CASYNC(1) | casync | CASYNC(1) |
casync - casync Documentation
casync [OPTIONS...] make [ARCHIVE | ARCHIVE_INDEX | BLOB_INDEX] [PATH] casync [OPTIONS...] extract [ARCHIVE | ARCHIVE_INDEX | BLOB_INDEX] [PATH] casync [OPTIONS...] list [ARCHIVE | ARCHIVE_INDEX | DIRECTORY] casync [OPTIONS...] mtree [ARCHIVE | ARCHIVE_INDEX | DIRECTORY] casync [OPTIONS...] stat [ARCHIVE | ARCHIVE_INDEX | DIRECTORY] [PATH] casync [OPTIONS...] digest [ARCHIVE | BLOB | ARCHIVE_INDEX | BLOB_INDEX | DIRECTORY] casync [OPTIONS...] mount [ARCHIVE | ARCHIVE_INDEX] PATH casync [OPTIONS...] mkdev [BLOB | BLOB_INDEX] [NODE] casync [OPTIONS...] gc BLOB_INDEX | ARCHIVE_INDEX ...
Content-Addressable Data Synchronization Tool
casync make [ARCHIVE | ARCHIVE_INDEX] [DIRECTORY] casync make [BLOB_INDEX] FILE | DEVICE
This will create either a .catar archive or an .caidx index for for the given DIRECTORY, or a .caibx index for the given FILE or block DEVICE. The type of output is automatically chosen based on the file extension (this may be overridden with --what=). DIRECTORY is optional, and the current directory will be used if not specified.
When a .caidx or .caibx file is created, a .castr storage directory will be created too, by default located in the same directory, and named default.castr unless configured otherwise (see --store= option).
The metadata included in the archive is controlled by the --with-* and --without-* options.
casync extract [ARCHIVE | ARCHIVE_INDEX] [DIRECTORY] casync extract BLOB_INDEX FILE | DEVICE
This will extract the contents of a .catar archive or .caidx index into the specified DIRECTORY, or the contents specified by BLOB_INDEX to the specified FILE or block DEVICE. DIRECTORY may be omitted, and the current directory will be used by default.
The metadata replayed from the archive is controlled by the --with-* and --without-* options.
casync list [ARCHIVE | ARCHIVE_INDEX | DIRECTORY]
This will list all the files and directories in the specified .catar archive or .caidx index, or the directory. The argument is optional, and the current directory will be used by default.
The output includes the permission mask and file names:
$ casync list /usr/share/doc/casync drwxr-xr-x -rw-r--r-- README.md -rw-r--r-- TODO
casync mtree [ARCHIVE | ARCHIVE_INDEX | DIRECTORY]
This is similar to list, but includes information about each entry in the key=value format defined by BSD mtree(5):
$ casync mtree /usr/share/doc/casync . type=dir mode=0755 uid=0 gid=0 time=1500343585.721189650 README.md type=file mode=0644 size=7286 uid=0 gid=0 time=1498175562.000000000 sha256digest=af75eacac1f00abf6adaa7510a2c7fe00a4636daf9ea910d69d96f0a4ae85df4 TODO type=file mode=0644 size=2395 uid=0 gid=0 time=1498175562.000000000 sha256digest=316f11a03c08ec39f0328ab1f7446bd048507d3fbeafffe7c32fad4942244b7d
casync stat [ARCHIVE | ARCHIVE_INDEX | DIRECTORY] [PATH]
This will show detailed information about a file or directory PATH, as found in either ARCHIVE or ARCHIVE_INDEX or underneath DIRECTORY. Both arguments are optional. The first defaults to the current directory, and the second the top-level path (.).
Example output:
$ casync stat .
File: .
Mode: drwxrwxr-x FileAttr: ----------
FATAttr: ---
Offset: 0
Time: 2017-07-17 22:53:30.723304050
User: zbyszek (1000)
Group: zbyszek (1000)
casync digest [ARCHIVE | BLOB | ARCHIVE_INDEX | BLOB_INDEX | DIRECTORY]
This will compute and print the checksum of the argument. The argument is optional and defaults to the current directory:
$ casync digest d1698b0c4c27163284abea5d1e369b92e89dd07cb74378638849800e0406baf7 $ casync digest . d1698b0c4c27163284abea5d1e369b92e89dd07cb74378638849800e0406baf7
casync mount [ARCHIVE | ARCHIVE_INDEX] PATH
This will mount the specified .catar archive or .caidx index at the specified PATH, using the FUSE protocol.
casync mkdev [BLOB | BLOB_INDEX] [NODE]
This will create a block device NODE with the contents specified by the .caibx BLOB_INDEX or just the file or block device BLOB, using the NBD protocol.
Example:
$ sudo casync -v mkdev README.md Attached: /dev/nbd0 (in another terminal) $ sudo head -n1 /dev/nbd0 # casync — Content Addressable Data Synchronizer
When casync mkdev is killed, the device is destroyed.
casync gc ARCHIVE_INDEX | BLOB_INDEX ...
This will remove all chunks that are not used by one of the specified indices (one or more blob and archive indices can be given). If --store is not given, the default store for the first index will be used.
This command can be used to prune unused chunks from a shared chunk store.
General options:
Input/output selector:
Turn on archive feature sets:
To turn archive features off, --without=… may be used, such as --without=fat-attrs, --without=privileged, etc. To disable all optional features, --without=all may be used. (The positive form --with=all does not make sense, because some features are conflicting. To enable the maximum set of information, use --with=best.)
Individual archive features:
(and similar: --without=16bit-uids, --without=32bit-uids, ...)
The various --with= and --without= parameters control the precise set of metadata to store in the archive, or restore when extracting. These flags only apply if casync operates on the file system level.
When generating an archive or index from a file system directory tree, some files and directories are excluded by default and others may optionally be excluded:
November 30, 2018 | 1 |