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* abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz * accounting * additional * allowed * almost * already * appropriately * arise * bandwidth * behave * bidirectional * brackets * cached * characters * cloud * committing * concatenating * configured * constructs * current * cutoff * deferred * different * directory * disposition * dropbox * either way * error * excess * experiments * explicitly * externally * files * github * gzipped * hierarchies * huffman * hyphen * implicitly * independent * insensitive * integrity * libraries * literally * metadata * mimics * missing * modification * multipart * multiple * nightmare * nonexistent * number * obscure * ourselves * overridden * potatoes * preexisting * priority * received * remote * replacement * represents * reproducibility * response * satisfies * sensitive * separately * separator * specifying * string * successful * synchronization * syncing * šenfeld * take * temporarily * testcontents * that * the * themselves * throttling * timeout * transaction * transferred * unnecessary * using * webbrowser * which * with * workspace Signed-off-by: Josh Soref <2119212+jsoref@users.noreply.github.com>
1091 lines
52 KiB
Markdown
1091 lines
52 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Bisync"
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description: "Bidirectional cloud sync solution in rclone"
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---
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## Getting started {#getting-started}
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- [Install rclone](/install/) and setup your remotes.
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- Bisync will create its working directory
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at `~/.cache/rclone/bisync` on Linux
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or `C:\Users\MyLogin\AppData\Local\rclone\bisync` on Windows.
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Make sure that this location is writable.
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- Run bisync with the `--resync` flag, specifying the paths
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to the local and remote sync directory roots.
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- For successive sync runs, leave off the `--resync` flag.
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- Consider using a [filters file](#filtering) for excluding
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unnecessary files and directories from the sync.
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- Consider setting up the [--check-access](#check-access-option) feature
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for safety.
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- On Linux, consider setting up a [crontab entry](#cron). bisync can
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safely run in concurrent cron jobs thanks to lock files it maintains.
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Here is a typical run log (with timestamps removed for clarity):
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```
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rclone bisync /testdir/path1/ /testdir/path2/ --verbose
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INFO : Synching Path1 "/testdir/path1/" with Path2 "/testdir/path2/"
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INFO : Path1 checking for diffs
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INFO : - Path1 File is new - file11.txt
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INFO : - Path1 File is newer - file2.txt
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INFO : - Path1 File is newer - file5.txt
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INFO : - Path1 File is newer - file7.txt
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INFO : - Path1 File was deleted - file4.txt
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INFO : - Path1 File was deleted - file6.txt
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INFO : - Path1 File was deleted - file8.txt
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INFO : Path1: 7 changes: 1 new, 3 newer, 0 older, 3 deleted
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INFO : Path2 checking for diffs
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INFO : - Path2 File is new - file10.txt
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INFO : - Path2 File is newer - file1.txt
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INFO : - Path2 File is newer - file5.txt
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INFO : - Path2 File is newer - file6.txt
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INFO : - Path2 File was deleted - file3.txt
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INFO : - Path2 File was deleted - file7.txt
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INFO : - Path2 File was deleted - file8.txt
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INFO : Path2: 7 changes: 1 new, 3 newer, 0 older, 3 deleted
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INFO : Applying changes
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INFO : - Path1 Queue copy to Path2 - /testdir/path2/file11.txt
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INFO : - Path1 Queue copy to Path2 - /testdir/path2/file2.txt
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INFO : - Path2 Queue delete - /testdir/path2/file4.txt
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NOTICE: - WARNING New or changed in both paths - file5.txt
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NOTICE: - Path1 Renaming Path1 copy - /testdir/path1/file5.txt..path1
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NOTICE: - Path1 Queue copy to Path2 - /testdir/path2/file5.txt..path1
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NOTICE: - Path2 Renaming Path2 copy - /testdir/path2/file5.txt..path2
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NOTICE: - Path2 Queue copy to Path1 - /testdir/path1/file5.txt..path2
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INFO : - Path2 Queue copy to Path1 - /testdir/path1/file6.txt
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INFO : - Path1 Queue copy to Path2 - /testdir/path2/file7.txt
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INFO : - Path2 Queue copy to Path1 - /testdir/path1/file1.txt
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INFO : - Path2 Queue copy to Path1 - /testdir/path1/file10.txt
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INFO : - Path1 Queue delete - /testdir/path1/file3.txt
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INFO : - Path2 Do queued copies to - Path1
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INFO : - Path1 Do queued copies to - Path2
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INFO : - Do queued deletes on - Path1
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INFO : - Do queued deletes on - Path2
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INFO : Updating listings
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INFO : Validating listings for Path1 "/testdir/path1/" vs Path2 "/testdir/path2/"
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INFO : Bisync successful
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```
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## Command line syntax
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```
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$ rclone bisync --help
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Usage:
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rclone bisync remote1:path1 remote2:path2 [flags]
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Positional arguments:
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Path1, Path2 Local path, or remote storage with ':' plus optional path.
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Type 'rclone listremotes' for list of configured remotes.
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Optional Flags:
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--check-access Ensure expected `RCLONE_TEST` files are found on
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both Path1 and Path2 filesystems, else abort.
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--check-filename FILENAME Filename for `--check-access` (default: `RCLONE_TEST`)
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--check-sync CHOICE Controls comparison of final listings:
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`true | false | only` (default: true)
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If set to `only`, bisync will only compare listings
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from the last run but skip actual sync.
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--filters-file PATH Read filtering patterns from a file
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--max-delete PERCENT Safety check on maximum percentage of deleted files allowed.
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If exceeded, the bisync run will abort. (default: 50%)
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--force Bypass `--max-delete` safety check and run the sync.
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Consider using with `--verbose`
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--remove-empty-dirs Remove empty directories at the final cleanup step.
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-1, --resync Performs the resync run.
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Warning: Path1 files may overwrite Path2 versions.
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Consider using `--verbose` or `--dry-run` first.
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--localtime Use local time in listings (default: UTC)
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--no-cleanup Retain working files (useful for troubleshooting and testing).
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--workdir PATH Use custom working directory (useful for testing).
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(default: `~/.cache/rclone/bisync`)
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-n, --dry-run Go through the motions - No files are copied/deleted.
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-v, --verbose Increases logging verbosity.
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May be specified more than once for more details.
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-h, --help help for bisync
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```
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Arbitrary rclone flags may be specified on the
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[bisync command line](/commands/rclone_bisync/), for example
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`rclone bisync ./testdir/path1/ gdrive:testdir/path2/ --drive-skip-gdocs -v -v --timeout 10s`
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Note that interactions of various rclone flags with bisync process flow
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has not been fully tested yet.
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### Paths
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Path1 and Path2 arguments may be references to any mix of local directory
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paths (absolute or relative), UNC paths (`//server/share/path`),
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Windows drive paths (with a drive letter and `:`) or configured
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[remotes](/docs/#syntax-of-remote-paths) with optional subdirectory paths.
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Cloud references are distinguished by having a `:` in the argument
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(see [Windows support](#windows) below).
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Path1 and Path2 are treated equally, in that neither has priority for
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file changes, and access efficiency does not change whether a remote
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is on Path1 or Path2.
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The listings in bisync working directory (default: `~/.cache/rclone/bisync`)
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are named based on the Path1 and Path2 arguments so that separate syncs
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to individual directories within the tree may be set up, e.g.:
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`path_to_local_tree..dropbox_subdir.lst`.
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Any empty directories after the sync on both the Path1 and Path2
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filesystems are not deleted by default. If the `--remove-empty-dirs`
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flag is specified, then both paths will have any empty directories purged
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as the last step in the process.
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## Command-line flags
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#### --resync
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This will effectively make both Path1 and Path2 filesystems contain a
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matching superset of all files. Path2 files that do not exist in Path1 will
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be copied to Path1, and the process will then sync the Path1 tree to Path2.
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The base directories on the both Path1 and Path2 filesystems must exist
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or bisync will fail. This is required for safety - that bisync can verify
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that both paths are valid.
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When using `--resync` a newer version of a file on the Path2 filesystem
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will be overwritten by the Path1 filesystem version.
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Carefully evaluate deltas using [--dry-run](/flags/#non-backend-flags).
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For a resync run, one of the paths may be empty (no files in the path tree).
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The resync run should result in files on both paths, else a normal non-resync
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run will fail.
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For a non-resync run, either path being empty (no files in the tree) fails with
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`Empty current PathN listing. Cannot sync to an empty directory: X.pathN.lst`
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This is a safety check that an unexpected empty path does not result in
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deleting **everything** in the other path.
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#### --check-access
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Access check files are an additional safety measure against data loss.
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bisync will ensure it can find matching `RCLONE_TEST` files in the same places
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in the Path1 and Path2 filesystems.
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Time stamps and file contents are not important, just the names and locations.
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Place one or more `RCLONE_TEST` files in the Path1 or Path2 filesystem and
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then do either a run without `--check-access` or a `--resync` to set
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matching files on both filesystems.
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If you have symbolic links in your sync tree it is recommended to place
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`RCLONE_TEST` files in the linked-to directory tree to protect against
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bisync assuming a bunch of deleted files if the linked-to tree should not be
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accessible. Also see the `--check-filename` flag.
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#### --max-delete
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As a safety check, if greater than the `--max-delete` percent of files were
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deleted on either the Path1 or Path2 filesystem, then bisync will abort with
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a warning message, without making any changes.
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The default `--max-delete` is `50%`.
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One way to trigger this limit is to rename a directory that contains more
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than half of your files. This will appear to bisync as a bunch of deleted
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files and a bunch of new files.
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This safety check is intended to block bisync from deleting all of the
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files on both filesystems due to a temporary network access issue, or if
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the user had inadvertently deleted the files on one side or the other.
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To force the sync either set a different delete percentage limit,
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e.g. `--max-delete 75` (allows up to 75% deletion), or use `--force`
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to bypass the check.
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Also see the [all files changed](#all-files-changed) check.
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#### --filters-file {#filters-file}
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By using rclone filter features you can exclude file types or directory
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sub-trees from the sync.
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See the [bisync filters](#filtering) section and generic
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[--filter-from](/filtering/#filter-from-read-filtering-patterns-from-a-file)
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documentation.
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An [example filters file](#example-filters-file) contains filters for
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non-allowed files for synching with Dropbox.
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If you make changes to your filters file then bisync requires a run
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with `--resync`. This is a safety feature, which avoids existing files
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on the Path1 and/or Path2 side from seeming to disappear from view
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(since they are excluded in the new listings), which would fool bisync
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into seeing them as deleted (as compared to the prior run listings),
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and then bisync would proceed to delete them for real.
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To block this from happening bisync calculates an MD5 hash of the filters file
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and stores the hash in a `.md5` file in the same place as your filters file.
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On the next runs with `--filters-file` set, bisync re-calculates the MD5 hash
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of the current filters file and compares it to the hash stored in `.md5` file.
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If they don't match the run aborts with a critical error and thus forces you
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to do a `--resync`, likely avoiding a disaster.
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#### --check-sync
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Enabled by default, the check-sync function checks that all of the same
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files exist in both the Path1 and Path2 history listings. This _check-sync_
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integrity check is performed at the end of the sync run by default.
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Any untrapped failing copy/deletes between the two paths might result
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in differences between the two listings and in the untracked file content
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differences between the two paths. A resync run would correct the error.
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Note that the default-enabled integrity check locally executes a load of both
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the final Path1 and Path2 listings, and thus adds to the run time of a sync.
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Using `--check-sync=false` will disable it and may significantly reduce the
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sync run times for very large numbers of files.
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The check may be run manually with `--check-sync=only`. It runs only the
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integrity check and terminates without actually synching.
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## Operation
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### Runtime flow details
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bisync retains the listings of the `Path1` and `Path2` filesystems
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from the prior run.
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On each successive run it will:
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- list files on `path1` and `path2`, and check for changes on each side.
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Changes include `New`, `Newer`, `Older`, and `Deleted` files.
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- Propagate changes on `path1` to `path2`, and vice-versa.
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### Safety measures
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- Lock file prevents multiple simultaneous runs when taking a while.
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This can be particularly useful if bisync is run by cron scheduler.
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- Handle change conflicts non-destructively by creating
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`..path1` and `..path2` file versions.
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- File system access health check using `RCLONE_TEST` files
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(see the `--check-access` flag).
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- Abort on excessive deletes - protects against a failed listing
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being interpreted as all the files were deleted.
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See the `--max-delete` and `--force` flags.
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- If something evil happens, bisync goes into a safe state to block
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damage by later runs. (See [Error Handling](#error-handling))
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### Normal sync checks
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Type | Description | Result | Implementation
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--------------|-----------------------------------------------|--------------------------|-----------------------------
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Path2 new | File is new on Path2, does not exist on Path1 | Path2 version survives | `rclone copy` Path2 to Path1
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Path2 newer | File is newer on Path2, unchanged on Path1 | Path2 version survives | `rclone copy` Path2 to Path1
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Path2 deleted | File is deleted on Path2, unchanged on Path1 | File is deleted | `rclone delete` Path1
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Path1 new | File is new on Path1, does not exist on Path2 | Path1 version survives | `rclone copy` Path1 to Path2
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Path1 newer | File is newer on Path1, unchanged on Path2 | Path1 version survives | `rclone copy` Path1 to Path2
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Path1 older | File is older on Path1, unchanged on Path2 | _Path1 version survives_ | `rclone copy` Path1 to Path2
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Path2 older | File is older on Path2, unchanged on Path1 | _Path2 version survives_ | `rclone copy` Path2 to Path1
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Path1 deleted | File no longer exists on Path1 | File is deleted | `rclone delete` Path2
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### Unusual sync checks
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Type | Description | Result | Implementation
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--------------------------------|---------------------------------------|------------------------------------|-----------------------
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Path1 new AND Path2 new | File is new on Path1 AND new on Path2 | Files renamed to _Path1 and _Path2 | `rclone copy` _Path2 file to Path1, `rclone copy` _Path1 file to Path2
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Path2 newer AND Path1 changed | File is newer on Path2 AND also changed (newer/older/size) on Path1 | Files renamed to _Path1 and _Path2 | `rclone copy` _Path2 file to Path1, `rclone copy` _Path1 file to Path2
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Path2 newer AND Path1 deleted | File is newer on Path2 AND also deleted on Path1 | Path2 version survives | `rclone copy` Path2 to Path1
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Path2 deleted AND Path1 changed | File is deleted on Path2 AND changed (newer/older/size) on Path1 | Path1 version survives |`rclone copy` Path1 to Path2
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Path1 deleted AND Path2 changed | File is deleted on Path1 AND changed (newer/older/size) on Path2 | Path2 version survives | `rclone copy` Path2 to Path1
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### All files changed check {#all-files-changed}
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if _all_ prior existing files on either of the filesystems have changed
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(e.g. timestamps have changed due to changing the system's timezone)
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then bisync will abort without making any changes.
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Any new files are not considered for this check. You could use `--force`
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to force the sync (whichever side has the changed timestamp files wins).
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Alternately, a `--resync` may be used (Path1 versions will be pushed
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to Path2). Consider the situation carefully and perhaps use `--dry-run`
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before you commit to the changes.
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### Modification time
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Bisync relies on file timestamps to identify changed files and will
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_refuse_ to operate if backend lacks the modification time support.
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If you or your application should change the content of a file
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without changing the modification time then bisync will _not_
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notice the change, and thus will not copy it to the other side.
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Note that on some cloud storage systems it is not possible to have file
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timestamps that match _precisely_ between the local and other filesystems.
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Bisync's approach to this problem is by tracking the changes on each side
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_separately_ over time with a local database of files in that side then
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applying the resulting changes on the other side.
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### Error handling {#error-handling}
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Certain bisync critical errors, such as file copy/move failing, will result in
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a bisync lockout of following runs. The lockout is asserted because the sync
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status and history of the Path1 and Path2 filesystems cannot be trusted,
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so it is safer to block any further changes until someone checks things out.
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The recovery is to do a `--resync` again.
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It is recommended to use `--resync --dry-run --verbose` initially and
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_carefully_ review what changes will be made before running the `--resync`
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without `--dry-run`.
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Most of these events come up due to a error status from an internal call.
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On such a critical error the `{...}.path1.lst` and `{...}.path2.lst`
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listing files are renamed to extension `.lst-err`, which blocks any future
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bisync runs (since the normal `.lst` files are not found).
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Bisync keeps them under `bisync` subdirectory of the rclone cache directory,
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typically at `${HOME}/.cache/rclone/bisync/` on Linux.
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Some errors are considered temporary and re-running the bisync is not blocked.
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The _critical return_ blocks further bisync runs.
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### Lock file
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When bisync is running, a lock file is created in the bisync working directory,
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typically at `~/.cache/rclone/bisync/PATH1..PATH2.lck` on Linux.
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If bisync should crash or hang, the lock file will remain in place and block
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any further runs of bisync _for the same paths_.
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Delete the lock file as part of debugging the situation.
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The lock file effectively blocks follow-on (e.g., scheduled by _cron_) runs
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when the prior invocation is taking a long time.
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The lock file contains _PID_ of the blocking process, which may help in debug.
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**Note**
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that while concurrent bisync runs are allowed, _be very cautious_
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that there is no overlap in the trees being synched between concurrent runs,
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lest there be replicated files, deleted files and general mayhem.
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### Return codes
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`rclone bisync` returns the following codes to calling program:
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- `0` on a successful run,
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- `1` for a non-critical failing run (a rerun may be successful),
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- `2` for a critically aborted run (requires a `--resync` to recover).
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## Limitations
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### Supported backends
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Bisync is considered _BETA_ and has been tested with the following backends:
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- Local filesystem
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- Google Drive
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- Dropbox
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- OneDrive
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- S3
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- SFTP
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- Yandex Disk
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It has not been fully tested with other services yet.
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If it works, or sorta works, please let us know and we'll update the list.
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Run the test suite to check for proper operation as described below.
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First release of `rclone bisync` requires that underlying backend supported
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the modification time feature and will refuse to run otherwise.
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This limitation will be lifted in a future `rclone bisync` release.
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### Concurrent modifications
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When using **Local, FTP or SFTP** remotes rclone does not create _temporary_
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files at the destination when copying, and thus if the connection is lost
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the created file may be corrupt, which will likely propagate back to the
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original path on the next sync, resulting in data loss.
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This will be solved in a future release, there is no workaround at the moment.
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Files that **change during** a bisync run may result in data loss.
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This has been seen in a highly dynamic environment, where the filesystem
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is getting hammered by running processes during the sync.
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The solution is to sync at quiet times or [filter out](#filtering)
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unnecessary directories and files.
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### Empty directories
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New empty directories on one path are _not_ propagated to the other side.
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This is because bisync (and rclone) natively works on files not directories.
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The following sequence is a workaround but will not propagate the delete
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of an empty directory to the other side:
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```
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rclone bisync PATH1 PATH2
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rclone copy PATH1 PATH2 --filter "+ */" --filter "- **" --create-empty-src-dirs
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rclone copy PATH2 PATH2 --filter "+ */" --filter "- **" --create-empty-src-dirs
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```
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### Renamed directories
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Renaming a folder on the Path1 side results is deleting all files on
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the Path2 side and then copying all files again from Path1 to Path2.
|
|
Bisync sees this as all files in the old directory name as deleted and all
|
|
files in the new directory name as new. Similarly, renaming a directory on
|
|
both sides to the same name will result in creating `..path1` and `..path2`
|
|
files on both sides.
|
|
Currently the most effective and efficient method of renaming a directory
|
|
is to rename it on both sides, then do a `--resync`.
|
|
|
|
### Case sensitivity
|
|
|
|
Synching with **case-insensitive** filesystems, such as Windows or `Box`,
|
|
can result in file name conflicts. This will be fixed in a future release.
|
|
The near term workaround is to make sure that files on both sides
|
|
don't have spelling case differences (`Smile.jpg` vs. `smile.jpg`).
|
|
|
|
## Windows support {#windows}
|
|
|
|
Bisync has been tested on Windows 8.1, Windows 10 Pro 64-bit and on Windows
|
|
GitHub runners.
|
|
|
|
Drive letters are allowed, including drive letters mapped to network drives
|
|
(`rclone bisync J:\localsync GDrive:`).
|
|
If a drive letter is omitted, the shell current drive is the default.
|
|
Drive letters are a single character follows by `:`, so cloud names
|
|
must be more than one character long.
|
|
|
|
Absolute paths (with or without a drive letter), and relative paths
|
|
(with or without a drive letter) are supported.
|
|
|
|
Working directory is created at `C:\Users\MyLogin\AppData\Local\rclone\bisync`.
|
|
|
|
Note that bisync output may show a mix of forward `/` and back `\` slashes.
|
|
|
|
Be careful of case independent directory and file naming on Windows
|
|
vs. case dependent Linux
|
|
|
|
## Filtering {#filtering}
|
|
|
|
See [filtering documentation](/filtering/)
|
|
for how filter rules are written and interpreted.
|
|
|
|
Bisync's [`--filters-file`](#filters-file) flag slightly extends the rclone's
|
|
[--filter-from](/filtering/#filter-from-read-filtering-patterns-from-a-file)
|
|
filtering mechanism.
|
|
For a given bisync run you may provide _only one_ `--filters-file`.
|
|
The `--include*`, `--exclude*`, and `--filter` flags are also supported.
|
|
|
|
### How to filter directories
|
|
|
|
Filtering portions of the directory tree is a critical feature for synching.
|
|
|
|
Examples of directory trees (always beneath the Path1/Path2 root level)
|
|
you may want to exclude from your sync:
|
|
- Directory trees containing only software build intermediate files.
|
|
- Directory trees containing application temporary files and data
|
|
such as the Windows `C:\Users\MyLogin\AppData\` tree.
|
|
- Directory trees containing files that are large, less important,
|
|
or are getting thrashed continuously by ongoing processes.
|
|
|
|
On the other hand, there may be only select directories that you
|
|
actually want to sync, and exclude all others. See the
|
|
[Example include-style filters for Windows user directories](#include-filters)
|
|
below.
|
|
|
|
### Filters file writing guidelines
|
|
|
|
1. Begin with excluding directory trees:
|
|
- e.g. `- /AppData/`
|
|
- `**` on the end is not necessary. Once a given directory level
|
|
is excluded then everything beneath it won't be looked at by rclone.
|
|
- Exclude such directories that are unneeded, are big, dynamically thrashed,
|
|
or where there may be access permission issues.
|
|
- Excluding such dirs first will make rclone operations (much) faster.
|
|
- Specific files may also be excluded, as with the Dropbox exclusions
|
|
example below.
|
|
2. Decide if its easier (or cleaner) to:
|
|
- Include select directories and therefore _exclude everything else_ -- or --
|
|
- Exclude select directories and therefore _include everything else_
|
|
3. Include select directories:
|
|
- Add lines like: `+ /Documents/PersonalFiles/**` to select which
|
|
directories to include in the sync.
|
|
- `**` on the end specifies to include the full depth of the specified tree.
|
|
- With Include-style filters, files at the Path1/Path2 root are not included.
|
|
They may be included with `+ /*`.
|
|
- Place RCLONE_TEST files within these included directory trees.
|
|
They will only be looked for in these directory trees.
|
|
- Finish by excluding everything else by adding `- **` at the end
|
|
of the filters file.
|
|
- Disregard step 4.
|
|
4. Exclude select directories:
|
|
- Add more lines like in step 1.
|
|
For example: `-/Desktop/tempfiles/`, or `- /testdir/`.
|
|
Again, a `**` on the end is not necessary.
|
|
- Do _not_ add a `- **` in the file. Without this line, everything
|
|
will be included that has not be explicitly excluded.
|
|
- Disregard step 3.
|
|
|
|
A few rules for the syntax of a filter file expanding on
|
|
[filtering documentation](/filtering/):
|
|
|
|
- Lines may start with spaces and tabs - rclone strips leading whitespace.
|
|
- If the first non-whitespace character is a `#` then the line is a comment
|
|
and will be ignored.
|
|
- Blank lines are ignored.
|
|
- The first non-whitespace character on a filter line must be a `+` or `-`.
|
|
- Exactly 1 space is allowed between the `+/-` and the path term.
|
|
- Only forward slashes (`/`) are used in path terms, even on Windows.
|
|
- The rest of the line is taken as the path term.
|
|
Trailing whitespace is taken literally, and probably is an error.
|
|
|
|
### Example include-style filters for Windows user directories {#include-filters}
|
|
|
|
This Windows _include-style_ example is based on the sync root (Path1)
|
|
set to `C:\Users\MyLogin`. The strategy is to select specific directories
|
|
to be synched with a network drive (Path2).
|
|
|
|
- `- /AppData/` excludes an entire tree of Windows stored stuff
|
|
that need not be synched.
|
|
In my case, AppData has >11 GB of stuff I don't care about, and there are
|
|
some subdirectories beneath AppData that are not accessible to my
|
|
user login, resulting in bisync critical aborts.
|
|
- Windows creates cache files starting with both upper and
|
|
lowercase `NTUSER` at `C:\Users\MyLogin`. These files may be dynamic,
|
|
locked, and are generally _don't care_.
|
|
- There are just a few directories with _my_ data that I do want synched,
|
|
in the form of `+ /<path>`. By selecting only the directory trees I
|
|
want to avoid the dozen plus directories that various apps make
|
|
at `C:\Users\MyLogin\Documents`.
|
|
- Include files in the root of the sync point, `C:\Users\MyLogin`,
|
|
by adding the `+ /*` line.
|
|
- This is an Include-style filters file, therefore it ends with `- **`
|
|
which excludes everything not explicitly included.
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
- /AppData/
|
|
- NTUSER*
|
|
- ntuser*
|
|
+ /Documents/Family/**
|
|
+ /Documents/Sketchup/**
|
|
+ /Documents/Microcapture_Photo/**
|
|
+ /Documents/Microcapture_Video/**
|
|
+ /Desktop/**
|
|
+ /Pictures/**
|
|
+ /*
|
|
- **
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Note also that Windows implements several "library" links such as
|
|
`C:\Users\MyLogin\My Documents\My Music` pointing to `C:\Users\MyLogin\Music`.
|
|
rclone sees these as links, so you must add `--links` to the
|
|
bisync command line if you which to follow these links. I find that I get
|
|
permission errors in trying to follow the links, so I don't include the
|
|
rclone `--links` flag, but then you get lots of `Can't follow symlink…`
|
|
noise from rclone about not following the links. This noise can be
|
|
quashed by adding `--quiet` to the bisync command line.
|
|
|
|
## Example exclude-style filters files for use with Dropbox {#exclude-filters}
|
|
|
|
- Dropbox disallows synching the listed temporary and configuration/data files.
|
|
The `- <filename>` filters exclude these files where ever they may occur
|
|
in the sync tree. Consider adding similar exclusions for file types
|
|
you don't need to sync, such as core dump and software build files.
|
|
- bisync testing creates `/testdir/` at the top level of the sync tree,
|
|
and usually deletes the tree after the test. If a normal sync should run
|
|
while the `/testdir/` tree exists the `--check-access` phase may fail
|
|
due to unbalanced RCLONE_TEST files.
|
|
The `- /testdir/` filter blocks this tree from being synched.
|
|
You don't need this exclusion if you are not doing bisync development testing.
|
|
- Everything else beneath the Path1/Path2 root will be synched.
|
|
- RCLONE_TEST files may be placed anywhere within the tree, including the root.
|
|
|
|
### Example filters file for Dropbox {#example-filters-file}
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
# Filter file for use with bisync
|
|
# See https://rclone.org/filtering/ for filtering rules
|
|
# NOTICE: If you make changes to this file you MUST do a --resync run.
|
|
# Run with --dry-run to see what changes will be made.
|
|
|
|
# Dropbox wont sync some files so filter them away here.
|
|
# See https://help.dropbox.com/installs-integrations/sync-uploads/files-not-syncing
|
|
- .dropbox.attr
|
|
- ~*.tmp
|
|
- ~$*
|
|
- .~*
|
|
- desktop.ini
|
|
- .dropbox
|
|
|
|
# Used for bisync testing, so excluded from normal runs
|
|
- /testdir/
|
|
|
|
# Other example filters
|
|
#- /TiBU/
|
|
#- /Photos/
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### How --check-access handles filters
|
|
|
|
At the start of a bisync run, listings are gathered for Path1 and Path2
|
|
while using the user's `--filters-file`. During the check access phase,
|
|
bisync scans these listings for `RCLONE_TEST` files.
|
|
Any `RCLONE_TEST` files hidden by the `--filters-file` are _not_ in the
|
|
listings and thus not checked during the check access phase.
|
|
|
|
## Troubleshooting {#troubleshooting}
|
|
|
|
### Reading bisync logs
|
|
|
|
Here are two normal runs. The first one has a newer file on the remote.
|
|
The second has no deltas between local and remote.
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
2021/05/16 00:24:38 INFO : Synching Path1 "/path/to/local/tree/" with Path2 "dropbox:/"
|
|
2021/05/16 00:24:38 INFO : Path1 checking for diffs
|
|
2021/05/16 00:24:38 INFO : - Path1 File is new - file.txt
|
|
2021/05/16 00:24:38 INFO : Path1: 1 changes: 1 new, 0 newer, 0 older, 0 deleted
|
|
2021/05/16 00:24:38 INFO : Path2 checking for diffs
|
|
2021/05/16 00:24:38 INFO : Applying changes
|
|
2021/05/16 00:24:38 INFO : - Path1 Queue copy to Path2 - dropbox:/file.txt
|
|
2021/05/16 00:24:38 INFO : - Path1 Do queued copies to - Path2
|
|
2021/05/16 00:24:38 INFO : Updating listings
|
|
2021/05/16 00:24:38 INFO : Validating listings for Path1 "/path/to/local/tree/" vs Path2 "dropbox:/"
|
|
2021/05/16 00:24:38 INFO : Bisync successful
|
|
|
|
2021/05/16 00:36:52 INFO : Synching Path1 "/path/to/local/tree/" with Path2 "dropbox:/"
|
|
2021/05/16 00:36:52 INFO : Path1 checking for diffs
|
|
2021/05/16 00:36:52 INFO : Path2 checking for diffs
|
|
2021/05/16 00:36:52 INFO : No changes found
|
|
2021/05/16 00:36:52 INFO : Updating listings
|
|
2021/05/16 00:36:52 INFO : Validating listings for Path1 "/path/to/local/tree/" vs Path2 "dropbox:/"
|
|
2021/05/16 00:36:52 INFO : Bisync successful
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### Dry run oddity
|
|
|
|
The `--dry-run` messages may indicate that it would try to delete some files.
|
|
For example, if a file is new on Path2 and does not exist on Path1 then
|
|
it would normally be copied to Path1, but with `--dry-run` enabled those
|
|
copies don't happen, which leads to the attempted delete on the Path2,
|
|
blocked again by --dry-run: `... Not deleting as --dry-run`.
|
|
|
|
This whole confusing situation is an artifact of the `--dry-run` flag.
|
|
Scrutinize the proposed deletes carefully, and if the files would have been
|
|
copied to Path1 then the threatened deletes on Path2 may be disregarded.
|
|
|
|
### Retries
|
|
|
|
Rclone has built in retries. If you run with `--verbose` you'll see
|
|
error and retry messages such as shown below. This is usually not a bug.
|
|
If at the end of the run you see `Bisync successful` and not
|
|
`Bisync critical error` or `Bisync aborted` then the run was successful,
|
|
and you can ignore the error messages.
|
|
|
|
The following run shows an intermittent fail. Lines _5_ and _6- are
|
|
low level messages. Line _6_ is a bubbled-up _warning_ message, conveying
|
|
the error. Rclone normally retries failing commands, so there may be
|
|
numerous such messages in the log.
|
|
|
|
Since there are no final error/warning messages on line _7_, rclone has
|
|
recovered from failure after a retry, and the overall sync was successful.
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
1: 2021/05/14 00:44:12 INFO : Synching Path1 "/path/to/local/tree" with Path2 "dropbox:"
|
|
2: 2021/05/14 00:44:12 INFO : Path1 checking for diffs
|
|
3: 2021/05/14 00:44:12 INFO : Path2 checking for diffs
|
|
4: 2021/05/14 00:44:12 INFO : Path2: 113 changes: 22 new, 0 newer, 0 older, 91 deleted
|
|
5: 2021/05/14 00:44:12 ERROR : /path/to/local/tree/objects/af: error listing: unexpected end of JSON input
|
|
6: 2021/05/14 00:44:12 NOTICE: WARNING listing try 1 failed. - dropbox:
|
|
7: 2021/05/14 00:44:12 INFO : Bisync successful
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
This log shows a _Critical failure_ which requires a `--resync` to recover from.
|
|
See the [Runtime Error Handling](#error-handling) section.
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
2021/05/12 00:49:40 INFO : Google drive root '': Waiting for checks to finish
|
|
2021/05/12 00:49:40 INFO : Google drive root '': Waiting for transfers to finish
|
|
2021/05/12 00:49:40 INFO : Google drive root '': not deleting files as there were IO errors
|
|
2021/05/12 00:49:40 ERROR : Attempt 3/3 failed with 3 errors and: not deleting files as there were IO errors
|
|
2021/05/12 00:49:40 ERROR : Failed to sync: not deleting files as there were IO errors
|
|
2021/05/12 00:49:40 NOTICE: WARNING rclone sync try 3 failed. - /path/to/local/tree/
|
|
2021/05/12 00:49:40 ERROR : Bisync aborted. Must run --resync to recover.
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### Denied downloads of "infected" or "abusive" files
|
|
|
|
Google Drive has a filter for certain file types (`.exe`, `.apk`, et cetera)
|
|
that by default cannot be copied from Google Drive to the local filesystem.
|
|
If you are having problems, run with `--verbose` to see specifically which
|
|
files are generating complaints. If the error is
|
|
`This file has been identified as malware or spam and cannot be downloaded`,
|
|
consider using the flag
|
|
[--drive-acknowledge-abuse](/drive/#drive-acknowledge-abuse).
|
|
|
|
### Google Doc files
|
|
|
|
Google docs exist as virtual files on Google Drive and cannot be transferred
|
|
to other filesystems natively. While it is possible to export a Google doc to
|
|
a normal file (with `.xlsx` extension, for example), it is not possible
|
|
to import a normal file back into a Google document.
|
|
|
|
Bisync's handling of Google Doc files is to flag them in the run log output
|
|
for user's attention and ignore them for any file transfers, deletes, or syncs.
|
|
They will show up with a length of `-1` in the listings.
|
|
This bisync run is otherwise successful:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
2021/05/11 08:23:15 INFO : Synching Path1 "/path/to/local/tree/base/" with Path2 "GDrive:"
|
|
2021/05/11 08:23:15 INFO : ...path2.lst-new: Ignoring incorrect line: "- -1 - - 2018-07-29T08:49:30.136000000+0000 GoogleDoc.docx"
|
|
2021/05/11 08:23:15 INFO : Bisync successful
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Usage examples
|
|
|
|
### Cron {#cron}
|
|
|
|
Rclone does not yet have a built-in capability to monitor the local file
|
|
system for changes and must be blindly run periodically.
|
|
On Windows this can be done using a _Task Scheduler_,
|
|
on Linux you can use _Cron_ which is described below.
|
|
|
|
The 1st example runs a sync every 5 minutes between a local directory
|
|
and an OwnCloud server, with output logged to a runlog file:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
# Minute (0-59)
|
|
# Hour (0-23)
|
|
# Day of Month (1-31)
|
|
# Month (1-12 or Jan-Dec)
|
|
# Day of Week (0-6 or Sun-Sat)
|
|
# Command
|
|
*/5 * * * * /path/to/rclone bisync /local/files MyCloud: --check-access --filters-file /path/to/bysync-filters.txt --log-file /path/to//bisync.log
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
See [crontab syntax](https://www.man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/crontab.1p.html#INPUT_FILES)).
|
|
for the details of crontab time interval expressions.
|
|
|
|
If you run `rclone bisync` as a cron job, redirect stdout/stderr to a file.
|
|
The 2nd example runs a sync to Dropbox every hour and logs all stdout (via the `>>`)
|
|
and stderr (via `2>&1`) to a log file.
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
0 * * * * /path/to/rclone bisync /path/to/local/dropbox Dropbox: --check-access --filters-file /home/user/filters.txt >> /path/to/logs/dropbox-run.log 2>&1
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### Sharing an encrypted folder tree between hosts
|
|
|
|
bisync can keep a local folder in sync with a cloud service,
|
|
but what if you have some highly sensitive files to be synched?
|
|
|
|
Usage of a cloud service is for exchanging both routine and sensitive
|
|
personal files between one's home network, one's personal notebook when on the
|
|
road, and with one's work computer. The routine data is not sensitive.
|
|
For the sensitive data, configure an rclone [crypt remote](/crypt/) to point to
|
|
a subdirectory within the local disk tree that is bisync'd to Dropbox,
|
|
and then set up an bisync for this local crypt directory to a directory
|
|
outside of the main sync tree.
|
|
|
|
### Linux server setup
|
|
|
|
- `/path/to/DBoxroot` is the root of my local sync tree.
|
|
There are numerous subdirectories.
|
|
- `/path/to/DBoxroot/crypt` is the root subdirectory for files
|
|
that are encrypted. This local directory target is setup as an
|
|
rclone crypt remote named `Dropcrypt:`.
|
|
See [rclone.conf](#rclone-conf-snippet) snippet below.
|
|
- `/path/to/my/unencrypted/files` is the root of my sensitive
|
|
files - not encrypted, not within the tree synched to Dropbox.
|
|
- To sync my local unencrypted files with the encrypted Dropbox versions
|
|
I manually run `bisync /path/to/my/unencrypted/files DropCrypt:`.
|
|
This step could be bundled into a script to run before and after
|
|
the full Dropbox tree sync in the last step,
|
|
thus actively keeping the sensitive files in sync.
|
|
- `bisync /path/to/DBoxroot Dropbox:` runs periodically via cron,
|
|
keeping my full local sync tree in sync with Dropbox.
|
|
|
|
### Windows notebook setup
|
|
|
|
- The Dropbox client runs keeping the local tree `C:\Users\MyLogin\Dropbox`
|
|
always in sync with Dropbox. I could have used `rclone bisync` instead.
|
|
- A separate directory tree at `C:\Users\MyLogin\Documents\DropLocal`
|
|
hosts the tree of unencrypted files/folders.
|
|
- To sync my local unencrypted files with the encrypted
|
|
Dropbox versions I manually run the following command:
|
|
`rclone bisync C:\Users\MyLogin\Documents\DropLocal Dropcrypt:`.
|
|
- The Dropbox client then syncs the changes with Dropbox.
|
|
|
|
### rclone.conf snippet {#rclone-conf-snippet}
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
[Dropbox]
|
|
type = dropbox
|
|
...
|
|
|
|
[Dropcrypt]
|
|
type = crypt
|
|
remote = /path/to/DBoxroot/crypt # on the Linux server
|
|
remote = C:\Users\MyLogin\Dropbox\crypt # on the Windows notebook
|
|
filename_encryption = standard
|
|
directory_name_encryption = true
|
|
password = ...
|
|
...
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Testing {#testing}
|
|
|
|
You should read this section only if you are developing for rclone.
|
|
You need to have rclone source code locally to work with bisync tests.
|
|
|
|
Bisync has a dedicated test framework implemented in the `bisync_test.go`
|
|
file located in the rclone source tree. The test suite is based on the
|
|
`go test` command. Series of tests are stored in subdirectories below the
|
|
`cmd/bisync/testdata` directory. Individual tests can be invoked by their
|
|
directory name, e.g.
|
|
`go test . -case basic -remote local -remote2 gdrive: -v`
|
|
|
|
Tests will make a temporary folder on remote and purge it afterwards.
|
|
If during test run there are intermittent errors and rclone retries,
|
|
these errors will be captured and flagged as invalid MISCOMPAREs.
|
|
Rerunning the test will let it pass. Consider such failures as noise.
|
|
|
|
### Test command syntax
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
usage: go test ./cmd/bisync [options...]
|
|
|
|
Options:
|
|
-case NAME Name(s) of the test case(s) to run. Multiple names should
|
|
be separated by commas. You can remove the `test_` prefix
|
|
and replace `_` by `-` in test name for convenience.
|
|
If not `all`, the name(s) should map to a directory under
|
|
`./cmd/bisync/testdata`.
|
|
Use `all` to run all tests (default: all)
|
|
-remote PATH1 `local` or name of cloud service with `:` (default: local)
|
|
-remote2 PATH2 `local` or name of cloud service with `:` (default: local)
|
|
-no-compare Disable comparing test results with the golden directory
|
|
(default: compare)
|
|
-no-cleanup Disable cleanup of Path1 and Path2 testdirs.
|
|
Useful for troubleshooting. (default: cleanup)
|
|
-golden Store results in the golden directory (default: false)
|
|
This flag can be used with multiple tests.
|
|
-debug Print debug messages
|
|
-stop-at NUM Stop test after given step number. (default: run to the end)
|
|
Implies `-no-compare` and `-no-cleanup`, if the test really
|
|
ends prematurely. Only meaningful for a single test case.
|
|
-refresh-times Force refreshing the target modtime, useful for Dropbox
|
|
(default: false)
|
|
-verbose Run tests verbosely
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Note: unlike rclone flags which must be prefixed by double dash (`--`), the
|
|
test command flags can be equally prefixed by a single `-` or double dash.
|
|
|
|
### Running tests
|
|
|
|
- `go test . -case basic -remote local -remote2 local`
|
|
runs the `test_basic` test case using only the local filesystem,
|
|
synching one local directory with another local directory.
|
|
Test script output is to the console, while commands within scenario.txt
|
|
have their output sent to the `.../workdir/test.log` file,
|
|
which is finally compared to the golden copy.
|
|
- The first argument after `go test` should be a relative name of the
|
|
directory containing bisync source code. If you run tests right from there,
|
|
the argument will be `.` (current directory) as in most examples below.
|
|
If you run bisync tests from the rclone source directory, the command
|
|
should be `go test ./cmd/bisync ...`.
|
|
- The test engine will mangle rclone output to ensure comparability
|
|
with golden listings and logs.
|
|
- Test scenarios are located in `./cmd/bisync/testdata`. The test `-case`
|
|
argument should match the full name of a subdirectory under that
|
|
directory. Every test subdirectory name on disk must start with `test_`,
|
|
this prefix can be omitted on command line for brevity. Also, underscores
|
|
in the name can be replaced by dashes for convenience.
|
|
- `go test . -remote local -remote2 local -case all` runs all tests.
|
|
- Path1 and Path2 may either be the keyword `local`
|
|
or may be names of configured cloud services.
|
|
`go test . -remote gdrive: -remote2 dropbox: -case basic`
|
|
will run the test between these two services, without transferring
|
|
any files to the local filesystem.
|
|
- Test run stdout and stderr console output may be directed to a file, e.g.
|
|
`go test . -remote gdrive: -remote2 local -case all > runlog.txt 2>&1`
|
|
|
|
### Test execution flow
|
|
|
|
1. The base setup in the `initial` directory of the testcase is applied
|
|
on the Path1 and Path2 filesystems (via rclone copy the initial directory
|
|
to Path1, then rclone sync Path1 to Path2).
|
|
2. The commands in the scenario.txt file are applied, with output directed
|
|
to the `test.log` file in the test working directory.
|
|
Typically, the first actual command in the `scenario.txt` file is
|
|
to do a `--resync`, which establishes the baseline
|
|
`{...}.path1.lst` and `{...}.path2.lst` files in the test working
|
|
directory (`.../workdir/` relative to the temporary test directory).
|
|
Various commands and listing snapshots are done within the test.
|
|
3. Finally, the contents of the test working directory are compared
|
|
to the contents of the testcase's golden directory.
|
|
|
|
### Notes about testing
|
|
|
|
- Test cases are in individual directories beneath `./cmd/bisync/testdata`.
|
|
A command line reference to a test is understood to reference a directory
|
|
beneath `testdata`. For example,
|
|
`go test ./cmd/bisync -case dry-run -remote gdrive: -remote2 local`
|
|
refers to the test case in `./cmd/bisync/testdata/test_dry_run`.
|
|
- The test working directory is located at `.../workdir` relative to a
|
|
temporary test directory, usually under `/tmp` on Linux.
|
|
- The local test sync tree is created at a temporary directory named
|
|
like `bisync.XXX` under system temporary directory.
|
|
- The remote test sync tree is located at a temporary directory
|
|
under `<remote:>/bisync.XXX/`.
|
|
- `path1` and/or `path2` subdirectories are created in a temporary
|
|
directory under the respective local or cloud test remote.
|
|
- By default, the Path1 and Path2 test dirs and workdir will be deleted
|
|
after each test run. The `-no-cleanup` flag disables purging these
|
|
directories when validating and debugging a given test.
|
|
These directories will be flushed before running another test,
|
|
independent of the `-no-cleanup` usage.
|
|
- You will likely want to add `- /testdir/` to your normal
|
|
bisync `--filters-file` so that normal syncs do not attempt to sync
|
|
the test temporary directories, which may have `RCLONE_TEST` miscompares
|
|
in some testcases which would otherwise trip the `--check-access` system.
|
|
The `--check-access` mechanism is hard-coded to ignore `RCLONE_TEST`
|
|
files beneath `bisync/testdata`, so the test cases may reside on the
|
|
synched tree even if there are check file mismatches in the test tree.
|
|
- Some Dropbox tests can fail, notably printing the following message:
|
|
`src and dst identical but can't set mod time without deleting and re-uploading`
|
|
This is expected and happens due a way Dropbox handles modification times.
|
|
You should use the `-refresh-times` test flag to make up for this.
|
|
- If Dropbox tests hit request limit for you and print error message
|
|
`too_many_requests/...: Too many requests or write operations.`
|
|
then follow the
|
|
[Dropbox App ID instructions](/dropbox/#get-your-own-dropbox-app-id).
|
|
|
|
### Updating golden results
|
|
|
|
Sometimes even a slight change in the bisync source can cause little changes
|
|
spread around many log files. Updating them manually would be a nightmare.
|
|
|
|
The `-golden` flag will store the `test.log` and `*.lst` listings from each
|
|
test case into respective golden directories. Golden results will
|
|
automatically contain generic strings instead of local or cloud paths which
|
|
means that they should match when run with a different cloud service.
|
|
|
|
Your normal workflow might be as follows:
|
|
1. Git-clone the rclone sources locally
|
|
2. Modify bisync source and check that it builds
|
|
3. Run the whole test suite `go test ./cmd/bisync -remote local`
|
|
4. If some tests show log difference, recheck them individually, e.g.:
|
|
`go test ./cmd/bisync -remote local -case basic`
|
|
5. If you are convinced with the difference, goldenize all tests at once:
|
|
`go test ./cmd/bisync -remote local -golden`
|
|
6. Use word diff: `git diff --word-diff ./cmd/bisync/testdata/`.
|
|
Please note that normal line-level diff is generally useless here.
|
|
7. Check the difference _carefully_!
|
|
8. Commit the change (`git commit`) _only_ if you are sure.
|
|
If unsure, save your code changes then wipe the log diffs from git:
|
|
`git reset [--hard]`.
|
|
|
|
### Structure of test scenarios
|
|
|
|
- `<testname>/initial/` contains a tree of files that will be set
|
|
as the initial condition on both Path1 and Path2 testdirs.
|
|
- `<testname>/modfiles/` contains files that will be used to
|
|
modify the Path1 and/or Path2 filesystems.
|
|
- `<testname>/golden/` contains the expected content of the test
|
|
working directory (`workdir`) at the completion of the testcase.
|
|
- `<testname>/scenario.txt` contains the body of the test, in the form of
|
|
various commands to modify files, run bisync, and snapshot listings.
|
|
Output from these commands is captured to `.../workdir/test.log`
|
|
for comparison to the golden files.
|
|
|
|
### Supported test commands
|
|
|
|
- `test <some message>`
|
|
Print the line to the console and to the `test.log`:
|
|
`test sync is working correctly with options x, y, z`
|
|
- `copy-listings <prefix>`
|
|
Save a copy of all `.lst` listings in the test working directory
|
|
with the specified prefix:
|
|
`save-listings exclude-pass-run`
|
|
- `move-listings <prefix>`
|
|
Similar to `copy-listings` but removes the source
|
|
- `purge-children <dir>`
|
|
This will delete all child files and purge all child subdirs under given
|
|
directory but keep the parent intact. This behavior is important for tests
|
|
with Google Drive because removing and re-creating the parent would change
|
|
its ID.
|
|
- `delete-file <file>`
|
|
Delete a single file.
|
|
- `delete-glob <dir> <pattern>`
|
|
Delete a group of files located one level deep in the given directory
|
|
with names maching a given glob pattern.
|
|
- `touch-glob YYYY-MM-DD <dir> <pattern>`
|
|
Change modification time on a group of files.
|
|
- `touch-copy YYYY-MM-DD <source-file> <dest-dir>`
|
|
Change file modification time then copy it to destination.
|
|
- `copy-file <source-file> <dest-dir>`
|
|
Copy a single file to given directory.
|
|
- `copy-as <source-file> <dest-file>`
|
|
Similar to above but destination must include both directory
|
|
and the new file name at destination.
|
|
- `copy-dir <src> <dst>` and `sync-dir <src> <dst>`
|
|
Copy/sync a directory. Equivalent of `rclone copy` and `rclone sync`.
|
|
- `list-dirs <dir>`
|
|
Equivalent to `rclone lsf -R --dirs-only <dir>`
|
|
- `bisync [options]`
|
|
Runs bisync against `-remote` and `-remote2`.
|
|
|
|
### Supported substitution terms
|
|
|
|
- `{testdir/}` - the root dir of the testcase
|
|
- `{datadir/}` - the `modfiles` dir under the testcase root
|
|
- `{workdir/}` - the temporary test working directory
|
|
- `{path1/}` - the root of the Path1 test directory tree
|
|
- `{path2/}` - the root of the Path2 test directory tree
|
|
- `{session}` - base name of the test listings
|
|
- `{/}` - OS-specific path separator
|
|
- `{spc}`, `{tab}`, `{eol}` - whitespace
|
|
- `{chr:HH}` - raw byte with given hexadecimal code
|
|
|
|
Substitution results of the terms named like `{dir/}` will end with
|
|
`/` (or backslash on Windows), so it is not necessary to include
|
|
slash in the usage, for example `delete-file {path1/}file1.txt`.
|
|
|
|
## Benchmarks
|
|
|
|
_This section is work in progress._
|
|
|
|
Here are a few data points for scale, execution times, and memory usage.
|
|
|
|
The first set of data was taken between a local disk to Dropbox.
|
|
The [speedtest.net](https://speedtest.net) download speed was ~170 Mbps,
|
|
and upload speed was ~10 Mbps. 500 files (~9.5 MB each) had been already
|
|
synched. 50 files were added in a new directory, each ~9.5 MB, ~475 MB total.
|
|
|
|
Change | Operations and times | Overall run time
|
|
--------------------------------------|--------------------------------------------------------|------------------
|
|
500 files synched (nothing to move) | 1x listings for Path1 & Path2 | 1.5 sec
|
|
500 files synched with --check-access | 1x listings for Path1 & Path2 | 1.5 sec
|
|
50 new files on remote | Queued 50 copies down: 27 sec | 29 sec
|
|
Moved local dir | Queued 50 copies up: 410 sec, 50 deletes up: 9 sec | 421 sec
|
|
Moved remote dir | Queued 50 copies down: 31 sec, 50 deletes down: <1 sec | 33 sec
|
|
Delete local dir | Queued 50 deletes up: 9 sec | 13 sec
|
|
|
|
This next data is from a user's application. They had ~400GB of data
|
|
over 1.96 million files being sync'ed between a Windows local disk and some
|
|
remote cloud. The file full path length was on average 35 characters
|
|
(which factors into load time and RAM required).
|
|
|
|
- Loading the prior listing into memory (1.96 million files, listing file
|
|
size 140 MB) took ~30 sec and occupied about 1 GB of RAM.
|
|
- Getting a fresh listing of the local file system (producing the
|
|
140 MB output file) took about XXX sec.
|
|
- Getting a fresh listing of the remote file system (producing the 140 MB
|
|
output file) took about XXX sec. The network download speed was measured
|
|
at XXX Mb/s.
|
|
- Once the prior and current Path1 and Path2 listings were loaded (a total
|
|
of four to be loaded, two at a time), determining the deltas was pretty
|
|
quick (a few seconds for this test case), and the transfer time for any
|
|
files to be copied was dominated by the network bandwidth.
|
|
|
|
## References
|
|
|
|
rclone's bisync implementation was derived from
|
|
the [rclonesync-V2](https://github.com/cjnaz/rclonesync-V2) project,
|
|
including documentation and test mechanisms,
|
|
with [@cjnaz](https://github.com/cjnaz)'s full support and encouragement.
|
|
|
|
`rclone bisync` is similar in nature to a range of other projects:
|
|
|
|
- [unison](https://github.com/bcpierce00/unison)
|
|
- [syncthing](https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing)
|
|
- [cjnaz/rclonesync](https://github.com/cjnaz/rclonesync-V2)
|
|
- [ConorWilliams/rsinc](https://github.com/ConorWilliams/rsinc)
|
|
- [jwink3101/syncrclone](https://github.com/Jwink3101/syncrclone)
|
|
- [DavideRossi/upback](https://github.com/DavideRossi/upback)
|
|
|
|
Bisync adopts the differential synchronization technique, which is
|
|
based on keeping history of changes performed by both synchronizing sides.
|
|
See the _Dual Shadow Method_ section in the
|
|
[Neil Fraser's article](https://neil.fraser.name/writing/sync/).
|
|
|
|
Also note a number of academic publications by
|
|
[Benjamin Pierce](http://www.cis.upenn.edu/%7Ebcpierce/papers/index.shtml#File%20Synchronization)
|
|
about _Unison_ and synchronization in general.
|