2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
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|
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|
[36m(01) :[0m [34mtest changes[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
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|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
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|
[36m(02) :[0m [34mtest initial bisync[0m
|
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|
[36m(03) :[0m [34mbisync resync[0m
|
bisync: full support for comparing checksum, size, modtime - fixes #5679 fixes #5683 fixes #5684 fixes #5675
Before this change, bisync could only detect changes based on modtime, and
would refuse to run if either path lacked modtime support. This made bisync
unavailable for many of rclone's backends. Additionally, bisync did not account
for the Fs's precision when comparing modtimes, meaning that they could only be
reliably compared within the same side -- not against the opposite side. Size
and checksum (even when available) were ignored completely for deltas.
After this change, bisync now fully supports comparing based on any combination
of size, modtime, and checksum, lifting the prior restriction on backends
without modtime support. The comparison logic considers the backend's
precision, hash types, and other features as appropriate.
The comparison features optionally use a new --compare flag (which takes any
combination of size,modtime,checksum) and even supports some combinations not
otherwise supported in `sync` (like comparing all three at the same time.) By
default (without the --compare flag), bisync inherits the same comparison
options as `sync` (that is: size and modtime by default, unless modified with
flags such as --checksum or --size-only.) If the --compare flag is set, it will
override these defaults.
If --compare includes checksum and both remotes support checksums but have no
hash types in common with each other, checksums will be considered only for
comparisons within the same side (to determine what has changed since the prior
sync), but not for comparisons against the opposite side. If one side supports
checksums and the other does not, checksums will only be considered on the side
that supports them. When comparing with checksum and/or size without modtime,
bisync cannot determine whether a file is newer or older -- only whether it is
changed or unchanged. (If it is changed on both sides, bisync still does the
standard equality-check to avoid declaring a sync conflict unless it absolutely
has to.)
Also included are some new flags to customize the checksum comparison behavior
on backends where hashes are slow or unavailable. --no-slow-hash and
--slow-hash-sync-only allow selectively ignoring checksums on backends such as
local where they are slow. --download-hash allows computing them by downloading
when (and only when) they're otherwise not available. Of course, this option
probably won't be practical with large files, but may be a good option for
syncing small-but-important files with maximum accuracy (for example, a source
code repo on a crypt remote.) An additional advantage over methods like
cryptcheck is that the original file is not required for comparison (for
example, --download-hash can be used to bisync two different crypt remotes with
different passwords.)
Additionally, all of the above are now considered during the final --check-sync
for much-improved accuracy (before this change, it only compared filenames!)
Many other details are explained in the included docs.
2023-12-01 08:44:38 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : [2mSetting --ignore-listing-checksum as neither --checksum nor --compare checksum are set.[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : Bisyncing with Comparison Settings:
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
"Modtime": true,
|
|
|
|
|
"Size": true,
|
|
|
|
|
"Checksum": false,
|
|
|
|
|
"NoSlowHash": false,
|
|
|
|
|
"SlowHashSyncOnly": false,
|
|
|
|
|
"DownloadHash": false
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : Synching Path1 "{path1/}" with Path2 "{path2/}"
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : Copying unique Path2 files to Path1
|
2023-11-06 23:34:47 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35mResync is copying UNIQUE files to[0m - [36mPath1[0m
|
bisync: full support for comparing checksum, size, modtime - fixes #5679 fixes #5683 fixes #5684 fixes #5675
Before this change, bisync could only detect changes based on modtime, and
would refuse to run if either path lacked modtime support. This made bisync
unavailable for many of rclone's backends. Additionally, bisync did not account
for the Fs's precision when comparing modtimes, meaning that they could only be
reliably compared within the same side -- not against the opposite side. Size
and checksum (even when available) were ignored completely for deltas.
After this change, bisync now fully supports comparing based on any combination
of size, modtime, and checksum, lifting the prior restriction on backends
without modtime support. The comparison logic considers the backend's
precision, hash types, and other features as appropriate.
The comparison features optionally use a new --compare flag (which takes any
combination of size,modtime,checksum) and even supports some combinations not
otherwise supported in `sync` (like comparing all three at the same time.) By
default (without the --compare flag), bisync inherits the same comparison
options as `sync` (that is: size and modtime by default, unless modified with
flags such as --checksum or --size-only.) If the --compare flag is set, it will
override these defaults.
If --compare includes checksum and both remotes support checksums but have no
hash types in common with each other, checksums will be considered only for
comparisons within the same side (to determine what has changed since the prior
sync), but not for comparisons against the opposite side. If one side supports
checksums and the other does not, checksums will only be considered on the side
that supports them. When comparing with checksum and/or size without modtime,
bisync cannot determine whether a file is newer or older -- only whether it is
changed or unchanged. (If it is changed on both sides, bisync still does the
standard equality-check to avoid declaring a sync conflict unless it absolutely
has to.)
Also included are some new flags to customize the checksum comparison behavior
on backends where hashes are slow or unavailable. --no-slow-hash and
--slow-hash-sync-only allow selectively ignoring checksums on backends such as
local where they are slow. --download-hash allows computing them by downloading
when (and only when) they're otherwise not available. Of course, this option
probably won't be practical with large files, but may be a good option for
syncing small-but-important files with maximum accuracy (for example, a source
code repo on a crypt remote.) An additional advantage over methods like
cryptcheck is that the original file is not required for comparison (for
example, --download-hash can be used to bisync two different crypt remotes with
different passwords.)
Additionally, all of the above are now considered during the final --check-sync
for much-improved accuracy (before this change, it only compared filenames!)
Many other details are explained in the included docs.
2023-12-01 08:44:38 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35mResync is copying UNIQUE OR DIFFERING files to[0m - [36mPath2[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
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|
INFO : Resync updating listings
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
|
|
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|
INFO : [32mBisync successful[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
|
|
|
|
[36m(04) :[0m [34mtest make modifications on both paths[0m
|
|
|
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|
[36m(05) :[0m [34mtest new on path2 - file10[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(06) :[0m [34mtouch-copy 2001-01-02 {datadir/}file10.txt {path2/}[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
|
|
|
|
[36m(07) :[0m [34mtest newer on path2 - file1[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(08) :[0m [34mtouch-copy 2001-01-02 {datadir/}file1.txt {path2/}[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
|
|
|
|
[36m(09) :[0m [34mtest new on path1 - file11[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(10) :[0m [34mtouch-copy 2001-01-02 {datadir/}file11.txt {path1/}[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
|
|
|
|
[36m(11) :[0m [34mtest newer on path1 - file2[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(12) :[0m [34mtouch-copy 2001-01-02 {datadir/}file2.txt {path1/}[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
|
|
|
|
[36m(13) :[0m [34mtest deleted on path2 - file3[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(14) :[0m [34mdelete-file {path2/}file3.txt[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
|
|
|
|
[36m(15) :[0m [34mtest deleted on path1 - file4[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(16) :[0m [34mdelete-file {path1/}file4.txt[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
|
|
|
|
[36m(17) :[0m [34mtest deleted on both paths - file8[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(18) :[0m [34mdelete-file {path1/}file8.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(19) :[0m [34mdelete-file {path2/}file8.txt[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
|
|
|
|
[36m(20) :[0m [34mtest changed on both paths - file5 (file5R, file5L)[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(21) :[0m [34mtouch-glob 2001-01-02 {datadir/} file5R.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(22) :[0m [34mcopy-as {datadir/}file5R.txt {path2/} file5.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(23) :[0m [34mtouch-glob 2001-03-04 {datadir/} file5L.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(24) :[0m [34mcopy-as {datadir/}file5L.txt {path1/} file5.txt[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
|
|
|
|
[36m(25) :[0m [34mtest newer on path2 and deleted on path1 - file6[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(26) :[0m [34mtouch-copy 2001-01-02 {datadir/}file6.txt {path2/}[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(27) :[0m [34mdelete-file {path1/}file6.txt[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
|
|
|
|
[36m(28) :[0m [34mtest newer on path1 and deleted on path2 - file7[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(29) :[0m [34mtouch-copy 2001-01-02 {datadir/}file7.txt {path1/}[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(30) :[0m [34mdelete-file {path2/}file7.txt[0m
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
|
|
|
|
[36m(31) :[0m [34mtest bisync run[0m
|
|
|
|
|
[36m(32) :[0m [34mbisync[0m
|
bisync: full support for comparing checksum, size, modtime - fixes #5679 fixes #5683 fixes #5684 fixes #5675
Before this change, bisync could only detect changes based on modtime, and
would refuse to run if either path lacked modtime support. This made bisync
unavailable for many of rclone's backends. Additionally, bisync did not account
for the Fs's precision when comparing modtimes, meaning that they could only be
reliably compared within the same side -- not against the opposite side. Size
and checksum (even when available) were ignored completely for deltas.
After this change, bisync now fully supports comparing based on any combination
of size, modtime, and checksum, lifting the prior restriction on backends
without modtime support. The comparison logic considers the backend's
precision, hash types, and other features as appropriate.
The comparison features optionally use a new --compare flag (which takes any
combination of size,modtime,checksum) and even supports some combinations not
otherwise supported in `sync` (like comparing all three at the same time.) By
default (without the --compare flag), bisync inherits the same comparison
options as `sync` (that is: size and modtime by default, unless modified with
flags such as --checksum or --size-only.) If the --compare flag is set, it will
override these defaults.
If --compare includes checksum and both remotes support checksums but have no
hash types in common with each other, checksums will be considered only for
comparisons within the same side (to determine what has changed since the prior
sync), but not for comparisons against the opposite side. If one side supports
checksums and the other does not, checksums will only be considered on the side
that supports them. When comparing with checksum and/or size without modtime,
bisync cannot determine whether a file is newer or older -- only whether it is
changed or unchanged. (If it is changed on both sides, bisync still does the
standard equality-check to avoid declaring a sync conflict unless it absolutely
has to.)
Also included are some new flags to customize the checksum comparison behavior
on backends where hashes are slow or unavailable. --no-slow-hash and
--slow-hash-sync-only allow selectively ignoring checksums on backends such as
local where they are slow. --download-hash allows computing them by downloading
when (and only when) they're otherwise not available. Of course, this option
probably won't be practical with large files, but may be a good option for
syncing small-but-important files with maximum accuracy (for example, a source
code repo on a crypt remote.) An additional advantage over methods like
cryptcheck is that the original file is not required for comparison (for
example, --download-hash can be used to bisync two different crypt remotes with
different passwords.)
Additionally, all of the above are now considered during the final --check-sync
for much-improved accuracy (before this change, it only compared filenames!)
Many other details are explained in the included docs.
2023-12-01 08:44:38 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : [2mSetting --ignore-listing-checksum as neither --checksum nor --compare checksum are set.[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : Bisyncing with Comparison Settings:
|
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
|
"Modtime": true,
|
|
|
|
|
"Size": true,
|
|
|
|
|
"Checksum": false,
|
|
|
|
|
"NoSlowHash": false,
|
|
|
|
|
"SlowHashSyncOnly": false,
|
|
|
|
|
"DownloadHash": false
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : Synching Path1 "{path1/}" with Path2 "{path2/}"
|
2023-10-07 18:33:43 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : Building Path1 and Path2 listings
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : Path1 checking for diffs
|
bisync: full support for comparing checksum, size, modtime - fixes #5679 fixes #5683 fixes #5684 fixes #5675
Before this change, bisync could only detect changes based on modtime, and
would refuse to run if either path lacked modtime support. This made bisync
unavailable for many of rclone's backends. Additionally, bisync did not account
for the Fs's precision when comparing modtimes, meaning that they could only be
reliably compared within the same side -- not against the opposite side. Size
and checksum (even when available) were ignored completely for deltas.
After this change, bisync now fully supports comparing based on any combination
of size, modtime, and checksum, lifting the prior restriction on backends
without modtime support. The comparison logic considers the backend's
precision, hash types, and other features as appropriate.
The comparison features optionally use a new --compare flag (which takes any
combination of size,modtime,checksum) and even supports some combinations not
otherwise supported in `sync` (like comparing all three at the same time.) By
default (without the --compare flag), bisync inherits the same comparison
options as `sync` (that is: size and modtime by default, unless modified with
flags such as --checksum or --size-only.) If the --compare flag is set, it will
override these defaults.
If --compare includes checksum and both remotes support checksums but have no
hash types in common with each other, checksums will be considered only for
comparisons within the same side (to determine what has changed since the prior
sync), but not for comparisons against the opposite side. If one side supports
checksums and the other does not, checksums will only be considered on the side
that supports them. When comparing with checksum and/or size without modtime,
bisync cannot determine whether a file is newer or older -- only whether it is
changed or unchanged. (If it is changed on both sides, bisync still does the
standard equality-check to avoid declaring a sync conflict unless it absolutely
has to.)
Also included are some new flags to customize the checksum comparison behavior
on backends where hashes are slow or unavailable. --no-slow-hash and
--slow-hash-sync-only allow selectively ignoring checksums on backends such as
local where they are slow. --download-hash allows computing them by downloading
when (and only when) they're otherwise not available. Of course, this option
probably won't be practical with large files, but may be a good option for
syncing small-but-important files with maximum accuracy (for example, a source
code repo on a crypt remote.) An additional advantage over methods like
cryptcheck is that the original file is not required for comparison (for
example, --download-hash can be used to bisync two different crypt remotes with
different passwords.)
Additionally, all of the above are now considered during the final --check-sync
for much-improved accuracy (before this change, it only compared filenames!)
Many other details are explained in the included docs.
2023-12-01 08:44:38 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35m[33mFile changed: [35msize (larger)[0m, [35mtime (newer)[0m[0m[0m - [36mfile2.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35m[31mFile was deleted[0m[0m - [36mfile4.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35m[33mFile changed: [35msize (larger)[0m, [35mtime (newer)[0m[0m[0m - [36mfile5.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35m[31mFile was deleted[0m[0m - [36mfile6.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35m[33mFile changed: [35msize (larger)[0m, [35mtime (newer)[0m[0m[0m - [36mfile7.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35m[31mFile was deleted[0m[0m - [36mfile8.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35m[32mFile is new[0m[0m - [36mfile11.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : Path1: 7 changes: [32m 1 new[0m, [33m 3 modified[0m, [31m 3 deleted[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : ([33mModified[0m: [36m 3 newer[0m, [34m 0 older[0m, [36m 3 larger[0m, [34m 0 smaller[0m)
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : Path2 checking for diffs
|
bisync: full support for comparing checksum, size, modtime - fixes #5679 fixes #5683 fixes #5684 fixes #5675
Before this change, bisync could only detect changes based on modtime, and
would refuse to run if either path lacked modtime support. This made bisync
unavailable for many of rclone's backends. Additionally, bisync did not account
for the Fs's precision when comparing modtimes, meaning that they could only be
reliably compared within the same side -- not against the opposite side. Size
and checksum (even when available) were ignored completely for deltas.
After this change, bisync now fully supports comparing based on any combination
of size, modtime, and checksum, lifting the prior restriction on backends
without modtime support. The comparison logic considers the backend's
precision, hash types, and other features as appropriate.
The comparison features optionally use a new --compare flag (which takes any
combination of size,modtime,checksum) and even supports some combinations not
otherwise supported in `sync` (like comparing all three at the same time.) By
default (without the --compare flag), bisync inherits the same comparison
options as `sync` (that is: size and modtime by default, unless modified with
flags such as --checksum or --size-only.) If the --compare flag is set, it will
override these defaults.
If --compare includes checksum and both remotes support checksums but have no
hash types in common with each other, checksums will be considered only for
comparisons within the same side (to determine what has changed since the prior
sync), but not for comparisons against the opposite side. If one side supports
checksums and the other does not, checksums will only be considered on the side
that supports them. When comparing with checksum and/or size without modtime,
bisync cannot determine whether a file is newer or older -- only whether it is
changed or unchanged. (If it is changed on both sides, bisync still does the
standard equality-check to avoid declaring a sync conflict unless it absolutely
has to.)
Also included are some new flags to customize the checksum comparison behavior
on backends where hashes are slow or unavailable. --no-slow-hash and
--slow-hash-sync-only allow selectively ignoring checksums on backends such as
local where they are slow. --download-hash allows computing them by downloading
when (and only when) they're otherwise not available. Of course, this option
probably won't be practical with large files, but may be a good option for
syncing small-but-important files with maximum accuracy (for example, a source
code repo on a crypt remote.) An additional advantage over methods like
cryptcheck is that the original file is not required for comparison (for
example, --download-hash can be used to bisync two different crypt remotes with
different passwords.)
Additionally, all of the above are now considered during the final --check-sync
for much-improved accuracy (before this change, it only compared filenames!)
Many other details are explained in the included docs.
2023-12-01 08:44:38 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35m[33mFile changed: [35msize (larger)[0m, [35mtime (newer)[0m[0m[0m - [36mfile1.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35m[31mFile was deleted[0m[0m - [36mfile3.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35m[33mFile changed: [35msize (larger)[0m, [35mtime (newer)[0m[0m[0m - [36mfile5.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35m[33mFile changed: [35msize (larger)[0m, [35mtime (newer)[0m[0m[0m - [36mfile6.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35m[31mFile was deleted[0m[0m - [36mfile7.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35m[31mFile was deleted[0m[0m - [36mfile8.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35m[32mFile is new[0m[0m - [36mfile10.txt[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : Path2: 7 changes: [32m 1 new[0m, [33m 3 modified[0m, [31m 3 deleted[0m
|
|
|
|
|
INFO : ([33mModified[0m: [36m 3 newer[0m, [34m 0 older[0m, [36m 3 larger[0m, [34m 0 smaller[0m)
|
2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : Applying changes
|
2023-07-11 17:33:31 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : Checking potential conflicts...
|
|
|
|
|
ERROR : file5.txt: md5 differ
|
2023-11-18 01:14:38 +08:00
|
|
|
|
NOTICE: {path2String}: 1 differences found
|
|
|
|
|
NOTICE: {path2String}: 1 errors while checking
|
2023-07-11 17:33:31 +08:00
|
|
|
|
INFO : Finished checking the potential conflicts. 1 differences found
|
bisync: full support for comparing checksum, size, modtime - fixes #5679 fixes #5683 fixes #5684 fixes #5675
Before this change, bisync could only detect changes based on modtime, and
would refuse to run if either path lacked modtime support. This made bisync
unavailable for many of rclone's backends. Additionally, bisync did not account
for the Fs's precision when comparing modtimes, meaning that they could only be
reliably compared within the same side -- not against the opposite side. Size
and checksum (even when available) were ignored completely for deltas.
After this change, bisync now fully supports comparing based on any combination
of size, modtime, and checksum, lifting the prior restriction on backends
without modtime support. The comparison logic considers the backend's
precision, hash types, and other features as appropriate.
The comparison features optionally use a new --compare flag (which takes any
combination of size,modtime,checksum) and even supports some combinations not
otherwise supported in `sync` (like comparing all three at the same time.) By
default (without the --compare flag), bisync inherits the same comparison
options as `sync` (that is: size and modtime by default, unless modified with
flags such as --checksum or --size-only.) If the --compare flag is set, it will
override these defaults.
If --compare includes checksum and both remotes support checksums but have no
hash types in common with each other, checksums will be considered only for
comparisons within the same side (to determine what has changed since the prior
sync), but not for comparisons against the opposite side. If one side supports
checksums and the other does not, checksums will only be considered on the side
that supports them. When comparing with checksum and/or size without modtime,
bisync cannot determine whether a file is newer or older -- only whether it is
changed or unchanged. (If it is changed on both sides, bisync still does the
standard equality-check to avoid declaring a sync conflict unless it absolutely
has to.)
Also included are some new flags to customize the checksum comparison behavior
on backends where hashes are slow or unavailable. --no-slow-hash and
--slow-hash-sync-only allow selectively ignoring checksums on backends such as
local where they are slow. --download-hash allows computing them by downloading
when (and only when) they're otherwise not available. Of course, this option
probably won't be practical with large files, but may be a good option for
syncing small-but-important files with maximum accuracy (for example, a source
code repo on a crypt remote.) An additional advantage over methods like
cryptcheck is that the original file is not required for comparison (for
example, --download-hash can be used to bisync two different crypt remotes with
different passwords.)
Additionally, all of the above are now considered during the final --check-sync
for much-improved accuracy (before this change, it only compared filenames!)
Many other details are explained in the included docs.
2023-12-01 08:44:38 +08:00
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INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35m[32mQueue copy to[0m Path2[0m - [36m{path2/}file11.txt[0m
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INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35m[32mQueue copy to[0m Path2[0m - [36m{path2/}file2.txt[0m
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INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35m[31mQueue delete[0m[0m - [36m{path2/}file4.txt[0m
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2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
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NOTICE: - [34mWARNING[0m [35mNew or changed in both paths[0m - [36mfile5.txt[0m
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bisync: full support for comparing checksum, size, modtime - fixes #5679 fixes #5683 fixes #5684 fixes #5675
Before this change, bisync could only detect changes based on modtime, and
would refuse to run if either path lacked modtime support. This made bisync
unavailable for many of rclone's backends. Additionally, bisync did not account
for the Fs's precision when comparing modtimes, meaning that they could only be
reliably compared within the same side -- not against the opposite side. Size
and checksum (even when available) were ignored completely for deltas.
After this change, bisync now fully supports comparing based on any combination
of size, modtime, and checksum, lifting the prior restriction on backends
without modtime support. The comparison logic considers the backend's
precision, hash types, and other features as appropriate.
The comparison features optionally use a new --compare flag (which takes any
combination of size,modtime,checksum) and even supports some combinations not
otherwise supported in `sync` (like comparing all three at the same time.) By
default (without the --compare flag), bisync inherits the same comparison
options as `sync` (that is: size and modtime by default, unless modified with
flags such as --checksum or --size-only.) If the --compare flag is set, it will
override these defaults.
If --compare includes checksum and both remotes support checksums but have no
hash types in common with each other, checksums will be considered only for
comparisons within the same side (to determine what has changed since the prior
sync), but not for comparisons against the opposite side. If one side supports
checksums and the other does not, checksums will only be considered on the side
that supports them. When comparing with checksum and/or size without modtime,
bisync cannot determine whether a file is newer or older -- only whether it is
changed or unchanged. (If it is changed on both sides, bisync still does the
standard equality-check to avoid declaring a sync conflict unless it absolutely
has to.)
Also included are some new flags to customize the checksum comparison behavior
on backends where hashes are slow or unavailable. --no-slow-hash and
--slow-hash-sync-only allow selectively ignoring checksums on backends such as
local where they are slow. --download-hash allows computing them by downloading
when (and only when) they're otherwise not available. Of course, this option
probably won't be practical with large files, but may be a good option for
syncing small-but-important files with maximum accuracy (for example, a source
code repo on a crypt remote.) An additional advantage over methods like
cryptcheck is that the original file is not required for comparison (for
example, --download-hash can be used to bisync two different crypt remotes with
different passwords.)
Additionally, all of the above are now considered during the final --check-sync
for much-improved accuracy (before this change, it only compared filenames!)
Many other details are explained in the included docs.
2023-12-01 08:44:38 +08:00
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NOTICE: - [36mPath1[0m [35mRenaming Path1 copy[0m - [36m{path1/}file5.txt..path1[0m
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NOTICE: - [36mPath1[0m [35m[32mQueue copy to[0m Path2[0m - [36m{path2/}file5.txt..path1[0m
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2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
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NOTICE: - [34mPath2[0m [35mRenaming Path2 copy[0m - [36m{path2/}file5.txt..path2[0m
|
bisync: full support for comparing checksum, size, modtime - fixes #5679 fixes #5683 fixes #5684 fixes #5675
Before this change, bisync could only detect changes based on modtime, and
would refuse to run if either path lacked modtime support. This made bisync
unavailable for many of rclone's backends. Additionally, bisync did not account
for the Fs's precision when comparing modtimes, meaning that they could only be
reliably compared within the same side -- not against the opposite side. Size
and checksum (even when available) were ignored completely for deltas.
After this change, bisync now fully supports comparing based on any combination
of size, modtime, and checksum, lifting the prior restriction on backends
without modtime support. The comparison logic considers the backend's
precision, hash types, and other features as appropriate.
The comparison features optionally use a new --compare flag (which takes any
combination of size,modtime,checksum) and even supports some combinations not
otherwise supported in `sync` (like comparing all three at the same time.) By
default (without the --compare flag), bisync inherits the same comparison
options as `sync` (that is: size and modtime by default, unless modified with
flags such as --checksum or --size-only.) If the --compare flag is set, it will
override these defaults.
If --compare includes checksum and both remotes support checksums but have no
hash types in common with each other, checksums will be considered only for
comparisons within the same side (to determine what has changed since the prior
sync), but not for comparisons against the opposite side. If one side supports
checksums and the other does not, checksums will only be considered on the side
that supports them. When comparing with checksum and/or size without modtime,
bisync cannot determine whether a file is newer or older -- only whether it is
changed or unchanged. (If it is changed on both sides, bisync still does the
standard equality-check to avoid declaring a sync conflict unless it absolutely
has to.)
Also included are some new flags to customize the checksum comparison behavior
on backends where hashes are slow or unavailable. --no-slow-hash and
--slow-hash-sync-only allow selectively ignoring checksums on backends such as
local where they are slow. --download-hash allows computing them by downloading
when (and only when) they're otherwise not available. Of course, this option
probably won't be practical with large files, but may be a good option for
syncing small-but-important files with maximum accuracy (for example, a source
code repo on a crypt remote.) An additional advantage over methods like
cryptcheck is that the original file is not required for comparison (for
example, --download-hash can be used to bisync two different crypt remotes with
different passwords.)
Additionally, all of the above are now considered during the final --check-sync
for much-improved accuracy (before this change, it only compared filenames!)
Many other details are explained in the included docs.
2023-12-01 08:44:38 +08:00
|
|
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|
NOTICE: - [34mPath2[0m [35m[32mQueue copy to[0m Path1[0m - [36m{path1/}file5.txt..path2[0m
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INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35m[32mQueue copy to[0m Path1[0m - [36m{path1/}file6.txt[0m
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INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35m[32mQueue copy to[0m Path2[0m - [36m{path2/}file7.txt[0m
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INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35m[32mQueue copy to[0m Path1[0m - [36m{path1/}file1.txt[0m
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INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35m[32mQueue copy to[0m Path1[0m - [36m{path1/}file10.txt[0m
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INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35m[31mQueue delete[0m[0m - [36m{path1/}file3.txt[0m
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2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
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INFO : - [34mPath2[0m [35mDo queued copies to[0m - [36mPath1[0m
|
bisync: full support for comparing checksum, size, modtime - fixes #5679 fixes #5683 fixes #5684 fixes #5675
Before this change, bisync could only detect changes based on modtime, and
would refuse to run if either path lacked modtime support. This made bisync
unavailable for many of rclone's backends. Additionally, bisync did not account
for the Fs's precision when comparing modtimes, meaning that they could only be
reliably compared within the same side -- not against the opposite side. Size
and checksum (even when available) were ignored completely for deltas.
After this change, bisync now fully supports comparing based on any combination
of size, modtime, and checksum, lifting the prior restriction on backends
without modtime support. The comparison logic considers the backend's
precision, hash types, and other features as appropriate.
The comparison features optionally use a new --compare flag (which takes any
combination of size,modtime,checksum) and even supports some combinations not
otherwise supported in `sync` (like comparing all three at the same time.) By
default (without the --compare flag), bisync inherits the same comparison
options as `sync` (that is: size and modtime by default, unless modified with
flags such as --checksum or --size-only.) If the --compare flag is set, it will
override these defaults.
If --compare includes checksum and both remotes support checksums but have no
hash types in common with each other, checksums will be considered only for
comparisons within the same side (to determine what has changed since the prior
sync), but not for comparisons against the opposite side. If one side supports
checksums and the other does not, checksums will only be considered on the side
that supports them. When comparing with checksum and/or size without modtime,
bisync cannot determine whether a file is newer or older -- only whether it is
changed or unchanged. (If it is changed on both sides, bisync still does the
standard equality-check to avoid declaring a sync conflict unless it absolutely
has to.)
Also included are some new flags to customize the checksum comparison behavior
on backends where hashes are slow or unavailable. --no-slow-hash and
--slow-hash-sync-only allow selectively ignoring checksums on backends such as
local where they are slow. --download-hash allows computing them by downloading
when (and only when) they're otherwise not available. Of course, this option
probably won't be practical with large files, but may be a good option for
syncing small-but-important files with maximum accuracy (for example, a source
code repo on a crypt remote.) An additional advantage over methods like
cryptcheck is that the original file is not required for comparison (for
example, --download-hash can be used to bisync two different crypt remotes with
different passwords.)
Additionally, all of the above are now considered during the final --check-sync
for much-improved accuracy (before this change, it only compared filenames!)
Many other details are explained in the included docs.
2023-12-01 08:44:38 +08:00
|
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|
INFO : - [36mPath1[0m [35mDo queued copies to[0m - [36mPath2[0m
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2021-04-01 18:21:23 +08:00
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INFO : Updating listings
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INFO : Validating listings for Path1 "{path1/}" vs Path2 "{path2/}"
|
2023-11-06 19:59:41 +08:00
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INFO : [32mBisync successful[0m
|