X-Git-Url: https://mattmccutchen.net/rsync/rsync.git/blobdiff_plain/e49f61f5fc5d43866aa442cde5309e7f6b33a44a..9bef934c760e181f62198326c091ea910bc9f39c:/rsync.yo diff --git a/rsync.yo b/rsync.yo index e4e498f2..88ae07b1 100644 --- a/rsync.yo +++ b/rsync.yo @@ -466,15 +466,21 @@ just the last parts of the filenames. This is particularly useful when you want to send several different directories at the same time. For example, if you used the command -verb(rsync foo/bar/foo.c remote:/tmp/) +verb(rsync /foo/bar/foo.c remote:/tmp/) then this would create a file called foo.c in /tmp/ on the remote machine. If instead you used -verb(rsync -R foo/bar/foo.c remote:/tmp/) +verb(rsync -R /foo/bar/foo.c remote:/tmp/) then a file called /tmp/foo/bar/foo.c would be created on the remote -machine -- the full path name is preserved. +machine -- the full path name is preserved. To limit the amount of +path information that is sent, do something like this: + +verb(cd /foo +rsync -R bar/foo.c remote:/tmp/) + +That would create /tmp/bar/foo.c on the remote machine. dit(bf(--no-relative)) Turn off the --relative option. This is only needed if you want to use --files-from without its implied --relative @@ -509,11 +515,13 @@ dit(bf(--suffix=SUFFIX)) This option allows you to override the default backup suffix used with the --backup (-b) option. The default suffix is a ~ if no --backup-dir was specified, otherwise it is an empty string. -dit(bf(-u, --update)) This forces rsync to skip any files for which the -destination file already exists and has a date later than the source -file. +dit(bf(-u, --update)) This forces rsync to skip any files which exist on +the destination and have a modified time that is newer than the source +file. (If an existing destination file has a modify time equal to the +source file's, it will be updated if the sizes are different.) -In the currently implementation, a difference of file format is always +In the current implementation of --update, a difference of file format +between the sender and receiver is always considered to be important enough for an update, no matter what date is on the objects. In other words, if the source has a directory or a symlink where the destination has a file, the transfer would occur @@ -968,7 +976,7 @@ is complete, the current calculated file-completion rate (including both data over the wire and data being matched locally), and the estimated time remaining in this transfer. -After the a file is complete, it the data looks like this: +After a file is complete, the data looks like this: verb( 1238099 100% 146.38kB/s 0:00:08 (5, 57.1% of 396)