. You can additionally
577specify a backup suffix using the bf(--suffix) option
578(otherwise the files backed up in the specified directory
579will keep their original filenames).
580
581dit(bf(--suffix=SUFFIX)) This option allows you to override the default
582backup suffix used with the bf(--backup) (bf(-b)) option. The default suffix is a ~
583if no -bf(-backup-dir) was specified, otherwise it is an empty string.
584
585dit(bf(-u, --update)) This forces rsync to skip any files which exist on
586the destination and have a modified time that is newer than the source
587file. (If an existing destination file has a modify time equal to the
588source file's, it will be updated if the sizes are different.)
589
590In the current implementation of bf(--update), a difference of file format
591between the sender and receiver is always
592considered to be important enough for an update, no matter what date
593is on the objects. In other words, if the source has a directory or a
594symlink where the destination has a file, the transfer would occur
595regardless of the timestamps. This might change in the future (feel
596free to comment on this on the mailing list if you have an opinion).
597
598dit(bf(--inplace)) This causes rsync not to create a new copy of the file
599and then move it into place. Instead rsync will overwrite the existing
600file, meaning that the rsync algorithm can't accomplish the full amount of
601network reduction it might be able to otherwise (since it does not yet try
602to sort data matches). One exception to this is if you combine the option
603with bf(--backup), since rsync is smart enough to use the backup file as the
604basis file for the transfer.
605
606This option is useful for transfer of large files with block-based changes
607or appended data, and also on systems that are disk bound, not network
608bound.
609
610The option implies bf(--partial) (since an interrupted transfer does not delete
611the file), but conflicts with bf(--partial-dir) and bf(--delay-updates).
612Prior to rsync 2.6.4 bf(--inplace) was also incompatible with bf(--compare-dest)
613and bf(--link-dest).
614
615WARNING: The file's data will be in an inconsistent state during the
616transfer (and possibly afterward if the transfer gets interrupted), so you
617should not use this option to update files that are in use. Also note that
618rsync will be unable to update a file in-place that is not writable by the
619receiving user.
620
621dit(bf(--append)) This causes rsync to update a file by appending data onto
622the end of the file, which presumes that the data that already exists on
623the receiving side is identical with the start of the file on the sending
624side. If that is not true, the file will fail the checksum test, and the
625resend will do a normal bf(--inplace) update to correct the mismatched data.
626Only files on the receiving side that are shorter than the corresponding
627file on the sending side (as well as new files) are sent.
628Implies bf(--inplace), but does not conflict with bf(--sparse) (though the
629bf(--sparse) option will be auto-disabled if a resend of the already-existing
630data is required).
631
632dit(bf(-d, --dirs)) Tell the sending side to include any directories that
633are encountered. Unlike bf(--recursive), a directory's contents are not copied
634unless the directory name specified is "." or ends with a trailing slash
635(e.g. ".", "dir/.", "dir/", etc.). Without this option or the
636bf(--recursive) option, rsync will skip all directories it encounters (and
637output a message to that effect for each one). If you specify both
638bf(--dirs) and bf(--recursive), bf(--recursive) takes precedence.
639
640dit(bf(-l, --links)) When symlinks are encountered, recreate the
641symlink on the destination.
642
643dit(bf(-L, --copy-links)) When symlinks are encountered, the file that
644they point to (the referent) is copied, rather than the symlink. In older
645versions of rsync, this option also had the side-effect of telling the
646receiving side to follow symlinks, such as symlinks to directories. In a
647modern rsync such as this one, you'll need to specify bf(--keep-dirlinks) (bf(-K))
648to get this extra behavior. The only exception is when sending files to
649an rsync that is too old to understand bf(-K) -- in that case, the bf(-L) option
650will still have the side-effect of bf(-K) on that older receiving rsync.
651
652dit(bf(--copy-unsafe-links)) This tells rsync to copy the referent of
653symbolic links that point outside the copied tree. Absolute symlinks
654are also treated like ordinary files, and so are any symlinks in the
655source path itself when bf(--relative) is used.
656
657dit(bf(--safe-links)) This tells rsync to ignore any symbolic links
658which point outside the copied tree. All absolute symlinks are
659also ignored. Using this option in conjunction with bf(--relative) may
660give unexpected results.
661
662dit(bf(-H, --hard-links)) This tells rsync to recreate hard links on
663the remote system to be the same as the local system. Without this
664option hard links are treated like regular files.
665
666Note that rsync can only detect hard links if both parts of the link
667are in the list of files being sent.
668
669This option can be quite slow, so only use it if you need it.
670
671dit(bf(-K, --keep-dirlinks)) On the receiving side, if a symlink is
672pointing to a directory, it will be treated as matching a directory
673from the sender.
674
675dit(bf(-W, --whole-file)) With this option the incremental rsync algorithm
676is not used and the whole file is sent as-is instead. The transfer may be
677faster if this option is used when the bandwidth between the source and
678destination machines is higher than the bandwidth to disk (especially when the
679"disk" is actually a networked filesystem). This is the default when both
680the source and destination are specified as local paths.
681
682dit(bf(-p, --perms)) This option causes the receiving rsync to set the
683destination permissions to be the same as the source permissions. (See
684also the bf(--chmod) option for a way to modify what rsync considers to
685be the source permissions.)
686
687When this option is em(off), permissions are set as follows:
688
689quote(itemize(
690 it() Existing files (including updated files) retain their existing
691 permissions, though the bf(--executability) option might change just
692 the execute permission for the file.
693 it() Each new file gets its permissions set based on the source file's
694 permissions, but masked by the receiving end's umask setting (including
695 the stripping of the three special permission bits).
696))
697
698Thus, when bf(--perms) and bf(--executability) are both disabled,
699rsync's behavior is the same as that of other file-copy utilities,
700such as bf(cp)(1) and bf(tar)(1).
701
702dit(bf(-E, --executability)) This option causes rsync to preserve the
703executability (or non-executability) of regular files when bf(--perms) is
704not enabled. A regular file is considered to be executable if at least one
705'x' is turned on in the source permissions.
706
707quote(itemize(
708 it() To make a file non-executable, rsync turns off all its 'x'
709 permissions.
710 it() To make a file executable, rsync turns on each 'x' permission that
711 has a corresponding 'r' permission enabled.
712))
713
714If bf(--perms) is enabled, this option is ignored.
715
716dit(bf(--chmod)) This option tells rsync to apply one or more
717comma-separated "chmod" strings to the permission of the files in the
718transfer. The resulting value is treated as though it was the permissions
719that the sending side supplied for the file, which means that this option
720can seem to have no effect on existing files if bf(--perms) is not enabled.
721
722In addition to the normal parsing rules specified in the bf(chmod)(1)
723manpage, you can specify an item that should only apply to a directory by
724prefixing it with a 'D', or specify an item that should only apply to a
725file by prefixing it with a 'F'. For example:
726
727quote(--chmod=Dg+s,ug+w,Fo-w,+X)
728
729It is also legal to specify multiple bf(--chmod) options, as each
730additional option is just appended to the list of changes to make.
731
732See the bf(--perms) and bf(--executability) options for how the resulting
733permission value can be applied to the files in the transfer.
734
735dit(bf(-o, --owner)) This option causes rsync to set the owner of the
736destination file to be the same as the source file. By default, the
737preservation is done by name, but may fall back to using the ID number
738in some circumstances (see the bf(--numeric-ids) option for a full
739discussion).
740This option has no effect if the receiving rsync is not run as the
741super-user and bf(--super) is not specified.
742
743dit(bf(-g, --group)) This option causes rsync to set the group of the
744destination file to be the same as the source file. If the receiving
745program is not running as the super-user (or with the bf(--no-super)
746option), only groups that the
747receiver is a member of will be preserved. By default, the preservation
748is done by name, but may fall back to using the ID number in some
749circumstances. See the bf(--numeric-ids) option for a full discussion.
750
751dit(bf(--devices)) This option causes rsync to transfer character and
752block device files to the remote system to recreate these devices.
753This option has no effect if the receiving rsync is not run as the
754super-user and bf(--super) is not specified.
755
756dit(bf(--specials)) This option causes rsync to transfer special files
757such as named sockets and fifos.
758
759dit(bf(-D)) The bf(-D) option is equivalent to bf(--devices) bf(--specials).
760
761dit(bf(-t, --times)) This tells rsync to transfer modification times along
762with the files and update them on the remote system. Note that if this
763option is not used, the optimization that excludes files that have not been
764modified cannot be effective; in other words, a missing bf(-t) or bf(-a) will
765cause the next transfer to behave as if it used bf(-I), causing all files to be
766updated (though the rsync algorithm will make the update fairly efficient
767if the files haven't actually changed, you're much better off using bf(-t)).
768
769dit(bf(-O, --omit-dir-times)) This tells rsync to omit directories when
770it is preserving modification times (see bf(--times)). If NFS is sharing
771the directories on the receiving side, it is a good idea to use bf(-O).
772This option is inferred if you use bf(--backup) without bf(--backup-dir).
773
774dit(bf(--super)) This tells the receiving side to attempt super-user
775activities even if the receiving rsync wasn't run by the super-user. These
776activities include: preserving users via the bf(--owner) option, preserving
777all groups (not just the current user's groups) via the bf(--groups)
778option, and copying devices via the bf(--devices) option. This is useful
779for systems that allow such activities without being the super-user, and
780also for ensuring that you will get errors if the receiving side isn't
781being running as the super-user. To turn off super-user activities, the
782super-user can use bf(--no-super).
783
784dit(bf(-n, --dry-run)) This tells rsync to not do any file transfers,
785instead it will just report the actions it would have taken.
786
787dit(bf(-S, --sparse)) Try to handle sparse files efficiently so they take
788up less space on the destination. Conflicts with bf(--inplace) because it's
789not possible to overwrite data in a sparse fashion.
790
791NOTE: Don't use this option when the destination is a Solaris "tmpfs"
792filesystem. It doesn't seem to handle seeks over null regions
793correctly and ends up corrupting the files.
794
795dit(bf(-x, --one-file-system)) This tells rsync to avoid crossing a
796filesystem boundary when recursing. This does not limit the user's ability
797to specify items to copy from multiple filesystems, just rsync's recursion
798through the hierarchy of each directory that the user specified, and also
799the analogous recursion on the receiving side during deletion. Also keep
800in mind that rsync treats a "bind" mount to the same device as being on the
801same filesystem.
802
803If this option is repeated, rsync omits all mount-point directories from
804the copy. Otherwise, it includes an empty directory at each mount-point it
805encounters (using the attributes of the mounted directory because those of
806the underlying mount-point directory are inaccessible).
807
808If rsync has been told to collapse symlinks (via bf(--copy-links) or
809bf(--copy-unsafe-links)), a symlink to a directory on another device is
810treated like a mount-point. Symlinks to non-directories are unaffected
811by this option.
812
813dit(bf(--existing, --ignore-non-existing)) This tells rsync to skip
814updating files that do not exist yet on the destination. If this option is
815combined with the bf(--ignore-existing) option, no files will be updated
816(which can be useful if all you want to do is to delete missing files).
817
818dit(bf(--ignore-existing)) This tells rsync to skip updating files that
819already exist on the destination. See also bf(--ignore-non-existing).
820
821dit(bf(--remove-sent-files)) This tells rsync to remove from the sending
822side the files and/or symlinks that are newly created or whose content is
823updated on the receiving side. Directories and devices are not removed,
824nor are files/symlinks whose attributes are merely changed.
825
826dit(bf(--delete)) This tells rsync to delete extraneous files from the
827receiving side (ones that aren't on the sending side), but only for the
828directories that are being synchronized. You must have asked rsync to
829send the whole directory (e.g. "dir" or "dir/") without using a wildcard
830for the directory's contents (e.g. "dir/*") since the wildcard is expanded
831by the shell and rsync thus gets a request to transfer individual files, not
832the files' parent directory. Files that are excluded from transfer are
833also excluded from being deleted unless you use the bf(--delete-excluded)
834option or mark the rules as only matching on the sending side (see the
835include/exclude modifiers in the FILTER RULES section).
836
837Prior to rsync 2.6.7, this option would have no effect unless bf(--recursive)
838was in effect. Beginning with 2.6.7, deletions will also occur when bf(--dirs)
839(bf(-d)) is in effect, but only for directories whose contents are being copied.
840
841This option can be dangerous if used incorrectly! It is a very good idea
842to run first using the bf(--dry-run) option (bf(-n)) to see what files would be
843deleted to make sure important files aren't listed.
844
845If the sending side detects any I/O errors, then the deletion of any
846files at the destination will be automatically disabled. This is to
847prevent temporary filesystem failures (such as NFS errors) on the
848sending side causing a massive deletion of files on the
849destination. You can override this with the bf(--ignore-errors) option.
850
851The bf(--delete) option may be combined with one of the --delete-WHEN options
852without conflict, as well as bf(--delete-excluded). However, if none of the
853--delete-WHEN options are specified, rsync will currently choose the
854bf(--delete-before) algorithm. A future version may change this to choose the
855bf(--delete-during) algorithm. See also bf(--delete-after).
856
857dit(bf(--delete-before)) Request that the file-deletions on the receiving
858side be done before the transfer starts. This is the default if bf(--delete)
859or bf(--delete-excluded) is specified without one of the --delete-WHEN options.
860See bf(--delete) (which is implied) for more details on file-deletion.
861
862Deleting before the transfer is helpful if the filesystem is tight for space
863and removing extraneous files would help to make the transfer possible.
864However, it does introduce a delay before the start of the transfer,
865and this delay might cause the transfer to timeout (if bf(--timeout) was
866specified).
867
868dit(bf(--delete-during, --del)) Request that the file-deletions on the
869receiving side be done incrementally as the transfer happens. This is
870a faster method than choosing the before- or after-transfer algorithm,
871but it is only supported beginning with rsync version 2.6.4.
872See bf(--delete) (which is implied) for more details on file-deletion.
873
874dit(bf(--delete-after)) Request that the file-deletions on the receiving
875side be done after the transfer has completed. This is useful if you
876are sending new per-directory merge files as a part of the transfer and
877you want their exclusions to take effect for the delete phase of the
878current transfer.
879See bf(--delete) (which is implied) for more details on file-deletion.
880
881dit(bf(--delete-excluded)) In addition to deleting the files on the
882receiving side that are not on the sending side, this tells rsync to also
883delete any files on the receiving side that are excluded (see bf(--exclude)).
884See the FILTER RULES section for a way to make individual exclusions behave
885this way on the receiver, and for a way to protect files from
886bf(--delete-excluded).
887See bf(--delete) (which is implied) for more details on file-deletion.
888
889dit(bf(--ignore-errors)) Tells bf(--delete) to go ahead and delete files
890even when there are I/O errors.
891
892dit(bf(--force)) This option tells rsync to delete a non-empty directory
893when it is to be replaced by a non-directory. This is only relevant if
894deletions are not active (see bf(--delete) for details).
895
896Note for older rsync versions: bf(--force) used to still be required when
897using bf(--delete-after), and it used to be non-functional unless the
898bf(--recursive) option was also enabled.
899
900dit(bf(--max-delete=NUM)) This tells rsync not to delete more than NUM
901files or directories (NUM must be non-zero).
902This is useful when mirroring very large trees to prevent disasters.
903
904dit(bf(--max-size=SIZE)) This tells rsync to avoid transferring any
905file that is larger than the specified SIZE. The SIZE value can be
906suffixed with a string to indicate a size multiplier, and
907may be a fractional value (e.g. "bf(--max-size=1.5m)").
908
909The suffixes are as follows: "K" (or "KiB") is a kibibyte (1024),
910"M" (or "MiB") is a mebibyte (1024*1024), and "G" (or "GiB") is a
911gibibyte (1024*1024*1024).
912If you want the multiplier to be 1000 instead of 1024, use "KB",
913"MB", or "GB". (Note: lower-case is also accepted for all values.)
914Finally, if the suffix ends in either "+1" or "-1", the value will
915be offset by one byte in the indicated direction.
916
917Examples: --max-size=1.5mb-1 is 1499999 bytes, and --max-size=2g+1 is
9182147483649 bytes.
919
920dit(bf(--min-size=SIZE)) This tells rsync to avoid transferring any
921file that is smaller than the specified SIZE, which can help in not
922transferring small, junk files.
923See the bf(--max-size) option for a description of SIZE.
924
925dit(bf(-B, --block-size=BLOCKSIZE)) This forces the block size used in
926the rsync algorithm to a fixed value. It is normally selected based on
927the size of each file being updated. See the technical report for details.
928
929dit(bf(-e, --rsh=COMMAND)) This option allows you to choose an alternative
930remote shell program to use for communication between the local and
931remote copies of rsync. Typically, rsync is configured to use ssh by
932default, but you may prefer to use rsh on a local network.
933
934If this option is used with bf([user@]host::module/path), then the
935remote shell em(COMMAND) will be used to run an rsync daemon on the
936remote host, and all data will be transmitted through that remote
937shell connection, rather than through a direct socket connection to a
938running rsync daemon on the remote host. See the section "USING
939RSYNC-DAEMON FEATURES VIA A REMOTE-SHELL CONNECTION" above.
940
941Command-line arguments are permitted in COMMAND provided that COMMAND is
942presented to rsync as a single argument. You must use spaces (not tabs
943or other whitespace) to separate the command and args from each other,
944and you can use single- and/or double-quotes to preserve spaces in an
945argument (but not backslashes). Note that doubling a single-quote
946inside a single-quoted string gives you a single-quote; likewise for
947double-quotes (though you need to pay attention to which quotes your
948shell is parsing and which quotes rsync is parsing). Some examples:
949
950quote(
951tt( -e 'ssh -p 2234')nl()
952tt( -e 'ssh -o "ProxyCommand nohup ssh firewall nc -w1 %h %p"')nl()
953)
954
955(Note that ssh users can alternately customize site-specific connect
956options in their .ssh/config file.)
957
958You can also choose the remote shell program using the RSYNC_RSH
959environment variable, which accepts the same range of values as bf(-e).
960
961See also the bf(--blocking-io) option which is affected by this option.
962
963dit(bf(--rsync-path=PROGRAM)) Use this to specify what program is to be run
964on the remote machine to start-up rsync. Often used when rsync is not in
965the default remote-shell's path (e.g. --rsync-path=/usr/local/bin/rsync).
966Note that PROGRAM is run with the help of a shell, so it can be any
967program, script, or command sequence you'd care to run, so long as it does
968not corrupt the standard-in & standard-out that rsync is using to
969communicate.
970
971One tricky example is to set a different default directory on the remote
972machine for use with the bf(--relative) option. For instance:
973
974quote(tt( rsync -avR --rsync-path="cd /a/b && rsync" hst:c/d /e/))
975
976dit(bf(-C, --cvs-exclude)) This is a useful shorthand for excluding a
977broad range of files that you often don't want to transfer between
978systems. It uses the same algorithm that CVS uses to determine if
979a file should be ignored.
980
981The exclude list is initialized to:
982
983quote(quote(tt(RCS SCCS CVS CVS.adm RCSLOG cvslog.* tags TAGS .make.state
984.nse_depinfo *~ #* .#* ,* _$* *$ *.old *.bak *.BAK *.orig *.rej
985.del-* *.a *.olb *.o *.obj *.so *.exe *.Z *.elc *.ln core .svn/)))
986
987then files listed in a $HOME/.cvsignore are added to the list and any
988files listed in the CVSIGNORE environment variable (all cvsignore names
989are delimited by whitespace).
990
991Finally, any file is ignored if it is in the same directory as a
992.cvsignore file and matches one of the patterns listed therein. Unlike
993rsync's filter/exclude files, these patterns are split on whitespace.
994See the bf(cvs(1)) manual for more information.
995
996If you're combining bf(-C) with your own bf(--filter) rules, you should
997note that these CVS excludes are appended at the end of your own rules,
998regardless of where the bf(-C) was placed on the command-line. This makes them
999a lower priority than any rules you specified explicitly. If you want to
1000control where these CVS excludes get inserted into your filter rules, you
1001should omit the bf(-C) as a command-line option and use a combination of
1002bf(--filter=:C) and bf(--filter=-C) (either on your command-line or by
1003putting the ":C" and "-C" rules into a filter file with your other rules).
1004The first option turns on the per-directory scanning for the .cvsignore
1005file. The second option does a one-time import of the CVS excludes
1006mentioned above.
1007
1008dit(bf(-f, --filter=RULE)) This option allows you to add rules to selectively
1009exclude certain files from the list of files to be transferred. This is
1010most useful in combination with a recursive transfer.
1011
1012You may use as many bf(--filter) options on the command line as you like
1013to build up the list of files to exclude.
1014
1015See the FILTER RULES section for detailed information on this option.
1016
1017dit(bf(-F)) The bf(-F) option is a shorthand for adding two bf(--filter) rules to
1018your command. The first time it is used is a shorthand for this rule:
1019
1020quote(tt( --filter='dir-merge /.rsync-filter'))
1021
1022This tells rsync to look for per-directory .rsync-filter files that have
1023been sprinkled through the hierarchy and use their rules to filter the
1024files in the transfer. If bf(-F) is repeated, it is a shorthand for this
1025rule:
1026
1027quote(tt( --filter='exclude .rsync-filter'))
1028
1029This filters out the .rsync-filter files themselves from the transfer.
1030
1031See the FILTER RULES section for detailed information on how these options
1032work.
1033
1034dit(bf(--exclude=PATTERN)) This option is a simplified form of the
1035bf(--filter) option that defaults to an exclude rule and does not allow
1036the full rule-parsing syntax of normal filter rules.
1037
1038See the FILTER RULES section for detailed information on this option.
1039
1040dit(bf(--exclude-from=FILE)) This option is related to the bf(--exclude)
1041option, but it specifies a FILE that contains exclude patterns (one per line).
1042Blank lines in the file and lines starting with ';' or '#' are ignored.
1043If em(FILE) is bf(-), the list will be read from standard input.
1044
1045dit(bf(--include=PATTERN)) This option is a simplified form of the
1046bf(--filter) option that defaults to an include rule and does not allow
1047the full rule-parsing syntax of normal filter rules.
1048
1049See the FILTER RULES section for detailed information on this option.
1050
1051dit(bf(--include-from=FILE)) This option is related to the bf(--include)
1052option, but it specifies a FILE that contains include patterns (one per line).
1053Blank lines in the file and lines starting with ';' or '#' are ignored.
1054If em(FILE) is bf(-), the list will be read from standard input.
1055
1056dit(bf(--files-from=FILE)) Using this option allows you to specify the
1057exact list of files to transfer (as read from the specified FILE or bf(-)
1058for standard input). It also tweaks the default behavior of rsync to make
1059transferring just the specified files and directories easier:
1060
1061quote(itemize(
1062 it() The bf(--relative) (bf(-R)) option is implied, which preserves the path
1063 information that is specified for each item in the file (use
1064 bf(--no-relative) or bf(--no-R) if you want to turn that off).
1065 it() The bf(--dirs) (bf(-d)) option is implied, which will create directories
1066 specified in the list on the destination rather than noisily skipping
1067 them (use bf(--no-dirs) or bf(--no-d) if you want to turn that off).
1068 it() The bf(--archive) (bf(-a)) option's behavior does not imply bf(--recursive)
1069 (bf(-r)), so specify it explicitly, if you want it.
1070 it() These side-effects change the default state of rsync, so the position
1071 of the bf(--files-from) option on the command-line has no bearing on how
1072 other options are parsed (e.g. bf(-a) works the same before or after
1073 bf(--files-from), as does bf(--no-R) and all other options).
1074))
1075
1076The file names that are read from the FILE are all relative to the
1077source dir -- any leading slashes are removed and no ".." references are
1078allowed to go higher than the source dir. For example, take this
1079command:
1080
1081quote(tt( rsync -a --files-from=/tmp/foo /usr remote:/backup))
1082
1083If /tmp/foo contains the string "bin" (or even "/bin"), the /usr/bin
1084directory will be created as /backup/bin on the remote host. If it
1085contains "bin/" (note the trailing slash), the immediate contents of
1086the directory would also be sent (without needing to be explicitly
1087mentioned in the file -- this began in version 2.6.4). In both cases,
1088if the bf(-r) option was enabled, that dir's entire hierarchy would
1089also be transferred (keep in mind that bf(-r) needs to be specified
1090explicitly with bf(--files-from), since it is not implied by bf(-a)).
1091Also note
1092that the effect of the (enabled by default) bf(--relative) option is to
1093duplicate only the path info that is read from the file -- it does not
1094force the duplication of the source-spec path (/usr in this case).
1095
1096In addition, the bf(--files-from) file can be read from the remote host
1097instead of the local host if you specify a "host:" in front of the file
1098(the host must match one end of the transfer). As a short-cut, you can
1099specify just a prefix of ":" to mean "use the remote end of the
1100transfer". For example:
1101
1102quote(tt( rsync -a --files-from=:/path/file-list src:/ /tmp/copy))
1103
1104This would copy all the files specified in the /path/file-list file that
1105was located on the remote "src" host.
1106
1107dit(bf(-0, --from0)) This tells rsync that the rules/filenames it reads from a
1108file are terminated by a null ('\0') character, not a NL, CR, or CR+LF.
1109This affects bf(--exclude-from), bf(--include-from), bf(--files-from), and any
1110merged files specified in a bf(--filter) rule.
1111It does not affect bf(--cvs-exclude) (since all names read from a .cvsignore
1112file are split on whitespace).
1113
1114dit(bf(-T, --temp-dir=DIR)) This option instructs rsync to use DIR as a
1115scratch directory when creating temporary copies of the files transferred
1116on the receiving side. The default behavior is to create each temporary
1117file in the same directory as the associated destination file.
1118
1119This option is most often used when the receiving disk partition does not
1120have enough free space to hold a copy of the largest file in the transfer.
1121In this case (i.e. when the scratch directory in on a different disk
1122partition), rsync will not be able to rename each received temporary file
1123over the top of the associated destination file, but instead must copy it
1124into place. Rsync does this by copying the file over the top of the
1125destination file, which means that the destination file will contain
1126truncated data during this copy. If this were not done this way (even if
1127the destination file were first removed, the data locally copied to a
1128temporary file in the destination directory, and then renamed into place)
1129it would be possible for the old file to continue taking up disk space (if
1130someone had it open), and thus there might not be enough room to fit the
1131new version on the disk at the same time.
1132
1133If you are using this option for reasons other than a shortage of disk
1134space, you may wish to combine it with the bf(--delay-updates) option,
1135which will ensure that all copied files get put into subdirectories in the
1136destination hierarchy, awaiting the end of the transfer. If you don't
1137have enough room to duplicate all the arriving files on the destination
1138partition, another way to tell rsync that you aren't overly concerned
1139about disk space is to use the bf(--partial-dir) option with a relative
1140path; because this tells rsync that it is OK to stash off a copy of a
1141single file in a subdir in the destination hierarchy, rsync will use the
1142partial-dir as a staging area to bring over the copied file, and then
1143rename it into place from there. (Specifying a bf(--partial-dir) with
1144an absolute path does not have this side-effect.)
1145
1146dit(bf(-y, --fuzzy)) This option tells rsync that it should look for a
1147basis file for any destination file that is missing. The current algorithm
1148looks in the same directory as the destination file for either a file that
1149has an identical size and modified-time, or a similarly-named file. If
1150found, rsync uses the fuzzy basis file to try to speed up the transfer.
1151
1152Note that the use of the bf(--delete) option might get rid of any potential
1153fuzzy-match files, so either use bf(--delete-after) or specify some
1154filename exclusions if you need to prevent this.
1155
1156dit(bf(--compare-dest=DIR)) This option instructs rsync to use em(DIR) on
1157the destination machine as an additional hierarchy to compare destination
1158files against doing transfers (if the files are missing in the destination
1159directory). If a file is found in em(DIR) that is identical to the
1160sender's file, the file will NOT be transferred to the destination
1161directory. This is useful for creating a sparse backup of just files that
1162have changed from an earlier backup.
1163
1164Beginning in version 2.6.4, multiple bf(--compare-dest) directories may be
1165provided, which will cause rsync to search the list in the order specified
1166for an exact match.
1167If a match is found that differs only in attributes, a local copy is made
1168and the attributes updated.
1169If a match is not found, a basis file from one of the em(DIR)s will be
1170selected to try to speed up the transfer.
1171
1172If em(DIR) is a relative path, it is relative to the destination directory.
1173See also bf(--copy-dest) and bf(--link-dest).
1174
1175dit(bf(--copy-dest=DIR)) This option behaves like bf(--compare-dest), but
1176rsync will also copy unchanged files found in em(DIR) to the destination
1177directory using a local copy.
1178This is useful for doing transfers to a new destination while leaving
1179existing files intact, and then doing a flash-cutover when all files have
1180been successfully transferred.
1181
1182Multiple bf(--copy-dest) directories may be provided, which will cause
1183rsync to search the list in the order specified for an unchanged file.
1184If a match is not found, a basis file from one of the em(DIR)s will be
1185selected to try to speed up the transfer.
1186
1187If em(DIR) is a relative path, it is relative to the destination directory.
1188See also bf(--compare-dest) and bf(--link-dest).
1189
1190dit(bf(--link-dest=DIR)) This option behaves like bf(--copy-dest), but
1191unchanged files are hard linked from em(DIR) to the destination directory.
1192The files must be identical in all preserved attributes (e.g. permissions,
1193possibly ownership) in order for the files to be linked together.
1194An example:
1195
1196quote(tt( rsync -av --link-dest=$PWD/prior_dir host:src_dir/ new_dir/))
1197
1198Beginning in version 2.6.4, multiple bf(--link-dest) directories may be
1199provided, which will cause rsync to search the list in the order specified
1200for an exact match.
1201If a match is found that differs only in attributes, a local copy is made
1202and the attributes updated.
1203If a match is not found, a basis file from one of the em(DIR)s will be
1204selected to try to speed up the transfer.
1205
1206If em(DIR) is a relative path, it is relative to the destination directory.
1207See also bf(--compare-dest) and bf(--copy-dest).
1208
1209Note that rsync versions prior to 2.6.1 had a bug that could prevent
1210bf(--link-dest) from working properly for a non-super-user when bf(-o) was
1211specified (or implied by bf(-a)). You can work-around this bug by avoiding
1212the bf(-o) option when sending to an old rsync.
1213
1214dit(bf(-z, --compress)) With this option, rsync compresses the file data
1215as it is sent to the destination machine, which reduces the amount of data
1216being transmitted -- something that is useful over a slow connection.
1217
1218Note this this option typically achieves better compression ratios that can
1219be achieved by using a compressing remote shell or a compressing transport
1220because it takes advantage of the implicit information in the matching data
1221blocks that are not explicitly sent over the connection.
1222
1223dit(bf(--compress-level=NUM)) Explicitly set the compression level to use
1224(see bf(--compress)) instead of letting it default. If NUM is non-zero,
1225the bf(--compress) option is implied.
1226
1227dit(bf(--numeric-ids)) With this option rsync will transfer numeric group
1228and user IDs rather than using user and group names and mapping them
1229at both ends.
1230
1231By default rsync will use the username and groupname to determine
1232what ownership to give files. The special uid 0 and the special group
12330 are never mapped via user/group names even if the bf(--numeric-ids)
1234option is not specified.
1235
1236If a user or group has no name on the source system or it has no match
1237on the destination system, then the numeric ID
1238from the source system is used instead. See also the comments on the
1239"use chroot" setting in the rsyncd.conf manpage for information on how
1240the chroot setting affects rsync's ability to look up the names of the
1241users and groups and what you can do about it.
1242
1243dit(bf(--timeout=TIMEOUT)) This option allows you to set a maximum I/O
1244timeout in seconds. If no data is transferred for the specified time
1245then rsync will exit. The default is 0, which means no timeout.
1246
1247dit(bf(--address)) By default rsync will bind to the wildcard address when
1248connecting to an rsync daemon. The bf(--address) option allows you to
1249specify a specific IP address (or hostname) to bind to. See also this
1250option in the bf(--daemon) mode section.
1251
1252dit(bf(--port=PORT)) This specifies an alternate TCP port number to use
1253rather than the default of 873. This is only needed if you are using the
1254double-colon (::) syntax to connect with an rsync daemon (since the URL
1255syntax has a way to specify the port as a part of the URL). See also this
1256option in the bf(--daemon) mode section.
1257
1258dit(bf(--sockopts)) This option can provide endless fun for people
1259who like to tune their systems to the utmost degree. You can set all
1260sorts of socket options which may make transfers faster (or
1261slower!). Read the man page for the setsockopt() system call for
1262details on some of the options you may be able to set. By default no
1263special socket options are set. This only affects direct socket
1264connections to a remote rsync daemon. This option also exists in the
1265bf(--daemon) mode section.
1266
1267dit(bf(--blocking-io)) This tells rsync to use blocking I/O when launching
1268a remote shell transport. If the remote shell is either rsh or remsh,
1269rsync defaults to using
1270blocking I/O, otherwise it defaults to using non-blocking I/O. (Note that
1271ssh prefers non-blocking I/O.)
1272
1273dit(bf(-i, --itemize-changes)) Requests a simple itemized list of the
1274changes that are being made to each file, including attribute changes.
1275This is exactly the same as specifying bf(--log-format='%i %n%L').
1276If you repeat the option, unchanged files will also be output, but only
1277if the receiving rsync is at least version 2.6.7 (you can use bf(-vv)
1278with older versions of rsync, but that also turns on the output of other
1279verbose messages).
1280
1281The "%i" escape has a cryptic output that is 8 letters long. The general
1282format is like the string bf(YXcstpog), where bf(Y) is replaced by the
1283kind of update being done, bf(X) is replaced by the file-type, and the
1284other letters represent attributes that may be output if they are being
1285modified.
1286
1287The update types that replace the bf(Y) are as follows:
1288
1289quote(itemize(
1290 it() A bf(<) means that a file is being transferred to the remote host
1291 (sent).
1292 it() A bf(>) means that a file is being transferred to the local host
1293 (received).
1294 it() A bf(c) means that a local change/creation is occurring for the item
1295 (such as the creation of a directory or the changing of a symlink, etc.).
1296 it() A bf(h) means that the item is a hard-link to another item (requires
1297 bf(--hard-links)).
1298 it() A bf(.) means that the item is not being updated (though it might
1299 have attributes that are being modified).
1300))
1301
1302The file-types that replace the bf(X) are: bf(f) for a file, a bf(d) for a
1303directory, an bf(L) for a symlink, a bf(D) for a device, and a bf(S) for a
1304special file (e.g. named sockets and fifos).
1305
1306The other letters in the string above are the actual letters that
1307will be output if the associated attribute for the item is being updated or
1308a "." for no change. Three exceptions to this are: (1) a newly created
1309item replaces each letter with a "+", (2) an identical item replaces the
1310dots with spaces, and (3) an unknown attribute replaces each letter with
1311a "?" (this can happen when talking to an older rsync).
1312
1313The attribute that is associated with each letter is as follows:
1314
1315quote(itemize(
1316 it() A bf(c) means the checksum of the file is different and will be
1317 updated by the file transfer (requires bf(--checksum)).
1318 it() A bf(s) means the size of the file is different and will be updated
1319 by the file transfer.
1320 it() A bf(t) means the modification time is different and is being updated
1321 to the sender's value (requires bf(--times)). An alternate value of bf(T)
1322 means that the time will be set to the transfer time, which happens
1323 anytime a symlink is transferred, or when a file or device is transferred
1324 without bf(--times).
1325 it() A bf(p) means the permissions are different and are being updated to
1326 the sender's value (requires bf(--perms)).
1327 it() An bf(o) means the owner is different and is being updated to the
1328 sender's value (requires bf(--owner) and super-user privileges).
1329 it() A bf(g) means the group is different and is being updated to the
1330 sender's value (requires bf(--group) and the authority to set the group).
1331))
1332
1333One other output is possible: when deleting files, the "%i" will output
1334the string "*deleting" for each item that is being removed (assuming that
1335you are talking to a recent enough rsync that it logs deletions instead of
1336outputting them as a verbose message).
1337
1338dit(bf(--log-format=FORMAT)) This allows you to specify exactly what the
1339rsync client outputs to the user on a per-file basis. The format is a text
1340string containing embedded single-character escape sequences prefixed with
1341a percent (%) character. For a list of the possible escape characters, see
1342the "log format" setting in the rsyncd.conf manpage. (Note that this
1343option does not affect what a daemon logs to its logfile.)
1344
1345Specifying this option will mention each file, dir, etc. that gets updated
1346in a significant way (a transferred file, a recreated symlink/device, or a
1347touched directory) unless the itemized-changes escape (%i) is included in
1348the string, in which case the logging of names increases to mention any
1349item that is changed in any way (as long as the receiving side is at least
13502.6.4). See the bf(--itemize-changes) option for a description of the
1351output of "%i".
1352
1353The bf(--verbose) option implies a format of "%n%L", but you can use
1354bf(--log-format) without bf(--verbose) if you like, or you can override
1355the format of its per-file output using this option.
1356
1357Rsync will output the log-format string prior to a file's transfer unless
1358one of the transfer-statistic escapes is requested, in which case the
1359logging is done at the end of the file's transfer. When this late logging
1360is in effect and bf(--progress) is also specified, rsync will also output
1361the name of the file being transferred prior to its progress information
1362(followed, of course, by the log-format output).
1363
1364dit(bf(--stats)) This tells rsync to print a verbose set of statistics
1365on the file transfer, allowing you to tell how effective the rsync
1366algorithm is for your data.
1367
1368dit(bf(-h, --human-readable)) Output numbers in a more human-readable format.
1369Large numbers may be output in larger units, with a K (1024), M (1024*1024),
1370or G (1024*1024*1024) suffix.
1371
1372dit(bf(--si)) Similar to the bf(--human-readable) option, but using powers
1373of 1000 instead of 1024.
1374
1375dit(bf(--partial)) By default, rsync will delete any partially
1376transferred file if the transfer is interrupted. In some circumstances
1377it is more desirable to keep partially transferred files. Using the
1378bf(--partial) option tells rsync to keep the partial file which should
1379make a subsequent transfer of the rest of the file much faster.
1380
1381dit(bf(--partial-dir=DIR)) A better way to keep partial files than the
1382bf(--partial) option is to specify a em(DIR) that will be used to hold the
1383partial data (instead of writing it out to the destination file).
1384On the next transfer, rsync will use a file found in this
1385dir as data to speed up the resumption of the transfer and then delete it
1386after it has served its purpose.
1387
1388Note that if bf(--whole-file) is specified (or implied), any partial-dir
1389file that is found for a file that is being updated will simply be removed
1390(since
1391rsync is sending files without using the incremental rsync algorithm).
1392
1393Rsync will create the em(DIR) if it is missing (just the last dir -- not
1394the whole path). This makes it easy to use a relative path (such as
1395"bf(--partial-dir=.rsync-partial)") to have rsync create the
1396partial-directory in the destination file's directory when needed, and then
1397remove it again when the partial file is deleted.
1398
1399If the partial-dir value is not an absolute path, rsync will add an exclude
1400rule at the end of all your existing excludes. This will prevent the
1401sending of any partial-dir files that may exist on the sending side, and
1402will also prevent the untimely deletion of partial-dir items on the
1403receiving side. An example: the above bf(--partial-dir) option would add
1404the equivalent of "bf(--exclude=.rsync-partial/)" at the end of any other
1405filter rules.
1406
1407If you are supplying your own exclude rules, you may need to add your own
1408exclude/hide/protect rule for the partial-dir because (1) the auto-added
1409rule may be ineffective at the end of your other rules, or (2) you may wish
1410to override rsync's exclude choice. For instance, if you want to make
1411rsync clean-up any left-over partial-dirs that may be lying around, you
1412should specify bf(--delete-after) and add a "risk" filter rule, e.g.
1413bf(-f 'R .rsync-partial/'). (Avoid using bf(--delete-before) or
1414bf(--delete-during) unless you don't need rsync to use any of the
1415left-over partial-dir data during the current run.)
1416
1417IMPORTANT: the bf(--partial-dir) should not be writable by other users or it
1418is a security risk. E.g. AVOID "/tmp".
1419
1420You can also set the partial-dir value the RSYNC_PARTIAL_DIR environment
1421variable. Setting this in the environment does not force bf(--partial) to be
1422enabled, but rather it effects where partial files go when bf(--partial) is
1423specified. For instance, instead of using bf(--partial-dir=.rsync-tmp)
1424along with bf(--progress), you could set RSYNC_PARTIAL_DIR=.rsync-tmp in your
1425environment and then just use the bf(-P) option to turn on the use of the
1426.rsync-tmp dir for partial transfers. The only times that the bf(--partial)
1427option does not look for this environment value are (1) when bf(--inplace) was
1428specified (since bf(--inplace) conflicts with bf(--partial-dir)), and (2) when
1429bf(--delay-updates) was specified (see below).
1430
1431For the purposes of the daemon-config's "refuse options" setting,
1432bf(--partial-dir) does em(not) imply bf(--partial). This is so that a
1433refusal of the bf(--partial) option can be used to disallow the overwriting
1434of destination files with a partial transfer, while still allowing the
1435safer idiom provided by bf(--partial-dir).
1436
1437dit(bf(--delay-updates)) This option puts the temporary file from each
1438updated file into a holding directory until the end of the
1439transfer, at which time all the files are renamed into place in rapid
1440succession. This attempts to make the updating of the files a little more
1441atomic. By default the files are placed into a directory named ".~tmp~" in
1442each file's destination directory, but if you've specified the
1443bf(--partial-dir) option, that directory will be used instead. See the
1444comments in the bf(--partial-dir) section for a discussion of how this
1445".~tmp~" dir will be excluded from the transfer, and what you can do if
1446you wnat rsync to cleanup old ".~tmp~" dirs that might be lying around.
1447Conflicts with bf(--inplace) and bf(--append).
1448
1449This option uses more memory on the receiving side (one bit per file
1450transferred) and also requires enough free disk space on the receiving
1451side to hold an additional copy of all the updated files. Note also that
1452you should not use an absolute path to bf(--partial-dir) unless (1)
1453there is no
1454chance of any of the files in the transfer having the same name (since all
1455the updated files will be put into a single directory if the path is
1456absolute)
1457and (2) there are no mount points in the hierarchy (since the
1458delayed updates will fail if they can't be renamed into place).
1459
1460See also the "atomic-rsync" perl script in the "support" subdir for an
1461update algorithm that is even more atomic (it uses bf(--link-dest) and a
1462parallel hierarchy of files).
1463
1464dit(bf(-m, --prune-empty-dirs)) This option tells the receiving rsync to get
1465rid of empty directories from the file-list, including nested directories
1466that have no non-directory children. This is useful for avoiding the
1467creation of a bunch of useless directories when the sending rsync is
1468recursively scanning a hierarchy of files using include/exclude/filter
1469rules.
1470
1471Because the file-list is actually being pruned, this option also affects
1472what directories get deleted when a delete is active. However, keep in
1473mind that excluded files and directories can prevent existing items from
1474being deleted (because an exclude hides source files and protects
1475destination files).
1476
1477You can prevent the pruning of certain empty directories from the file-list
1478by using a global "protect" filter. For instance, this option would ensure
1479that the directory "emptydir" was kept in the file-list:
1480
1481quote( --filter 'protect emptydir/')
1482
1483Here's an example that copies all .pdf files in a hierarchy, only creating
1484the necessary destination directories to hold the .pdf files, and ensures
1485that any superfluous files and directories in the destination are removed
1486(note the hide filter of non-directories being used instead of an exclude):
1487
1488quote( rsync -avm --del --include='*.pdf' -f 'hide! */' src/ dest)
1489
1490If you didn't want to remove superfluous destination files, the more
1491time-honored options of "--include='*/' --exclude='*'" would work fine
1492in place of the hide-filter (if that is more natural to you).
1493
1494dit(bf(--progress)) This option tells rsync to print information
1495showing the progress of the transfer. This gives a bored user
1496something to watch.
1497Implies bf(--verbose) if it wasn't already specified.
1498
1499When the file is transferring, the data looks like this:
1500
1501verb( 782448 63% 110.64kB/s 0:00:04)
1502
1503This tells you the current file size, the percentage of the transfer that
1504is complete, the current calculated file-completion rate (including both
1505data over the wire and data being matched locally), and the estimated time
1506remaining in this transfer.
1507
1508After a file is complete, the data looks like this:
1509
1510verb( 1238099 100% 146.38kB/s 0:00:08 (5, 57.1% of 396))
1511
1512This tells you the final file size, that it's 100% complete, the final
1513transfer rate for the file, the amount of elapsed time it took to transfer
1514the file, and the addition of a total-transfer summary in parentheses.
1515These additional numbers tell you how many files have been updated, and
1516what percent of the total number of files has been scanned.
1517
1518dit(bf(-P)) The bf(-P) option is equivalent to bf(--partial) bf(--progress). Its
1519purpose is to make it much easier to specify these two options for a long
1520transfer that may be interrupted.
1521
1522dit(bf(--password-file)) This option allows you to provide a password
1523in a file for accessing a remote rsync daemon. Note that this option
1524is only useful when accessing an rsync daemon using the built in
1525transport, not when using a remote shell as the transport. The file
1526must not be world readable. It should contain just the password as a
1527single line.
1528
1529dit(bf(--list-only)) This option will cause the source files to be listed
1530instead of transferred. This option is inferred if there is no destination
1531specified, so you don't usually need to use it explicitly. However, it can
1532come in handy for a user that wants to avoid the "bf(-r --exclude='/*/*')"
1533options that rsync might use as a compatibility kluge when generating a
1534non-recursive listing, or to list the files that are involved in a local
1535copy (since the destination path is not optional for a local copy, you
1536must specify this option explicitly and still include a destination).
1537
1538dit(bf(--bwlimit=KBPS)) This option allows you to specify a maximum
1539transfer rate in kilobytes per second. This option is most effective when
1540using rsync with large files (several megabytes and up). Due to the nature
1541of rsync transfers, blocks of data are sent, then if rsync determines the
1542transfer was too fast, it will wait before sending the next data block. The
1543result is an average transfer rate equaling the specified limit. A value
1544of zero specifies no limit.
1545
1546dit(bf(--write-batch=FILE)) Record a file that can later be applied to
1547another identical destination with bf(--read-batch). See the "BATCH MODE"
1548section for details, and also the bf(--only-write-batch) option.
1549
1550dit(bf(--only-write-batch=FILE)) Works like bf(--write-batch), except that
1551no updates are made on the destination system when creating the batch.
1552This lets you transport the changes to the destination system via some
1553other means and then apply the changes via bf(--read-batch).
1554
1555Note that you can feel free to write the batch directly to some portable
1556media: if this media fills to capacity before the end of the transfer, you
1557can just apply that partial transfer to the destination and repeat the
1558whole process to get the rest of the changes (as long as you don't mind a
1559partially updated destination system while the multi-update cycle is
1560happening).
1561
1562Also note that you only save bandwidth when pushing changes to a remote
1563system because this allows the batched data to be diverted from the sender
1564into the batch file without having to flow over the wire to the receiver
1565(when pulling, the sender is remote, and thus can't write the batch).
1566
1567dit(bf(--read-batch=FILE)) Apply all of the changes stored in FILE, a
1568file previously generated by bf(--write-batch).
1569If em(FILE) is bf(-), the batch data will be read from standard input.
1570See the "BATCH MODE" section for details.
1571
1572dit(bf(--protocol=NUM)) Force an older protocol version to be used. This
1573is useful for creating a batch file that is compatible with an older
1574version of rsync. For instance, if rsync 2.6.4 is being used with the
1575bf(--write-batch) option, but rsync 2.6.3 is what will be used to run the
1576bf(--read-batch) option, you should use "--protocol=28" when creating the
1577batch file to force the older protocol version to be used in the batch
1578file (assuming you can't upgrade the rsync on the reading system).
1579
1580dit(bf(-4, --ipv4) or bf(-6, --ipv6)) Tells rsync to prefer IPv4/IPv6
1581when creating sockets. This only affects sockets that rsync has direct
1582control over, such as the outgoing socket when directly contacting an
1583rsync daemon. See also these options in the bf(--daemon) mode section.
1584
1585dit(bf(--checksum-seed=NUM)) Set the MD4 checksum seed to the integer
1586NUM. This 4 byte checksum seed is included in each block and file
1587MD4 checksum calculation. By default the checksum seed is generated
1588by the server and defaults to the current time(). This option
1589is used to set a specific checksum seed, which is useful for
1590applications that want repeatable block and file checksums, or
1591in the case where the user wants a more random checksum seed.
1592Note that setting NUM to 0 causes rsync to use the default of time()
1593for checksum seed.
1594enddit()
1595
1596manpagesection(DAEMON OPTIONS)
1597
1598The options allowed when starting an rsync daemon are as follows:
1599
1600startdit()
1601dit(bf(--daemon)) This tells rsync that it is to run as a daemon. The
1602daemon you start running may be accessed using an rsync client using
1603the bf(host::module) or bf(rsync://host/module/) syntax.
1604
1605If standard input is a socket then rsync will assume that it is being
1606run via inetd, otherwise it will detach from the current terminal and
1607become a background daemon. The daemon will read the config file
1608(rsyncd.conf) on each connect made by a client and respond to
1609requests accordingly. See the rsyncd.conf(5) man page for more
1610details.
1611
1612dit(bf(--address)) By default rsync will bind to the wildcard address when
1613run as a daemon with the bf(--daemon) option. The bf(--address) option
1614allows you to specify a specific IP address (or hostname) to bind to. This
1615makes virtual hosting possible in conjunction with the bf(--config) option.
1616See also the "address" global option in the rsyncd.conf manpage.
1617
1618dit(bf(--bwlimit=KBPS)) This option allows you to specify a maximum
1619transfer rate in kilobytes per second for the data the daemon sends.
1620The client can still specify a smaller bf(--bwlimit) value, but their
1621requested value will be rounded down if they try to exceed it. See the
1622client version of this option (above) for some extra details.
1623
1624dit(bf(--config=FILE)) This specifies an alternate config file than
1625the default. This is only relevant when bf(--daemon) is specified.
1626The default is /etc/rsyncd.conf unless the daemon is running over
1627a remote shell program and the remote user is not the super-user; in that case
1628the default is rsyncd.conf in the current directory (typically $HOME).
1629
1630dit(bf(--no-detach)) When running as a daemon, this option instructs
1631rsync to not detach itself and become a background process. This
1632option is required when running as a service on Cygwin, and may also
1633be useful when rsync is supervised by a program such as
1634bf(daemontools) or AIX's bf(System Resource Controller).
1635bf(--no-detach) is also recommended when rsync is run under a
1636debugger. This option has no effect if rsync is run from inetd or
1637sshd.
1638
1639dit(bf(--port=PORT)) This specifies an alternate TCP port number for the
1640daemon to listen on rather than the default of 873. See also the "port"
1641global option in the rsyncd.conf manpage.
1642
1643dit(bf(--sockopts)) This overrides the bf(socket options) setting in the
1644rsyncd.conf file and has the same syntax.
1645
1646dit(bf(-v, --verbose)) This option increases the amount of information the
1647daemon logs during its startup phase. After the client connects, the
1648daemon's verbosity level will be controlled by the options that the client
1649used and the "max verbosity" setting in the module's config section.
1650
1651dit(bf(-4, --ipv4) or bf(-6, --ipv6)) Tells rsync to prefer IPv4/IPv6
1652when creating the incoming sockets that the rsync daemon will use to
1653listen for connections. One of these options may be required in older
1654versions of Linux to work around an IPv6 bug in the kernel (if you see
1655an "address already in use" error when nothing else is using the port,
1656try specifying bf(--ipv6) or bf(--ipv4) when starting the daemon).
1657
1658dit(bf(-h, --help)) When specified after bf(--daemon), print a short help
1659page describing the options available for starting an rsync daemon.
1660enddit()
1661
1662manpagesection(FILTER RULES)
1663
1664The filter rules allow for flexible selection of which files to transfer
1665(include) and which files to skip (exclude). The rules either directly
1666specify include/exclude patterns or they specify a way to acquire more
1667include/exclude patterns (e.g. to read them from a file).
1668
1669As the list of files/directories to transfer is built, rsync checks each
1670name to be transferred against the list of include/exclude patterns in
1671turn, and the first matching pattern is acted on: if it is an exclude
1672pattern, then that file is skipped; if it is an include pattern then that
1673filename is not skipped; if no matching pattern is found, then the
1674filename is not skipped.
1675
1676Rsync builds an ordered list of filter rules as specified on the
1677command-line. Filter rules have the following syntax:
1678
1679quote(
1680tt(RULE [PATTERN_OR_FILENAME])nl()
1681tt(RULE,MODIFIERS [PATTERN_OR_FILENAME])nl()
1682)
1683
1684You have your choice of using either short or long RULE names, as described
1685below. If you use a short-named rule, the ',' separating the RULE from the
1686MODIFIERS is optional. The PATTERN or FILENAME that follows (when present)
1687must come after either a single space or an underscore (_).
1688Here are the available rule prefixes:
1689
1690quote(
1691bf(exclude, -) specifies an exclude pattern. nl()
1692bf(include, +) specifies an include pattern. nl()
1693bf(merge, .) specifies a merge-file to read for more rules. nl()
1694bf(dir-merge, :) specifies a per-directory merge-file. nl()
1695bf(hide, H) specifies a pattern for hiding files from the transfer. nl()
1696bf(show, S) files that match the pattern are not hidden. nl()
1697bf(protect, P) specifies a pattern for protecting files from deletion. nl()
1698bf(risk, R) files that match the pattern are not protected. nl()
1699bf(clear, !) clears the current include/exclude list (takes no arg) nl()
1700)
1701
1702When rules are being read from a file, empty lines are ignored, as are
1703comment lines that start with a "#".
1704
1705Note that the bf(--include)/bf(--exclude) command-line options do not allow the
1706full range of rule parsing as described above -- they only allow the
1707specification of include/exclude patterns plus a "!" token to clear the
1708list (and the normal comment parsing when rules are read from a file).
1709If a pattern
1710does not begin with "- " (dash, space) or "+ " (plus, space), then the
1711rule will be interpreted as if "+ " (for an include option) or "- " (for
1712an exclude option) were prefixed to the string. A bf(--filter) option, on
1713the other hand, must always contain either a short or long rule name at the
1714start of the rule.
1715
1716Note also that the bf(--filter), bf(--include), and bf(--exclude) options take one
1717rule/pattern each. To add multiple ones, you can repeat the options on
1718the command-line, use the merge-file syntax of the bf(--filter) option, or
1719the bf(--include-from)/bf(--exclude-from) options.
1720
1721manpagesection(INCLUDE/EXCLUDE PATTERN RULES)
1722
1723You can include and exclude files by specifying patterns using the "+",
1724"-", etc. filter rules (as introduced in the FILTER RULES section above).
1725The include/exclude rules each specify a pattern that is matched against
1726the names of the files that are going to be transferred. These patterns
1727can take several forms:
1728
1729itemize(
1730 it() if the pattern starts with a / then it is anchored to a
1731 particular spot in the hierarchy of files, otherwise it is matched
1732 against the end of the pathname. This is similar to a leading ^ in
1733 regular expressions.
1734 Thus "/foo" would match a file called "foo" at either the "root of the
1735 transfer" (for a global rule) or in the merge-file's directory (for a
1736 per-directory rule).
1737 An unqualified "foo" would match any file or directory named "foo"
1738 anywhere in the tree because the algorithm is applied recursively from
1739 the
1740 top down; it behaves as if each path component gets a turn at being the
1741 end of the file name. Even the unanchored "sub/foo" would match at
1742 any point in the hierarchy where a "foo" was found within a directory
1743 named "sub". See the section on ANCHORING INCLUDE/EXCLUDE PATTERNS for
1744 a full discussion of how to specify a pattern that matches at the root
1745 of the transfer.
1746 it() if the pattern ends with a / then it will only match a
1747 directory, not a file, link, or device.
1748
1749 it() rsync chooses between doing a simple string match and wildcard
1750 matching by checking if the pattern contains one of these three wildcard
1751 characters: '*', '?', and '[' .
1752 it() a '*' matches any non-empty path component (it stops at slashes).
1753 it() use '**' to match anything, including slashes.
1754 it() a '?' matches any character except a slash (/).
1755 it() a '[' introduces a character class, such as [a-z] or [[:alpha:]].
1756 it() in a wildcard pattern, a backslash can be used to escape a wildcard
1757 character, but it is matched literally when no wildcards are present.
1758 it() if the pattern contains a / (not counting a trailing /) or a "**",
1759 then it is matched against the full pathname, including any leading
1760 directories. If the pattern doesn't contain a / or a "**", then it is
1761 matched only against the final component of the filename.
1762 (Remember that the algorithm is applied recursively so "full filename"
1763 can actually be any portion of a path from the starting directory on
1764 down.)
1765 it() a trailing "dir_name/***" will match both the directory (as if
1766 "dir_name/" had been specified) and all the files in the directory
1767 (as if "dir_name/**" had been specified). (This behavior is new for
1768 version 2.6.7.)
1769)
1770
1771Note that, when using the bf(--recursive) (bf(-r)) option (which is implied by
1772bf(-a)), every subcomponent of every path is visited from the top down, so
1773include/exclude patterns get applied recursively to each subcomponent's
1774full name (e.g. to include "/foo/bar/baz" the subcomponents "/foo" and
1775"/foo/bar" must not be excluded).
1776The exclude patterns actually short-circuit the directory traversal stage
1777when rsync finds the files to send. If a pattern excludes a particular
1778parent directory, it can render a deeper include pattern ineffectual
1779because rsync did not descend through that excluded section of the
1780hierarchy. This is particularly important when using a trailing '*' rule.
1781For instance, this won't work:
1782
1783quote(
1784tt(+ /some/path/this-file-will-not-be-found)nl()
1785tt(+ /file-is-included)nl()
1786tt(- *)nl()
1787)
1788
1789This fails because the parent directory "some" is excluded by the '*'
1790rule, so rsync never visits any of the files in the "some" or "some/path"
1791directories. One solution is to ask for all directories in the hierarchy
1792to be included by using a single rule: "+ */" (put it somewhere before the
1793"- *" rule). Another solution is to add specific include rules for all
1794the parent dirs that need to be visited. For instance, this set of rules
1795works fine:
1796
1797quote(
1798tt(+ /some/)nl()
1799tt(+ /some/path/)nl()
1800tt(+ /some/path/this-file-is-found)nl()
1801tt(+ /file-also-included)nl()
1802tt(- *)nl()
1803)
1804
1805Here are some examples of exclude/include matching:
1806
1807itemize(
1808 it() "- *.o" would exclude all filenames matching *.o
1809 it() "- /foo" would exclude a file called foo in the transfer-root directory
1810 it() "- foo/" would exclude any directory called foo
1811 it() "- /foo/*/bar" would exclude any file called bar two
1812 levels below a directory called foo in the transfer-root directory
1813 it() "- /foo/**/bar" would exclude any file called bar two
1814 or more levels below a directory called foo in the transfer-root directory
1815 it() The combination of "+ */", "+ *.c", and "- *" would include all
1816 directories and C source files but nothing else.
1817 it() The combination of "+ foo/", "+ foo/bar.c", and "- *" would include
1818 only the foo directory and foo/bar.c (the foo directory must be
1819 explicitly included or it would be excluded by the "*")
1820)
1821
1822manpagesection(MERGE-FILE FILTER RULES)
1823
1824You can merge whole files into your filter rules by specifying either a
1825merge (.) or a dir-merge (:) filter rule (as introduced in the FILTER RULES
1826section above).
1827
1828There are two kinds of merged files -- single-instance ('.') and
1829per-directory (':'). A single-instance merge file is read one time, and
1830its rules are incorporated into the filter list in the place of the "."
1831rule. For per-directory merge files, rsync will scan every directory that
1832it traverses for the named file, merging its contents when the file exists
1833into the current list of inherited rules. These per-directory rule files
1834must be created on the sending side because it is the sending side that is
1835being scanned for the available files to transfer. These rule files may
1836also need to be transferred to the receiving side if you want them to
1837affect what files don't get deleted (see PER-DIRECTORY RULES AND DELETE
1838below).
1839
1840Some examples:
1841
1842quote(
1843tt(merge /etc/rsync/default.rules)nl()
1844tt(. /etc/rsync/default.rules)nl()
1845tt(dir-merge .per-dir-filter)nl()
1846tt(dir-merge,n- .non-inherited-per-dir-excludes)nl()
1847tt(:n- .non-inherited-per-dir-excludes)nl()
1848)
1849
1850The following modifiers are accepted after a merge or dir-merge rule:
1851
1852itemize(
1853 it() A bf(-) specifies that the file should consist of only exclude
1854 patterns, with no other rule-parsing except for in-file comments.
1855 it() A bf(+) specifies that the file should consist of only include
1856 patterns, with no other rule-parsing except for in-file comments.
1857 it() A bf(C) is a way to specify that the file should be read in a
1858 CVS-compatible manner. This turns on 'n', 'w', and '-', but also
1859 allows the list-clearing token (!) to be specified. If no filename is
1860 provided, ".cvsignore" is assumed.
1861 it() A bf(e) will exclude the merge-file name from the transfer; e.g.
1862 "dir-merge,e .rules" is like "dir-merge .rules" and "- .rules".
1863 it() An bf(n) specifies that the rules are not inherited by subdirectories.
1864 it() A bf(w) specifies that the rules are word-split on whitespace instead
1865 of the normal line-splitting. This also turns off comments. Note: the
1866 space that separates the prefix from the rule is treated specially, so
1867 "- foo + bar" is parsed as two rules (assuming that prefix-parsing wasn't
1868 also disabled).
1869 it() You may also specify any of the modifiers for the "+" or "-" rules
1870 (below) in order to have the rules that are read-in from the file
1871 default to having that modifier set. For instance, "merge,-/ .excl" would
1872 treat the contents of .excl as absolute-path excludes,
1873 while "dir-merge,s .filt" and ":sC" would each make all their
1874 per-directory rules apply only on the sending side.
1875)
1876
1877The following modifiers are accepted after a "+" or "-":
1878
1879itemize(
1880 it() A "/" specifies that the include/exclude rule should be matched
1881 against the absolute pathname of the current item. For example,
1882 "-/ /etc/passwd" would exclude the passwd file any time the transfer
1883 was sending files from the "/etc" directory, and "-/ subdir/foo"
1884 would always exclude "foo" when it is in a dir named "subdir", even
1885 if "foo" is at the root of the current transfer.
1886 it() A "!" specifies that the include/exclude should take effect if
1887 the pattern fails to match. For instance, "-! */" would exclude all
1888 non-directories.
1889 it() A bf(C) is used to indicate that all the global CVS-exclude rules
1890 should be inserted as excludes in place of the "-C". No arg should
1891 follow.
1892 it() An bf(s) is used to indicate that the rule applies to the sending
1893 side. When a rule affects the sending side, it prevents files from
1894 being transferred. The default is for a rule to affect both sides
1895 unless bf(--delete-excluded) was specified, in which case default rules
1896 become sender-side only. See also the hide (H) and show (S) rules,
1897 which are an alternate way to specify sending-side includes/excludes.
1898 it() An bf(r) is used to indicate that the rule applies to the receiving
1899 side. When a rule affects the receiving side, it prevents files from
1900 being deleted. See the bf(s) modifier for more info. See also the
1901 protect (P) and risk (R) rules, which are an alternate way to
1902 specify receiver-side includes/excludes.
1903)
1904
1905Per-directory rules are inherited in all subdirectories of the directory
1906where the merge-file was found unless the 'n' modifier was used. Each
1907subdirectory's rules are prefixed to the inherited per-directory rules
1908from its parents, which gives the newest rules a higher priority than the
1909inherited rules. The entire set of dir-merge rules are grouped together in
1910the spot where the merge-file was specified, so it is possible to override
1911dir-merge rules via a rule that got specified earlier in the list of global
1912rules. When the list-clearing rule ("!") is read from a per-directory
1913file, it only clears the inherited rules for the current merge file.
1914
1915Another way to prevent a single rule from a dir-merge file from being inherited is to
1916anchor it with a leading slash. Anchored rules in a per-directory
1917merge-file are relative to the merge-file's directory, so a pattern "/foo"
1918would only match the file "foo" in the directory where the dir-merge filter
1919file was found.
1920
1921Here's an example filter file which you'd specify via bf(--filter=". file":)
1922
1923quote(
1924tt(merge /home/user/.global-filter)nl()
1925tt(- *.gz)nl()
1926tt(dir-merge .rules)nl()
1927tt(+ *.[ch])nl()
1928tt(- *.o)nl()
1929)
1930
1931This will merge the contents of the /home/user/.global-filter file at the
1932start of the list and also turns the ".rules" filename into a per-directory
1933filter file. All rules read-in prior to the start of the directory scan
1934follow the global anchoring rules (i.e. a leading slash matches at the root
1935of the transfer).
1936
1937If a per-directory merge-file is specified with a path that is a parent
1938directory of the first transfer directory, rsync will scan all the parent
1939dirs from that starting point to the transfer directory for the indicated
1940per-directory file. For instance, here is a common filter (see bf(-F)):
1941
1942quote(tt(--filter=': /.rsync-filter'))
1943
1944That rule tells rsync to scan for the file .rsync-filter in all
1945directories from the root down through the parent directory of the
1946transfer prior to the start of the normal directory scan of the file in
1947the directories that are sent as a part of the transfer. (Note: for an
1948rsync daemon, the root is always the same as the module's "path".)
1949
1950Some examples of this pre-scanning for per-directory files:
1951
1952quote(
1953tt(rsync -avF /src/path/ /dest/dir)nl()
1954tt(rsync -av --filter=': ../../.rsync-filter' /src/path/ /dest/dir)nl()
1955tt(rsync -av --filter=': .rsync-filter' /src/path/ /dest/dir)nl()
1956)
1957
1958The first two commands above will look for ".rsync-filter" in "/" and
1959"/src" before the normal scan begins looking for the file in "/src/path"
1960and its subdirectories. The last command avoids the parent-dir scan
1961and only looks for the ".rsync-filter" files in each directory that is
1962a part of the transfer.
1963
1964If you want to include the contents of a ".cvsignore" in your patterns,
1965you should use the rule ":C", which creates a dir-merge of the .cvsignore
1966file, but parsed in a CVS-compatible manner. You can
1967use this to affect where the bf(--cvs-exclude) (bf(-C)) option's inclusion of the
1968per-directory .cvsignore file gets placed into your rules by putting the
1969":C" wherever you like in your filter rules. Without this, rsync would
1970add the dir-merge rule for the .cvsignore file at the end of all your other
1971rules (giving it a lower priority than your command-line rules). For
1972example:
1973
1974quote(
1975tt(cat <<EOT | rsync -avC --filter='. -' a/ b)nl()
1976tt(+ foo.o)nl()
1977tt(:C)nl()
1978tt(- *.old)nl()
1979tt(EOT)nl()
1980tt(rsync -avC --include=foo.o -f :C --exclude='*.old' a/ b)nl()
1981)
1982
1983Both of the above rsync commands are identical. Each one will merge all
1984the per-directory .cvsignore rules in the middle of the list rather than
1985at the end. This allows their dir-specific rules to supersede the rules
1986that follow the :C instead of being subservient to all your rules. To
1987affect the other CVS exclude rules (i.e. the default list of exclusions,
1988the contents of $HOME/.cvsignore, and the value of $CVSIGNORE) you should
1989omit the bf(-C) command-line option and instead insert a "-C" rule into
1990your filter rules; e.g. "--filter=-C".
1991
1992manpagesection(LIST-CLEARING FILTER RULE)
1993
1994You can clear the current include/exclude list by using the "!" filter
1995rule (as introduced in the FILTER RULES section above). The "current"
1996list is either the global list of rules (if the rule is encountered while
1997parsing the filter options) or a set of per-directory rules (which are
1998inherited in their own sub-list, so a subdirectory can use this to clear
1999out the parent's rules).
2000
2001manpagesection(ANCHORING INCLUDE/EXCLUDE PATTERNS)
2002
2003As mentioned earlier, global include/exclude patterns are anchored at the
2004"root of the transfer" (as opposed to per-directory patterns, which are
2005anchored at the merge-file's directory). If you think of the transfer as
2006a subtree of names that are being sent from sender to receiver, the
2007transfer-root is where the tree starts to be duplicated in the destination
2008directory. This root governs where patterns that start with a / match.
2009
2010Because the matching is relative to the transfer-root, changing the
2011trailing slash on a source path or changing your use of the bf(--relative)
2012option affects the path you need to use in your matching (in addition to
2013changing how much of the file tree is duplicated on the destination
2014host). The following examples demonstrate this.
2015
2016Let's say that we want to match two source files, one with an absolute
2017path of "/home/me/foo/bar", and one with a path of "/home/you/bar/baz".
2018Here is how the various command choices differ for a 2-source transfer:
2019
2020quote(
2021 Example cmd: rsync -a /home/me /home/you /dest nl()
2022 +/- pattern: /me/foo/bar nl()
2023 +/- pattern: /you/bar/baz nl()
2024 Target file: /dest/me/foo/bar nl()
2025 Target file: /dest/you/bar/baz nl()
2026)
2027
2028quote(
2029 Example cmd: rsync -a /home/me/ /home/you/ /dest nl()
2030 +/- pattern: /foo/bar (note missing "me") nl()
2031 +/- pattern: /bar/baz (note missing "you") nl()
2032 Target file: /dest/foo/bar nl()
2033 Target file: /dest/bar/baz nl()
2034)
2035
2036quote(
2037 Example cmd: rsync -a --relative /home/me/ /home/you /dest nl()
2038 +/- pattern: /home/me/foo/bar (note full path) nl()
2039 +/- pattern: /home/you/bar/baz (ditto) nl()
2040 Target file: /dest/home/me/foo/bar nl()
2041 Target file: /dest/home/you/bar/baz nl()
2042)
2043
2044quote(
2045 Example cmd: cd /home; rsync -a --relative me/foo you/ /dest nl()
2046 +/- pattern: /me/foo/bar (starts at specified path) nl()
2047 +/- pattern: /you/bar/baz (ditto) nl()
2048 Target file: /dest/me/foo/bar nl()
2049 Target file: /dest/you/bar/baz nl()
2050)
2051
2052The easiest way to see what name you should filter is to just
2053look at the output when using bf(--verbose) and put a / in front of the name
2054(use the bf(--dry-run) option if you're not yet ready to copy any files).
2055
2056manpagesection(PER-DIRECTORY RULES AND DELETE)
2057
2058Without a delete option, per-directory rules are only relevant on the
2059sending side, so you can feel free to exclude the merge files themselves
2060without affecting the transfer. To make this easy, the 'e' modifier adds
2061this exclude for you, as seen in these two equivalent commands:
2062
2063quote(
2064tt(rsync -av --filter=': .excl' --exclude=.excl host:src/dir /dest)nl()
2065tt(rsync -av --filter=':e .excl' host:src/dir /dest)nl()
2066)
2067
2068However, if you want to do a delete on the receiving side AND you want some
2069files to be excluded from being deleted, you'll need to be sure that the
2070receiving side knows what files to exclude. The easiest way is to include
2071the per-directory merge files in the transfer and use bf(--delete-after),
2072because this ensures that the receiving side gets all the same exclude
2073rules as the sending side before it tries to delete anything:
2074
2075quote(tt(rsync -avF --delete-after host:src/dir /dest))
2076
2077However, if the merge files are not a part of the transfer, you'll need to
2078either specify some global exclude rules (i.e. specified on the command
2079line), or you'll need to maintain your own per-directory merge files on
2080the receiving side. An example of the first is this (assume that the
2081remote .rules files exclude themselves):
2082
2083verb(rsync -av --filter=': .rules' --filter='. /my/extra.rules'
2084 --delete host:src/dir /dest)
2085
2086In the above example the extra.rules file can affect both sides of the
2087transfer, but (on the sending side) the rules are subservient to the rules
2088merged from the .rules files because they were specified after the
2089per-directory merge rule.
2090
2091In one final example, the remote side is excluding the .rsync-filter
2092files from the transfer, but we want to use our own .rsync-filter files
2093to control what gets deleted on the receiving side. To do this we must
2094specifically exclude the per-directory merge files (so that they don't get
2095deleted) and then put rules into the local files to control what else
2096should not get deleted. Like one of these commands:
2097
2098verb( rsync -av --filter=':e /.rsync-filter' --delete \
2099 host:src/dir /dest
2100 rsync -avFF --delete host:src/dir /dest)
2101
2102manpagesection(BATCH MODE)
2103
2104Batch mode can be used to apply the same set of updates to many
2105identical systems. Suppose one has a tree which is replicated on a
2106number of hosts. Now suppose some changes have been made to this
2107source tree and those changes need to be propagated to the other
2108hosts. In order to do this using batch mode, rsync is run with the
2109write-batch option to apply the changes made to the source tree to one
2110of the destination trees. The write-batch option causes the rsync
2111client to store in a "batch file" all the information needed to repeat
2112this operation against other, identical destination trees.
2113
2114To apply the recorded changes to another destination tree, run rsync
2115with the read-batch option, specifying the name of the same batch
2116file, and the destination tree. Rsync updates the destination tree
2117using the information stored in the batch file.
2118
2119For convenience, one additional file is creating when the write-batch
2120option is used. This file's name is created by appending
2121".sh" to the batch filename. The .sh file contains
2122a command-line suitable for updating a destination tree using that
2123batch file. It can be executed using a Bourne(-like) shell, optionally
2124passing in an alternate destination tree pathname which is then used
2125instead of the original path. This is useful when the destination tree
2126path differs from the original destination tree path.
2127
2128Generating the batch file once saves having to perform the file
2129status, checksum, and data block generation more than once when
2130updating multiple destination trees. Multicast transport protocols can
2131be used to transfer the batch update files in parallel to many hosts
2132at once, instead of sending the same data to every host individually.
2133
2134Examples:
2135
2136quote(
2137tt($ rsync --write-batch=foo -a host:/source/dir/ /adest/dir/)nl()
2138tt($ scp foo* remote:)nl()
2139tt($ ssh remote ./foo.sh /bdest/dir/)nl()
2140)
2141
2142quote(
2143tt($ rsync --write-batch=foo -a /source/dir/ /adest/dir/)nl()
2144tt($ ssh remote rsync --read-batch=- -a /bdest/dir/ <foo)nl()
2145)
2146
2147In these examples, rsync is used to update /adest/dir/ from /source/dir/
2148and the information to repeat this operation is stored in "foo" and
2149"foo.sh". The host "remote" is then updated with the batched data going
2150into the directory /bdest/dir. The differences between the two examples
2151reveals some of the flexibility you have in how you deal with batches:
2152
2153itemize(
2154 it() The first example shows that the initial copy doesn't have to be
2155 local -- you can push or pull data to/from a remote host using either the
2156 remote-shell syntax or rsync daemon syntax, as desired.
2157 it() The first example uses the created "foo.sh" file to get the right
2158 rsync options when running the read-batch command on the remote host.
2159 it() The second example reads the batch data via standard input so that
2160 the batch file doesn't need to be copied to the remote machine first.
2161 This example avoids the foo.sh script because it needed to use a modified
2162 bf(--read-batch) option, but you could edit the script file if you wished to
2163 make use of it (just be sure that no other option is trying to use
2164 standard input, such as the "bf(--exclude-from=-)" option).
2165)
2166
2167Caveats:
2168
2169The read-batch option expects the destination tree that it is updating
2170to be identical to the destination tree that was used to create the
2171batch update fileset. When a difference between the destination trees
2172is encountered the update might be discarded with a warning (if the file
2173appears to be up-to-date already) or the file-update may be attempted
2174and then, if the file fails to verify, the update discarded with an
2175error. This means that it should be safe to re-run a read-batch operation
2176if the command got interrupted. If you wish to force the batched-update to
2177always be attempted regardless of the file's size and date, use the bf(-I)
2178option (when reading the batch).
2179If an error occurs, the destination tree will probably be in a
2180partially updated state. In that case, rsync can
2181be used in its regular (non-batch) mode of operation to fix up the
2182destination tree.
2183
2184The rsync version used on all destinations must be at least as new as the
2185one used to generate the batch file. Rsync will die with an error if the
2186protocol version in the batch file is too new for the batch-reading rsync
2187to handle. See also the bf(--protocol) option for a way to have the
2188creating rsync generate a batch file that an older rsync can understand.
2189(Note that batch files changed format in version 2.6.3, so mixing versions
2190older than that with newer versions will not work.)
2191
2192When reading a batch file, rsync will force the value of certain options
2193to match the data in the batch file if you didn't set them to the same
2194as the batch-writing command. Other options can (and should) be changed.
2195For instance bf(--write-batch) changes to bf(--read-batch),
2196bf(--files-from) is dropped, and the
2197bf(--filter)/bf(--include)/bf(--exclude) options are not needed unless
2198one of the bf(--delete) options is specified.
2199
2200The code that creates the BATCH.sh file transforms any filter/include/exclude
2201options into a single list that is appended as a "here" document to the
2202shell script file. An advanced user can use this to modify the exclude
2203list if a change in what gets deleted by bf(--delete) is desired. A normal
2204user can ignore this detail and just use the shell script as an easy way
2205to run the appropriate bf(--read-batch) command for the batched data.
2206
2207The original batch mode in rsync was based on "rsync+", but the latest
2208version uses a new implementation.
2209
2210manpagesection(SYMBOLIC LINKS)
2211
2212Three basic behaviors are possible when rsync encounters a symbolic
2213link in the source directory.
2214
2215By default, symbolic links are not transferred at all. A message
2216"skipping non-regular" file is emitted for any symlinks that exist.
2217
2218If bf(--links) is specified, then symlinks are recreated with the same
2219target on the destination. Note that bf(--archive) implies
2220bf(--links).
2221
2222If bf(--copy-links) is specified, then symlinks are "collapsed" by
2223copying their referent, rather than the symlink.
2224
2225rsync also distinguishes "safe" and "unsafe" symbolic links. An
2226example where this might be used is a web site mirror that wishes
2227ensure the rsync module they copy does not include symbolic links to
2228bf(/etc/passwd) in the public section of the site. Using
2229bf(--copy-unsafe-links) will cause any links to be copied as the file
2230they point to on the destination. Using bf(--safe-links) will cause
2231unsafe links to be omitted altogether. (Note that you must specify
2232bf(--links) for bf(--safe-links) to have any effect.)
2233
2234Symbolic links are considered unsafe if they are absolute symlinks
2235(start with bf(/)), empty, or if they contain enough bf("..")
2236components to ascend from the directory being copied.
2237
2238Here's a summary of how the symlink options are interpreted. The list is
2239in order of precedence, so if your combination of options isn't mentioned,
2240use the first line that is a complete subset of your options:
2241
2242dit(bf(--copy-links)) Turn all symlinks into normal files (leaving no
2243symlinks for any other options to affect).
2244
2245dit(bf(--links --copy-unsafe-links)) Turn all unsafe symlinks into files
2246and duplicate all safe symlinks.
2247
2248dit(bf(--copy-unsafe-links)) Turn all unsafe symlinks into files, noisily
2249skip all safe symlinks.
2250
2251dit(bf(--links --safe-links)) Duplicate safe symlinks and skip unsafe
2252ones.
2253
2254dit(bf(--links)) Duplicate all symlinks.
2255
2256manpagediagnostics()
2257
2258rsync occasionally produces error messages that may seem a little
2259cryptic. The one that seems to cause the most confusion is "protocol
2260version mismatch -- is your shell clean?".
2261
2262This message is usually caused by your startup scripts or remote shell
2263facility producing unwanted garbage on the stream that rsync is using
2264for its transport. The way to diagnose this problem is to run your
2265remote shell like this:
2266
2267quote(tt(ssh remotehost /bin/true > out.dat))
2268
2269then look at out.dat. If everything is working correctly then out.dat
2270should be a zero length file. If you are getting the above error from
2271rsync then you will probably find that out.dat contains some text or
2272data. Look at the contents and try to work out what is producing
2273it. The most common cause is incorrectly configured shell startup
2274scripts (such as .cshrc or .profile) that contain output statements
2275for non-interactive logins.
2276
2277If you are having trouble debugging filter patterns, then
2278try specifying the bf(-vv) option. At this level of verbosity rsync will
2279show why each individual file is included or excluded.
2280
2281manpagesection(EXIT VALUES)
2282
2283startdit()
2284dit(bf(0)) Success
2285dit(bf(1)) Syntax or usage error
2286dit(bf(2)) Protocol incompatibility
2287dit(bf(3)) Errors selecting input/output files, dirs
2288dit(bf(4)) Requested action not supported: an attempt
2289was made to manipulate 64-bit files on a platform that cannot support
2290them; or an option was specified that is supported by the client and
2291not by the server.
2292dit(bf(5)) Error starting client-server protocol
2293dit(bf(6)) Daemon unable to append to log-file
2294dit(bf(10)) Error in socket I/O
2295dit(bf(11)) Error in file I/O
2296dit(bf(12)) Error in rsync protocol data stream
2297dit(bf(13)) Errors with program diagnostics
2298dit(bf(14)) Error in IPC code
2299dit(bf(20)) Received SIGUSR1 or SIGINT
2300dit(bf(21)) Some error returned by waitpid()
2301dit(bf(22)) Error allocating core memory buffers
2302dit(bf(23)) Partial transfer due to error
2303dit(bf(24)) Partial transfer due to vanished source files
2304dit(bf(25)) The --max-delete limit stopped deletions
2305dit(bf(30)) Timeout in data send/receive
2306enddit()
2307
2308manpagesection(ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES)
2309
2310startdit()
2311dit(bf(CVSIGNORE)) The CVSIGNORE environment variable supplements any
2312ignore patterns in .cvsignore files. See the bf(--cvs-exclude) option for
2313more details.
2314dit(bf(RSYNC_RSH)) The RSYNC_RSH environment variable allows you to
2315override the default shell used as the transport for rsync. Command line
2316options are permitted after the command name, just as in the bf(-e) option.
2317dit(bf(RSYNC_PROXY)) The RSYNC_PROXY environment variable allows you to
2318redirect your rsync client to use a web proxy when connecting to a
2319rsync daemon. You should set RSYNC_PROXY to a hostname:port pair.
2320dit(bf(RSYNC_PASSWORD)) Setting RSYNC_PASSWORD to the required
2321password allows you to run authenticated rsync connections to an rsync
2322daemon without user intervention. Note that this does not supply a
2323password to a shell transport such as ssh.
2324dit(bf(USER) or bf(LOGNAME)) The USER or LOGNAME environment variables
2325are used to determine the default username sent to an rsync daemon.
2326If neither is set, the username defaults to "nobody".
2327dit(bf(HOME)) The HOME environment variable is used to find the user's
2328default .cvsignore file.
2329enddit()
2330
2331manpagefiles()
2332
2333/etc/rsyncd.conf or rsyncd.conf
2334
2335manpageseealso()
2336
2337rsyncd.conf(5)
2338
2339manpagebugs()
2340
2341times are transferred as unix time_t values
2342
2343When transferring to FAT filesystems rsync may re-sync
2344unmodified files.
2345See the comments on the bf(--modify-window) option.
2346
2347file permissions, devices, etc. are transferred as native numerical
2348values
2349
2350see also the comments on the bf(--delete) option
2351
2352Please report bugs! See the website at
2353url(http://rsync.samba.org/)(http://rsync.samba.org/)
2354
2355manpagesection(VERSION)
2356
2357This man page is current for version 2.6.6 of rsync.
2358
2359manpagesection(CREDITS)
2360
2361rsync is distributed under the GNU public license. See the file
2362COPYING for details.
2363
2364A WEB site is available at
2365url(http://rsync.samba.org/)(http://rsync.samba.org/). The site
2366includes an FAQ-O-Matic which may cover questions unanswered by this
2367manual page.
2368
2369The primary ftp site for rsync is
2370url(ftp://rsync.samba.org/pub/rsync)(ftp://rsync.samba.org/pub/rsync).
2371
2372We would be delighted to hear from you if you like this program.
2373
2374This program uses the excellent zlib compression library written by
2375Jean-loup Gailly and Mark Adler.
2376
2377manpagesection(THANKS)
2378
2379Thanks to Richard Brent, Brendan Mackay, Bill Waite, Stephen Rothwell
2380and David Bell for helpful suggestions, patches and testing of rsync.
2381I've probably missed some people, my apologies if I have.
2382
2383Especial thanks also to: David Dykstra, Jos Backus, Sebastian Krahmer,
2384Martin Pool, Wayne Davison, J.W. Schultz.
2385
2386manpageauthor()
2387
2388rsync was originally written by Andrew Tridgell and Paul Mackerras.
2389Many people have later contributed to it.
2390
2391Mailing lists for support and development are available at
2392url(http://lists.samba.org)(lists.samba.org)