- Fixed a potential hang when verbosity is high, the client side is
the sender, and the file-list is large.
+ - Fixed a potential protocol-corrupting bug where the generator could
+ merge a message from the receiver into the middle of a multiplexed
+ packet of data if only part of that data was written out to the
+ socket when we got the message from the generator.
+
- We now check if the OS doesn't support using mknod() for creating
FIFOs and sockets, and compile-in using mkfifo() and socket() when
necessary.
- The stat size of a device is not added to the total file size of the
items in the transfer since the size might be undefined on some OSes.
+ - Fixed a problem with refused-option messages sometimes not making it
+ back to the client side when a remote --files-from was in effect and
+ the daemon was the receiver.
+
+ - The --compare-dest option was not updating a file that differred in
+ (the preserved) attributes from the version in the compare-dest DIR.
+
+ - When rsync is copying files into a write-protected directory, fixed
+ the change-report output for the directory so that we don't report
+ an identical directory as changed.
+
ENHANCEMENTS:
- Rsync now supports popt's option aliases, which means that you can
algorithm only creates one directory of objects at a time (for files
inside the transfer).
- - Added support for specifying multiple --compare-dest or --link-dest
- options, but only of a single type. (Promoted from the patches dir
- and enhanced.)
+ - Added the --copy-dest option, which works like --link-dest except
+ that it copies identical files instead of hard-linking them.
+
+ - Added support for specifying multiple --compare-dest, --copy-dest, or
+ --link-dest options, but only of a single type. (Promoted from the
+ patches dir and enhanced.) (Requires protocol 29.)
- Added the --max-size option. (Promoted from the patches dir.)
file, we now flush any data in the write-cache before closing the
partial file.
- - The --inplace support was enhanced to work with --compare-dest and
- --link-dest. (Requires protocol 29.)
+ - The --inplace support was enhanced to work with --compare-dest,
+ --link-dest, and (the new) --copy-dest options. (Requires protocol
+ 29.)
- Added the --dirs (-d) option for an easier way to copy directories
without recursion.
file was renamed with no other changes) as well as based on a fuzzy
name-matching algorithm. This option requires protocol 29 because
it needs the new file-sorting order. (Promoted from patches dir
- and enhanced.)
+ and enhanced.) (Requires protocol 29.)
- Added the --remove-sent-files option, which lets you move files
between systems.
+ - The hostname in HOST:PATH or HOST::PATH may now be an IPv6 literal
+ enclosed in '[' and ']' (e.g. "[::1]"). (We already allowed IPv6
+ literals in the rsync://HOST:PORT/PATH format.)
+
+ - When rsync recurses to build the file list, it no longer keeps open
+ the directory handles of all the parent dirs inside the transfer.
+
- When building under windows, the default for --daemon is now to
avoid detaching, requiring the new --detach option to force rsync
to detach.
+ - The --dry-run option can now be combined with either --write-batch or
+ --read-batch, allowing you to run a do-nothing test command to see
+ what would happen without --dry-run.
+
- Improved the option descriptions in the --help text.
SUPPORT FILES:
generator now transmits an index and a flag-word to indicate when
dirs and symlinks have changed (instead of producing a message),
which makes the outputting of the information more consistent and
- less prone to screen corruption (because either the receiver or the
- sender is now outputting all the file-change info).
-
- - If --inplace is specified, the generator flags any transfer that is
- using an alternate basis file so that the sender can use the entire
- basis file in the rsync algorithm (unlike a normal --inplace update).
+ less prone to screen corruption (because the local receiver/sender is
+ now outputting all the file-change info messages).
+
+ - If a file is being hard-linked, the appropriate bit is enabled in
+ the flag-word and the name of the file that was linked immediately
+ follows in vstring format (see below).
+
+ - If a file is being transferred with an alternate-basis file, the
+ appropriate bit is enabled in the flag-word and a single-byte
+ follows, indicating what type of basis file was chosen. If that
+ indicates that a fuzzy-match was selected, the name of the match
+ immediately follows in vstring format. A vstring is a variable
+ length string that has its size written prior to the string, and
+ no terminating null. If the string is from 1-127 bytes, the length
+ is a single byte. If it is from 128-32767 bytes, the length is
+ written as ((len >> 8) | 0x80) followed by (len % 0x100).
- The sending of exclude names is done using filter-rule syntax. This
means that all names have a prefixed rule indicator, even excludes
build the file-list, and one for how long it took to send it over the
wire (each expressed in thousandths of a second).
- - When --delete-excluded is specified with some filter excludes, a
- client sender will now initiate a send of the filter rules to the
- receiver (older protocols used to omit the sending of excludes in
+ - When --delete-excluded is specified with some filter rules (AKA
+ excludes), a client sender will now initiate a send of the rules to
+ the receiver (older protocols used to omit the sending of excludes in
this situation since there were no receiver-specific rules that
survived --delete-excluded back then). Note that, as with all the
filter-list sending, only items that are significant to the other
side will actually be sent over the wire, so the filter-rule list
- is often empty in this scenario.
-
- - A protocol-29 batch file includes a bit for the setting of the --dirs
- option. Also, the shell script created by --write-batch will use the
- --filter option instead of --exclude-from to capture any filter rules.
+ that is sent in this scenario is often empty.
- An index equal to the file-list count is sent as a keep-alive packet
from the generator to the sender, which then forwards it on to the
packet if the 16-bit flag-word that follows it contains a single bit
(ITEM_IS_NEW, which is normally an illegal flag to appear alone).
+ - A protocol-29 batch file includes a bit for the setting of the --dirs
+ option and for the setting of the --compress option. Also, the shell
+ script created by --write-batch will use the --filter option instead
+ of --exclude-from to capture any filter rules.
+
BUILD CHANGES:
- Handle an operating system that use mkdev() in place of makedev().