Awesome useful rsync
convenience wrapper for Python 3.
Does the heavy lifting of finding potential problems, plus detects potential moves.
We recommend using PyPy
, which appears to operate order(s) of magnitude faster during the (inefficient) file tree computations.
pip install rsyncr
This includes the following dependencies: typing_extensions
, textdistance
, but would also make use of fuzzywuzzy
, StringDist
, brew-distance
, edit-distance
, editdistance-s
or editdistance
if installed.
rsyncr
always operates on the current folder.
You only specify the target folder (plus options).
rsyncr <target-path> [options]
with options:
rsyncr (C) Arne Bachmann 2017-2024
This rsync-wrapper simplifies backing up the current directory tree.
Syntax: rsyncr <target-path> [options]
target-path is either a local folder /path or Drive:\path or a remote path [rsync://][user@]host:/path
using Drive: - use the drive's current folder (Windows only)
using Drive:\~ - use full source path on target drive
Copy mode options (default: update):
--add -a Immediately copy only additional files (otherwise add, and update modified)
--sync -s Remove files in target if removed in source, including empty folders
--del -d Only remove files, do not add nor update
--simulate -n Don't actually sync, stop after simulation
--estimate Estimate copy speed
--file <file path> Transfer a single local file instead of synchronizing a folder
--user <user name> -u Manual remote user name specification, unless using user@host notation
--skip-move Do not compute potential moves
Interactive options:
--ask -i In case of dangerous operation, ask user interactively
--force-foldername -f Sync even if target folder name differs
--force -y Sync even if deletions or moved files have been detected
--force-copy Force writing over existing files
Generic options:
--flat -1 Don't recurse into sub folders, only operate on current folder
--checksum -C Full file comparison using checksums
--compress -c Compress data during transport, handle many files better
--verbose -v Show more output
--help -h Show this information
Special options:
--with-checksums corrupDetect compatibility: if set, .corrupdetect files are not ignored
- Update the version in
pyproject.toml
hatch clean && hatch build -t wheel
hatch publish dist\*.whl
rsync status output explanation:
Source: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4493525/rsync-what-means-the-f-on-rsync-logs
1: > received, . unchanged or modified (cf. below), c local change, * message, e.g. deleted, h hardlink, * = message following (no path)
2: f file, d directory, L symlink, D device, S special
3: c checksum of orther change
4: s size change
5: t time change
6: p permission
7: o owner
8: g group
9: u future
10: a ACL (not available on all systems)
11: x extended attributes (as above)
https://linux.die.net/man/1/rsync
-r --recursive recursive
-R --relative preserves full path
-u --update skip files newer in target (to avoid unnecessary write operations)
-i --itemize-changes Show results (itemize - necessary to allow parsing)
-t --times keep timestamps
-S --sparse sparse files handling
-b --backup make backups using the "~~" suffix (into folder hierarchy), use --backup-dir and --suffix to modify base backup dir and backup suffix. A second sync will remove backups as well!
-h --human-readable ...
-c --checksum compute checksum, don't use name, time and size
--stats show traffic stats
--existing only update files already there
--ignore-existing stronger than -u: don't copy existing files, even if older than in source
--prune-empty-dirs on target, if updating
-z, --compress --compress-level=9