rclone/docs/content/overview.md
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Overview of cloud storage systems Overview of cloud storage systems page

Overview of cloud storage systems

Each cloud storage system is slightly different. Rclone attempts to
provide a unified interface to them, but some underlying differences
show through.

Features

Here is an overview of the major features of each cloud storage system.

Name Hash ModTime Case Insensitive Duplicate Files MIME Type Metadata
1Fichier Whirlpool - No Yes R -
Akamai Netstorage MD5, SHA256 R/W No No R -
Amazon S3 (or S3 compatible) MD5 R/W No No R/W RWU
Backblaze B2 SHA1 R/W No No R/W -
Box SHA1 R/W Yes No - -
Citrix ShareFile MD5 R/W Yes No - -
Dropbox DBHASH ¹ R Yes No - -
Enterprise File Fabric - R/W Yes No R/W -
Files.com MD5, CRC32 DR/W Yes No R -
FTP - R/W ¹⁰ No No - -
Gofile MD5 DR/W No Yes R -
Google Cloud Storage MD5 R/W No No R/W -
Google Drive MD5, SHA1, SHA256 DR/W No Yes R/W DRWU
Google Photos - - No Yes R -
HDFS - R/W No No - -
HiDrive HiDrive ¹² R/W No No - -
HTTP - R No No R -
iCloud Drive - R No No - -
Internet Archive MD5, SHA1, CRC32 R/W ¹¹ No No - RWU
Jottacloud MD5 R/W Yes No R RW
Koofr MD5 - Yes No - -
Linkbox - R No No - -
Mail.ru Cloud Mailru ⁶ R/W Yes No - -
Mega - - No Yes - -
Memory MD5 R/W No No - -
Microsoft Azure Blob Storage MD5 R/W No No R/W -
Microsoft Azure Files Storage MD5 R/W Yes No R/W -
Microsoft OneDrive QuickXorHash ⁵ DR/W Yes No R DRW
OpenDrive MD5 R/W Yes Partial ⁸ - -
OpenStack Swift MD5 R/W No No R/W -
Oracle Object Storage MD5 R/W No No R/W -
pCloud MD5, SHA1 ⁷ R No No W -
PikPak MD5 R No No R -
Pixeldrain SHA256 R/W No No R RW
premiumize.me - - Yes No R -
put.io CRC-32 R/W No Yes R -
Proton Drive SHA1 R/W No No R -
QingStor MD5 - ⁹ No No R/W -
Quatrix by Maytech - R/W No No - -
Seafile - - No No - -
SFTP MD5, SHA1 ² DR/W Depends No - -
Sia - - No No - -
SMB - R/W Yes No - -
SugarSync - - No No - -
Storj - R No No - -
Uloz.to MD5, SHA256 ¹³ - No Yes - -
Uptobox - - No Yes - -
WebDAV MD5, SHA1 ³ R ⁴ Depends No - -
Yandex Disk MD5 R/W No No R -
Zoho WorkDrive - - No No - -
The local filesystem All DR/W Depends No - DRWU

¹ Dropbox supports its own custom
hash
.
This is an SHA256 sum of all the 4 MiB block SHA256s.

² SFTP supports checksums if the same login has shell access and
md5sum or sha1sum as well as echo are in the remote's PATH.

³ WebDAV supports hashes when used with Fastmail Files, Owncloud and Nextcloud only.

⁴ WebDAV supports modtimes when used with Fastmail Files, Owncloud and Nextcloud only.

QuickXorHash is Microsoft's own hash.

⁶ Mail.ru uses its own modified SHA1 hash

⁷ pCloud only supports SHA1 (not MD5) in its EU region

⁸ Opendrive does not support creation of duplicate files using
their web client interface or other stock clients, but the underlying
storage platform has been determined to allow duplicate files, and it
is possible to create them with rclone. It may be that this is a
mistake or an unsupported feature.

⁹ QingStor does not support SetModTime for objects bigger than 5 GiB.

¹⁰ FTP supports modtimes for the major FTP servers, and also others
if they advertised required protocol extensions. See this
for more details.

¹¹ Internet Archive requires option wait_archive to be set to a non-zero value
for full modtime support.

¹² HiDrive supports its own custom
hash
.
It combines SHA1 sums for each 4 KiB block hierarchically to a single
top-level sum.

¹³ Uloz.to provides server-calculated MD5 hash upon file upload. MD5 and SHA256
hashes are client-calculated and stored as metadata fields.

Hash

The cloud storage system supports various hash types of the objects.
The hashes are used when transferring data as an integrity check and
can be specifically used with the --checksum flag in syncs and in
the check command.

To use the verify checksums when transferring between cloud storage
systems they must support a common hash type.

ModTime

Almost all cloud storage systems store some sort of timestamp
on objects, but several of them not something that is appropriate
to use for syncing. E.g. some backends will only write a timestamp
that represents the time of the upload. To be relevant for syncing
it should be able to store the modification time of the source
object. If this is not the case, rclone will only check the file
size by default, though can be configured to check the file hash
(with the --checksum flag). Ideally it should also be possible to
change the timestamp of an existing file without having to re-upload it.

Key Explanation
- ModTimes not supported - times likely the upload time
R ModTimes supported on files but can't be changed without re-upload
R/W Read and Write ModTimes fully supported on files
DR ModTimes supported on files and directories but can't be changed without re-upload
DR/W Read and Write ModTimes fully supported on files and directories

Storage systems with a - in the ModTime column, means the
modification read on objects is not the modification time of the
file when uploaded. It is most likely the time the file was uploaded,
or possibly something else (like the time the picture was taken in
Google Photos).

Storage systems with a R (for read-only) in the ModTime column,
means the it keeps modification times on objects, and updates them
when uploading objects, but it does not support changing only the
modification time (SetModTime operation) without re-uploading,
possibly not even without deleting existing first. Some operations
in rclone, such as copy and sync commands, will automatically
check for SetModTime support and re-upload if necessary to keep
the modification times in sync. Other commands will not work
without SetModTime support, e.g. touch command on an existing
file will fail, and changes to modification time only on a files
in a mount will be silently ignored.

Storage systems with R/W (for read/write) in the ModTime column,
means they do also support modtime-only operations.

Storage systems with D in the ModTime column means that the
following symbols apply to directories as well as files.

Case Insensitive

If a cloud storage systems is case sensitive then it is possible to
have two files which differ only in case, e.g. file.txt and
FILE.txt. If a cloud storage system is case insensitive then that
isn't possible.

This can cause problems when syncing between a case insensitive
system and a case sensitive system. The symptom of this is that no
matter how many times you run the sync it never completes fully.

The local filesystem and SFTP may or may not be case sensitive
depending on OS.

  • Windows - usually case insensitive, though case is preserved
  • OSX - usually case insensitive, though it is possible to format case sensitive
  • Linux - usually case sensitive, but there are case insensitive file systems (e.g. FAT formatted USB keys)

Most of the time this doesn't cause any problems as people tend to
avoid files whose name differs only by case even on case sensitive
systems.

Duplicate files

If a cloud storage system allows duplicate files then it can have two
objects with the same name.

This confuses rclone greatly when syncing - use the rclone dedupe
command to rename or remove duplicates.

Restricted filenames

Some cloud storage systems might have restrictions on the characters
that are usable in file or directory names.
When rclone detects such a name during a file upload, it will
transparently replace the restricted characters with similar looking
Unicode characters. To handle the different sets of restricted characters
for different backends, rclone uses something it calls encoding.

This process is designed to avoid ambiguous file names as much as
possible and allow to move files between many cloud storage systems
transparently.

The name shown by rclone to the user or during log output will only
contain a minimal set of replaced characters
to ensure correct formatting and not necessarily the actual name used
on the cloud storage.

This transformation is reversed when downloading a file or parsing
rclone arguments. For example, when uploading a file named my file?.txt
to Onedrive, it will be displayed as my file?.txt on the console, but
stored as my file.txt to Onedrive (the ? gets replaced by the similar
looking character, the so-called "fullwidth question mark").
The reverse transformation allows to read a file unusual/name.txt
from Google Drive, by passing the name unusualname.txt on the command line
(the / needs to be replaced by the similar looking character).

Caveats

The filename encoding system works well in most cases, at least
where file names are written in English or similar languages.
You might not even notice it: It just works. In some cases it may
lead to issues, though. E.g. when file names are written in Chinese,
or Japanese, where it is always the Unicode fullwidth variants of the
punctuation marks that are used.

On Windows, the characters :, * and ? are examples of restricted
characters. If these are used in filenames on a remote that supports it,
Rclone will transparently convert them to their fullwidth Unicode
variants , and when downloading to Windows, and back again
when uploading. This way files with names that are not allowed on Windows
can still be stored.

However, if you have files on your Windows system originally with these same
Unicode characters in their names, they will be included in the same conversion
process. E.g. if you create a file in your Windows filesystem with name
Test1.jpg, where is the Unicode fullwidth colon symbol, and use
rclone to upload it to Google Drive, which supports regular : (halfwidth
question mark), rclone will replace the fullwidth : with the
halfwidth : and store the file as Test:1.jpg in Google Drive. Since
both Windows and Google Drive allows the name Test1.jpg, it would
probably be better if rclone just kept the name as is in this case.

With the opposite situation; if you have a file named Test:1.jpg,
in your Google Drive, e.g. uploaded from a Linux system where : is valid
in file names. Then later use rclone to copy this file to your Windows
computer you will notice that on your local disk it gets renamed
to Test1.jpg. The original filename is not legal on Windows, due to
the :, and rclone therefore renames it to make the copy possible.
That is all good. However, this can also lead to an issue: If you already
had a different file named Test1.jpg on Windows, and then use rclone
to copy either way. Rclone will then treat the file originally named
Test:1.jpg on Google Drive and the file originally named Test1.jpg
on Windows as the same file, and replace the contents from one with the other.

Its virtually impossible to handle all cases like these correctly in all
situations, but by customizing the encoding option, changing the
set of characters that rclone should convert, you should be able to
create a configuration that works well for your specific situation.
See also the example below.

(Windows was used as an example of a file system with many restricted
characters, and Google drive a storage system with few.)

Default restricted characters

The table below shows the characters that are replaced by default.

When a replacement character is found in a filename, this character
will be escaped with the character to avoid ambiguous file names.
(e.g. a file named ␀.txt would shown as ‛␀.txt)

Each cloud storage backend can use a different set of characters,
which will be specified in the documentation for each backend.

Character Value Replacement
NUL 0x00
SOH 0x01
STX 0x02
ETX 0x03
EOT 0x04
ENQ 0x05
ACK 0x06
BEL 0x07
BS 0x08
HT 0x09
LF 0x0A
VT 0x0B
FF 0x0C
CR 0x0D
SO 0x0E
SI 0x0F
DLE 0x10
DC1 0x11
DC2 0x12
DC3 0x13
DC4 0x14
NAK 0x15
SYN 0x16
ETB 0x17
CAN 0x18
EM 0x19
SUB 0x1A
ESC 0x1B
FS 0x1C
GS 0x1D
RS 0x1E
US 0x1F
/ 0x2F
DEL 0x7F

The default encoding will also encode these file names as they are
problematic with many cloud storage systems.

File name Replacement
.
..

Invalid UTF-8 bytes

Some backends only support a sequence of well formed UTF-8 bytes
as file or directory names.

In this case all invalid UTF-8 bytes will be replaced with a quoted
representation of the byte value to allow uploading a file to such a
backend. For example, the invalid byte 0xFE will be encoded as FE.

A common source of invalid UTF-8 bytes are local filesystems, that store
names in a different encoding than UTF-8 or UTF-16, like latin1. See the
local filenames section for details.

Encoding option

Most backends have an encoding option, specified as a flag
--backend-encoding where backend is the name of the backend, or as
a config parameter encoding (you'll need to select the Advanced
config in rclone config to see it).

This will have default value which encodes and decodes characters in
such a way as to preserve the maximum number of characters (see
above).

However this can be incorrect in some scenarios, for example if you
have a Windows file system with Unicode fullwidth characters
, or , that you want to remain as those characters on the
remote rather than being translated to regular (halfwidth) *, ? and :.

The --backend-encoding flags allow you to change that. You can
disable the encoding completely with --backend-encoding Raw or set
encoding = Raw in the config file.

Encoding takes a comma separated list of encodings. You can see the
list of all possible values by passing an invalid value to this
flag, e.g. --local-encoding "help". The command rclone help flags encoding
will show you the defaults for the backends.

Encoding Characters Encoded as
Asterisk *
BackQuote `
BackSlash \
Colon :
CrLf CR 0x0D, LF 0x0A ,
Ctl All control characters 0x00-0x1F ␀␁␂␃␄␅␆␇␈␉␊␋␌␍␎␏␐␑␒␓␔␕␖␗␘␙␚␛␜␝␞␟
Del DEL 0x7F
Dollar $
Dot . or .. as entire string ,
DoubleQuote "
Exclamation !
Hash #
InvalidUtf8 An invalid UTF-8 character (e.g. latin1) <EFBFBD>
LeftCrLfHtVt CR 0x0D, LF 0x0A, HT 0x09, VT 0x0B on the left of a string , , ,
LeftPeriod . on the left of a string .
LeftSpace SPACE on the left of a string
LeftTilde ~ on the left of a string
LtGt <, > ,
None ¹ NUL 0x00
Percent %
Pipe |
Question ?
RightCrLfHtVt CR 0x0D, LF 0x0A, HT 0x09, VT 0x0B on the right of a string , , ,
RightPeriod . on the right of a string .
RightSpace SPACE on the right of a string
Semicolon ;
SingleQuote '
Slash /
SquareBracket [, ] ,

¹ Encoding from NUL 0x00 to ␀ is always implicit except when using Raw.
It was previously incorrectly documented as disabling encoding,
and to maintain backward compatibility, its behavior has not been changed.

Encoding example: FTP

To take a specific example, the FTP backend's default encoding is

--ftp-encoding "Slash,Del,Ctl,RightSpace,Dot"

However, let's say the FTP server is running on Windows and can't have
any of the invalid Windows characters in file names. You are backing
up Linux servers to this FTP server which do have those characters in
file names. So you would add the Windows set which are

Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,BackSlash,Ctl,RightSpace,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8,Dot

to the existing ones, giving:

Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,BackSlash,Ctl,RightSpace,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8,Dot,Del,RightSpace

This can be specified using the --ftp-encoding flag or using an encoding parameter in the config file.

Encoding example: Windows

As a nother example, take a Windows system where there is a file with
name Test1.jpg, where is the Unicode fullwidth colon symbol.
When using rclone to copy this to a remote which supports :,
the regular (halfwidth) colon (such as Google Drive), you will notice
that the file gets renamed to Test:1.jpg.

To avoid this you can change the set of characters rclone should convert
for the local filesystem, using command-line argument --local-encoding.
Rclone's default behavior on Windows corresponds to

--local-encoding "Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,BackSlash,Ctl,RightSpace,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8,Dot"

If you want to use fullwidth characters , and in your filenames
without rclone changing them when uploading to a remote, then set the same as
the default value but without Colon,Question,Asterisk:

--local-encoding "Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Pipe,BackSlash,Ctl,RightSpace,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8,Dot"

Alternatively, you can disable the conversion of any characters with --local-encoding Raw.

Instead of using command-line argument --local-encoding, you may also set it
as environment variable RCLONE_LOCAL_ENCODING,
or configure a remote of type local in your config,
and set the encoding option there.

The risk by doing this is that if you have a filename with the regular (halfwidth)
:, * and ? in your cloud storage, and you try to download
it to your Windows filesystem, this will fail. These characters are not
valid in filenames on Windows, and you have told rclone not to work around
this by converting them to valid fullwidth variants.

MIME Type

MIME types (also known as media types) classify types of documents
using a simple text classification, e.g. text/html or
application/pdf.

Some cloud storage systems support reading (R) the MIME type of
objects and some support writing (W) the MIME type of objects.

The MIME type can be important if you are serving files directly to
HTTP from the storage system.

If you are copying from a remote which supports reading (R) to a
remote which supports writing (W) then rclone will preserve the MIME
types. Otherwise they will be guessed from the extension, or the
remote itself may assign the MIME type.

Metadata

Backends may or may support reading or writing metadata. They may
support reading and writing system metadata (metadata intrinsic to
that backend) and/or user metadata (general purpose metadata).

The levels of metadata support are

Key Explanation
R Read only System Metadata on files only
RW Read and write System Metadata on files only
RWU Read and write System Metadata and read and write User Metadata on files only
DR Read only System Metadata on files and directories
DRW Read and write System Metadata on files and directories
DRWU Read and write System Metadata and read and write User Metadata on files and directories

See the metadata docs for more info.

Optional Features

All rclone remotes support a base command set. Other features depend
upon backend-specific capabilities.

Name Purge Copy Move DirMove CleanUp ListR StreamUpload MultithreadUpload LinkSharing About EmptyDir
1Fichier No Yes Yes No No No No No Yes No Yes
Akamai Netstorage Yes No No No No Yes Yes No No No Yes
Amazon S3 (or S3 compatible) No Yes No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No
Backblaze B2 No Yes No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No
Box Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Citrix ShareFile Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No No No Yes
Dropbox Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Enterprise File Fabric Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No No Yes
Files.com Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes No Yes No Yes
FTP No No Yes Yes No No Yes No No No Yes
Gofile Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Google Cloud Storage Yes Yes No No No No Yes No No No No
Google Drive Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Google Photos No No No No No No No No No No No
HDFS Yes No Yes Yes No No Yes No No Yes Yes
HiDrive Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes No No No Yes
HTTP No No No No No No No No No No Yes
iCloud Drive Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No No No Yes
ImageKit Yes Yes Yes No No No No No No No Yes
Internet Archive No Yes No No Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No
Jottacloud Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes Yes Yes
Koofr Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Mail.ru Cloud Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No Yes Yes Yes
Mega Yes No Yes Yes Yes No No No Yes Yes Yes
Memory No Yes No No No Yes Yes No No No No
Microsoft Azure Blob Storage Yes Yes No No No Yes Yes Yes No No No
Microsoft Azure Files Storage No Yes Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No Yes Yes
Microsoft OneDrive Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes ⁵ No No Yes Yes Yes
OpenDrive Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No No Yes Yes
OpenStack Swift Yes ¹ Yes No No No Yes Yes No No Yes No
Oracle Object Storage No Yes No No Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No
pCloud Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No Yes Yes Yes
PikPak Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No Yes Yes Yes
Pixeldrain Yes No Yes Yes No No Yes No Yes Yes Yes
premiumize.me Yes No Yes Yes No No No No Yes Yes Yes
put.io Yes No Yes Yes Yes No Yes No No Yes Yes
Proton Drive Yes No Yes Yes Yes No No No No Yes Yes
QingStor No Yes No No Yes Yes No No No No No
Quatrix by Maytech Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No No Yes Yes
Seafile Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes
SFTP No Yes ⁴ Yes Yes No No Yes No No Yes Yes
Sia No No No No No No Yes No No No Yes
SMB No No Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No No Yes
SugarSync Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes No Yes No Yes
Storj Yes ² Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No Yes No No
Uloz.to No No Yes Yes No No No No No No Yes
Uptobox No Yes Yes Yes No No No No No No No
WebDAV Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes ³ No No Yes Yes
Yandex Disk Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Zoho WorkDrive Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No No Yes Yes
The local filesystem No No Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No Yes Yes

¹ Note Swift implements this in order to delete directory markers but
it doesn't actually have a quicker way of deleting files other than
deleting them individually.

² Storj implements this efficiently only for entire buckets. If
purging a directory inside a bucket, files are deleted individually.

³ StreamUpload is not supported with Nextcloud

⁴ Use the --sftp-copy-is-hardlink flag to enable.

⁵ Use the --onedrive-delta flag to enable.

Purge

This deletes a directory quicker than just deleting all the files in
the directory.

Copy

Used when copying an object to and from the same remote. This known
as a server-side copy so you can copy a file without downloading it
and uploading it again. It is used if you use rclone copy or
rclone move if the remote doesn't support Move directly.

If the server doesn't support Copy directly then for copy operations
the file is downloaded then re-uploaded.

Move

Used when moving/renaming an object on the same remote. This is known
as a server-side move of a file. This is used in rclone move if the
server doesn't support DirMove.

If the server isn't capable of Move then rclone simulates it with
Copy then delete. If the server doesn't support Copy then rclone
will download the file and re-upload it.

DirMove

This is used to implement rclone move to move a directory if
possible. If it isn't then it will use Move on each file (which
falls back to Copy then download and upload - see Move section).

CleanUp

This is used for emptying the trash for a remote by rclone cleanup.

If the server can't do CleanUp then rclone cleanup will return an
error.

‡‡ Note that while Box implements this it has to delete every file
individually so it will be slower than emptying the trash via the WebUI

ListR

The remote supports a recursive list to list all the contents beneath
a directory quickly. This enables the --fast-list flag to work.
See the rclone docs for more details.

StreamUpload

Some remotes allow files to be uploaded without knowing the file size
in advance. This allows certain operations to work without spooling the
file to local disk first, e.g. rclone rcat.

MultithreadUpload

Some remotes allow transfers to the remote to be sent as chunks in
parallel. If this is supported then rclone will use multi-thread
copying to transfer files much faster.

LinkSharing

Sets the necessary permissions on a file or folder and prints a link
that allows others to access them, even if they don't have an account
on the particular cloud provider.

About

Rclone about prints quota information for a remote. Typical output
includes bytes used, free, quota and in trash.

If a remote lacks about capability rclone about remote:returns
an error.

Backends without about capability cannot determine free space for an
rclone mount, or use policy mfs (most free space) as a member of an
rclone union remote.

See rclone about command

EmptyDir

The remote supports empty directories. See Limitations
for details. Most Object/Bucket-based remotes do not support this.