Use --delete if you want the destination to have any files that have been deleted from the source to also deleted in the destination.
The -q option just suppresses any output that isn't an error, I tend to leave it off do that I can see what file it's currently working on. You can add or remove it as needed.
Brian Cluff
On 09/21/2015 03:42 AM, Michael Havens wrote:
what about the -q option and the --delete option? i noticed that you
didn't use them in your command 'rsync -auW /sort/directory
/dest/directory/'.
On Sun, Sep 20, 2015 at 10:34 PM, Brian Cluff <brian@snaptek.com<mailto:PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org><mailto:brian@snaptek.com>> wrote:
If you are backing up locally you will want to do things a little
different size as:
rsync -auW /sort/directory /dest/directory/
You will want to skip the -z option and the corresponding
--compress-level option. Since you are doing copying everything
locally that will only cause the machine to compress and immediately
decompress every file that is copied wasting a ton of CPU/power.
The other thing you will want to do is use the -W flag, that tells
the machine to copy whole files instead of looking for what has
changed between the documents. That way it can look at the time
and/or size and if it's changed it will just copy the whole file.
Without that flag it would read through both the source and
destination file and then just copy the differences by writing a
whole new file, so with the -W (whole file) flag the machine just
reads/writes the file once and is a lot more efficient/faster.
This can also be a good flag to set on fast networks since it can be
a lot faster just to re-copy the whole file than it is to have the
hard drive reading the file multiple times.
The progress flag is very nice, but unless you are planning on
closely monitoring your copy, I would skip it as I've found that it
tends to slow down the transfer... or at least make it feel that
way, like a watched pot never boils :)
On your slash at end end question. A slash at the end tends to mean
that you want to put the source files/dirs into that directory and a
destination without a slash usually means that you want to rename
your source file/directory to that destination file/dir name.
Lastly the -h option gives you the sizes in easily readable terms or
in other words, instead of just giving you the size in bytes it will
give you size that look like 100K 2.4M 1.8G
Brian Cluff
On 09/20/2015 05:34 AM, Michael Havens wrote:
I know how to use rsync (sorta) to backup a disk and go between
remote
machines. With my current incarnation of the os I'm not so
worried about
backing up the whole system as I am a directory (and all of the
directories under it) nor copying between remote machines. The
directory
is the 'Documents' directory. Would I:
rsync -aquz --compress-level=5 /home/bmike1/Documents
/media/bmike1/USB
DISK/
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