- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
You might not even like rsync. Yeah it’s old. Yeah it’s slow. But if you’re working with Linux you’re going to need to know it.
In this video I walk through my favorite everyday flags for rsync.
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Here’s a companion blog post, where I cover a bit more detail: https://vkc.sh/everyday-rsync
Also, @BreadOnPenguins made an awesome rsync video and you should check it out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eifQI5uD6VQ
Lastly, I left out all of the ssh setup stuff because I made a video about that and the blog post goes into a smidge more detail. If you want to see a video covering the basics of using SSH, I made one a few years ago and it’s still pretty good: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3FKsdbjzBcc
Chapters:
1:18 Invoking rsync
4:05 The --delete flag for rsync
5:30 Compression flag: -z
6:02 Using tmux and rsync together
6:30 but Veronica… why not use (insert shiny object here)
Nope. I never have needed to know it. I only ever used it because I was either curious to know how to use it or because it was more convenient than other solutions. But scp is basically just as convenient.
It doesn’t do diffs, so it’s really bad if there’s a lot of duplicate data.
If you want to use it for backups, there are other solutions, so you still don’t need to use it or know it. You can use something else. That’s my only point. 🤷♂️
And “really bad” is all relative. If you are only backing up your home drive with documents or whatever, copying a few unnecessary gigabytes over a LAN connection isn’t too bad at all. But scp isn’t what you should be using for backups anyway. I only used rsync for file transfer…
I use rsync for all kinda of things:
I only really use scp if the system doesn’t already have rsync.
Alright. But you don’t need to know rsync. That’s my only point. 👍👍
Sure, but you should probably be aware of what it is and what it does. It’s incredibly common and will be referenced in a ton of documentation for Linux server stuff.
You won’t need to unless you run a server in that case. 👍 But the only condition here was “working with Linux”.
Like I said, I’ve been using Linux at home and for work for over a decade, maybe 15+ years, never once did I need to use rsync or know what it is.
That being said, it was convenient when I used it, but never did I need it.
This is the self-hosted community, so that’s the context I was assuming.