--- title: "Hasher" description: "Better checksums for other remotes" --- # {{< icon "fa fa-check-double" >}} Hasher (EXPERIMENTAL) Hasher is a special overlay backend to create remotes which handle checksums for other remotes. It's main functions include: - Emulate hash types unimplemented by backends - Cache checksums to help with slow hashing of large local or (S)FTP files - Warm up checksum cache from external SUM files ## Getting started To use Hasher, first set up the underlying remote following the configuration instructions for that remote. You can also use a local pathname instead of a remote. Check that your base remote is working. Let's call the base remote `myRemote:path` here. Note that anything inside `myRemote:path` will be handled by hasher and anything outside won't. This means that if you are using a bucket based remote (S3, B2, Swift) then you should put the bucket in the remote `s3:bucket`. Now proceed to interactive or manual configuration. ### Interactive configuration Run `rclone config`: ``` No remotes found, make a new one? n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> Hasher1 Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Handle checksums for other remotes \ "hasher" [snip] Storage> hasher Remote to cache checksums for, like myremote:mypath. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). remote> myRemote:path Comma separated list of supported checksum types. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default ("md5,sha1"). hashsums> md5 Maximum time to keep checksums in cache. 0 = no cache, off = cache forever. max_age> off Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No y/n> n Remote config -------------------- [Hasher1] type = hasher remote = myRemote:path hashsums = md5 max_age = off -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y ``` ### Manual configuration Run `rclone config path` to see the path of current active config file, usually `YOURHOME/.config/rclone/rclone.conf`. Open it in your favorite text editor, find section for the base remote and create new section for hasher like in the following examples: ``` [Hasher1] type = hasher remote = myRemote:path hashes = md5 max_age = off [Hasher2] type = hasher remote = /local/path hashes = dropbox,sha1 max_age = 24h ``` Hasher takes basically the following parameters: - `remote` is required, - `hashes` is a comma separated list of supported checksums (by default `md5,sha1`), - `max_age` - maximum time to keep a checksum value in the cache, `0` will disable caching completely, `off` will cache "forever" (that is until the files get changed). Make sure the `remote` has `:` (colon) in. If you specify the remote without a colon then rclone will use a local directory of that name. So if you use a remote of `/local/path` then rclone will handle hashes for that directory. If you use `remote = name` literally then rclone will put files **in a directory called `name` located under current directory**. ## Usage ### Basic operations Now you can use it as `Hasher2:subdir/file` instead of base remote. Hasher will transparently update cache with new checksums when a file is fully read or overwritten, like: ``` rclone copy External:path/file Hasher:dest/path rclone cat Hasher:path/to/file > /dev/null ``` The way to refresh **all** cached checksums (even unsupported by the base backend) for a subtree is to **re-download** all files in the subtree. For example, use `hashsum --download` using **any** supported hashsum on the command line (we just care to re-read): ``` rclone hashsum MD5 --download Hasher:path/to/subtree > /dev/null rclone backend dump Hasher:path/to/subtree ``` You can print or drop hashsum cache using custom backend commands: ``` rclone backend dump Hasher:dir/subdir rclone backend drop Hasher: ``` ### Pre-Seed from a SUM File Hasher supports two backend commands: generic SUM file `import` and faster but less consistent `stickyimport`. ``` rclone backend import Hasher:dir/subdir SHA1 /path/to/SHA1SUM [--checkers 4] ``` Instead of SHA1 it can be any hash supported by the remote. The last argument can point to either a local or an `other-remote:path` text file in SUM format. The command will parse the SUM file, then walk down the path given by the first argument, snapshot current fingerprints and fill in the cache entries correspondingly. - Paths in the SUM file are treated as relative to `hasher:dir/subdir`. - The command will **not** check that supplied values are correct. You **must know** what you are doing. - This is a one-time action. The SUM file will not get "attached" to the remote. Cache entries can still be overwritten later, should the object's fingerprint change. - The tree walk can take long depending on the tree size. You can increase `--checkers` to make it faster. Or use `stickyimport` if you don't care about fingerprints and consistency. ``` rclone backend stickyimport hasher:path/to/data sha1 remote:/path/to/sum.sha1 ``` `stickyimport` is similar to `import` but works much faster because it does not need to stat existing files and skips initial tree walk. Instead of binding cache entries to file fingerprints it creates _sticky_ entries bound to the file name alone ignoring size, modification time etc. Such hash entries can be replaced only by `purge`, `delete`, `backend drop` or by full re-read/re-write of the files. ## Configuration reference {{< rem autogenerated options start" - DO NOT EDIT - instead edit fs.RegInfo in backend/hasher/hasher.go then run make backenddocs" >}} ### Standard options Here are the standard options specific to hasher (Better checksums for other remotes). #### --hasher-remote Remote to cache checksums for (e.g. myRemote:path). Properties: - Config: remote - Env Var: RCLONE_HASHER_REMOTE - Type: string - Required: true #### --hasher-hashes Comma separated list of supported checksum types. Properties: - Config: hashes - Env Var: RCLONE_HASHER_HASHES - Type: CommaSepList - Default: md5,sha1 #### --hasher-max-age Maximum time to keep checksums in cache (0 = no cache, off = cache forever). Properties: - Config: max_age - Env Var: RCLONE_HASHER_MAX_AGE - Type: Duration - Default: off ### Advanced options Here are the advanced options specific to hasher (Better checksums for other remotes). #### --hasher-auto-size Auto-update checksum for files smaller than this size (disabled by default). Properties: - Config: auto_size - Env Var: RCLONE_HASHER_AUTO_SIZE - Type: SizeSuffix - Default: 0 ## Backend commands Here are the commands specific to the hasher backend. Run them with rclone backend COMMAND remote: The help below will explain what arguments each command takes. See [the "rclone backend" command](/commands/rclone_backend/) for more info on how to pass options and arguments. These can be run on a running backend using the rc command [backend/command](/rc/#backend-command). ### drop Drop cache rclone backend drop remote: [options] [+] Completely drop checksum cache. Usage Example: rclone backend drop hasher: ### dump Dump the database rclone backend dump remote: [options] [+] Dump cache records covered by the current remote ### fulldump Full dump of the database rclone backend fulldump remote: [options] [+] Dump all cache records in the database ### import Import a SUM file rclone backend import remote: [options] [+] Amend hash cache from a SUM file and bind checksums to files by size/time. Usage Example: rclone backend import hasher:subdir md5 /path/to/sum.md5 ### stickyimport Perform fast import of a SUM file rclone backend stickyimport remote: [options] [+] Fill hash cache from a SUM file without verifying file fingerprints. Usage Example: rclone backend stickyimport hasher:subdir md5 remote:path/to/sum.md5 {{< rem autogenerated options stop >}} ## Implementation details (advanced) This section explains how various rclone operations work on a hasher remote. **Disclaimer. This section describes current implementation which can change in future rclone versions!.** ### Hashsum command The `rclone hashsum` (or `md5sum` or `sha1sum`) command will: 1. if requested hash is supported by lower level, just pass it. 2. if object size is below `auto_size` then download object and calculate _requested_ hashes on the fly. 3. if unsupported and the size is big enough, build object `fingerprint` (including size, modtime if supported, first-found _other_ hash if any). 4. if the strict match is found in cache for the requested remote, return the stored hash. 5. if remote found but fingerprint mismatched, then purge the entry and proceed to step 6. 6. if remote not found or had no requested hash type or after step 5: download object, calculate all _supported_ hashes on the fly and store in cache; return requested hash. ### Other operations - whenever a file is uploaded or downloaded **in full**, capture the stream to calculate all supported hashes on the fly and update database - server-side `move` will update keys of existing cache entries - `deletefile` will remove a single cache entry - `purge` will remove all cache entries under the purged path Note that setting `max_age = 0` will disable checksum caching completely. If you set `max_age = off`, checksums in cache will never age, unless you fully rewrite or delete the file. ### Cache storage Cached checksums are stored as `bolt` database files under rclone cache directory, usually `~/.cache/rclone/kv/`. Databases are maintained one per _base_ backend, named like `BaseRemote~hasher.bolt`. Checksums for multiple `alias`-es into a single base backend will be stored in the single database. All local paths are treated as aliases into the `local` backend (unless crypted or chunked) and stored in `~/.cache/rclone/kv/local~hasher.bolt`. Databases can be shared between multiple rclone processes.