Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting [bash] Simple backup (cp) script but incremental Post 302345432 by laumars on Wednesday 19th of August 2009 08:32:29 AM
Old 08-19-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by laurens
Thanks for the replies, I am indeed familiar with cp and its options, like recursive. Having the verbose options print all the copied files would be nice in my case.
Like you said it is maybe better to not use cp; but cpio instead.
The only problem I experience now is that it doesn't copy recursive. (but only the single file in /home ; not the folders) Is there a solution to this?

Thanks in advance
After checking the man pages, the only advantage of CPIO that I can see is compression.
If compression isn't an issue, then perhaps you're over engineering a solution (I'm a firm believer of KISS - automate everything, but don't build a sports car when all you need is scooter).
If compression is an issue (which I suspect it is), then perhaps it might be better looking into tar (which i believe can also do an update as well as recursive)
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to reinvent incremental backup in bash?

I want to backup two important files everytime they are modified. How would I write a bash script that would check the dates of my zip files and my data files and only create a new zip file if the zip file is older than the two data files? Thanks, Siegfried (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: siegfried
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

tar - incremental backup

Hello everyone! I'm trying to make incremental tar archives of a folder for an example. On the box I use is UNIX AIX installed. I tried some sample codes I found on several web pages but with no success. Don't know what I'm doing wrong. Please write some sample code to make incremental tar... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Funky_ass
0 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

incremental backup

Hi All.. i am trying to write a script which will give the incremental tar backup of all files with latest timestam. i tried with find -mmin -2 but if it takes half on hour or something to creat the tar itself, then no meaning in using the above command. so please help me to find the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Usha Shastri
2 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Best unix incremental backup utility?

Hello everyone. Could you please advise of what would be the best Unix (Debian 4) program for regular (daily or weekly) incremental backups? I'm not sure whether the backups will be stored on a "backup" drive on the same system or on an external "backup" system, but we would like to have a... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nottrobin
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Incremental backup

Hi, I would like to create a daily incremental backup of a directory with all of the files within and add a timestamp (year-month-day) to the tar.gz file. I have the following, but it doesn't backup the inside files of the directory. #!/bin/bash tar -czf... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: agasamapetilon
1 Replies

6. Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions

Incremental Backup

I have a folder /root/test in a centos 5.3 system. I want to take an incremental backup of the contents of the folder in the C:\Downloads folder of a windows system present in the same lan as the linux system. What are the ways of executing this plan? Kindly help (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: proactiveaditya
0 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help making simple perl or bash script to create a simple matrix

Hello all! This is my first post and I'm very new to programming. I would like help creating a simple perl or bash script that I will be using in my work as a junior bioinformatician. Essentially, I would like to take a tab-delimted or .csv text with 3 columns and write them to a "3D" matrix: ... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: torchij
16 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

incremental and full backup.. please help me

Hi, i'm new here(and a newbie) and i need some help with a project. I need to write a script for an incremental backup (this must be executed every day at 24:00) and a full backup (executed once a month) for etc/var/home directories. Can someone please help me with this? And a small explanation of... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: bender-alex
9 Replies

9. Homework & Coursework Questions

incremental or full backup ???

Hi. Can someone tell me if the following script that i have made is a script for INCREMENTAL BACKUP or FULL BACKUP. My teacher told me that is doing an FULL BACKUP. • find /etc /var /home -newer /backups/.backup_reference > /backups/.files_to_archive • touch /backups/.backup_reference • tar... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bender-alex
1 Replies

10. Homework & Coursework Questions

Create a simple bash backup script of a file

This is the problem: Write a script that will make a backup of a file giving it a ‘.bak’ extension & verify that it works. I have tried a number of different scripts that haven't worked and I haven't seen anything really concise and to the point via google. For brevity's sake this is one of the... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: demet8
4 Replies
DITTO(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						  DITTO(1)

NAME
ditto -- copy directory hierarchies, create and extract archives SYNOPSIS
ditto [-v] [-V] [-X] [<options>] src ... dst_directory ditto [-v] [-V] [<options>] src_file dst_file ditto -c [-z | -j | -k] [-v] [-V] [-X] [<options>] src dst_archive ditto -x [-z | -j | -k] [-v] [-V] [<options>] src_archive ... dst_directory ditto -h | --help DESCRIPTION
In its first form, ditto copies one or more source files or directories to a destination directory. If the destination directory does not exist it will be created before the first source is copied. If the destination directory already exists then the source directories are merged with the previous contents of the destination. In its second form, ditto copies a file to the supplied dst_file pathname. The next two forms reflect ditto's ability to create and extract archives. These archives can be either CPIO format (preferred for unix con- tent) or PKZip (for Windows compatibility). src_archive (and dst_archive) can be the single character '-', causing ditto to read (write) ar- chive data from stdin (or to stdout, respectively). ditto follows symbolic links provided as arguments but does not follow any links as it traverses the source or destination hierarchies. ditto overwrites existing files, symbolic links, and devices in the destination when these are copied from a source. The resulting files, links, and devices will have the same mode, access time, modification time, owner, and group as the source items from which they are copied. Pipes, sockets, and files with names beginning with .nfs or .afpDeleted will be ignored. ditto does not modify the mode, owner, group, extended attributes, or ACLs of existing directories in the destination. Files and symbolic links cannot overwrite directories or vice- versa. ditto can be used to "thin" Universal Mach-O binaries during a copy. ditto can also copy files selectively based on the contents of a BOM ("Bill of Materials") file. ditto preserves file hard links (but not directory hard links) present in the source directories and preserves setuid and setgid modes when run as the superuser. ditto will preserve resource forks and HFS meta-data information when copying unless instructed otherwise using --norsrc . Similarly, ditto will preserve extended attributes and Access Control Lists (ACLs) unless --noextattr or --noacl is passed. DITTONORSRC can be set in the environment as an alias to --norsrc --noextattr --noacl on the command line. OPTIONS
-h Print full usage. -v Print a line of output to stderr for each source directory copied. -V Print a line of output to stderr for every file, symbolic link, and device copied. -X When copying one or more source directories, do not descend into directories that have a different device ID. -c Create an archive at the destination path. The default format is CPIO, unless -k is given. CPIO archives should be stored in files with names ending in .cpio. Compressed CPIO archives should be stored in files with names ending in .cpgz. -z Create compressed CPIO archives, using gzip(1) compression. -j Create compressed CPIO archives, using bzip2(1) compression. -x Extract the archives given as source arguments. The format is assumed to be CPIO, unless -k is given. Compressed CPIO is auto- matically handled. -k Create or extract from a PKZip archive instead of the default CPIO. PKZip archives should be stored in filenames ending in .zip. --keepParent When creating an archive, embed the parent directory name src in dst_archive. --arch arch Thin Universal binaries to the specified architecture. If multiple --arch options are specified then the resulting destination file will contain each of the specified architectures (if they are present in the source file). arch should be specified as "i386", "x86_64", etc. --bom bom Copy only files, links, devices, and directories that are present in the specified BOM. --rsrc Preserve resource forks and HFS meta-data. ditto will store this data in Carbon-compatible ._ AppleDouble files on filesystems that do not natively support resource forks. As of Mac OS X 10.4, --rsrc is default behavior. --norsrc Do not preserve resource forks and HFS meta-data. If both --norsrc and --rsrc are passed, whichever is passed last will take precedence. Both options override DITTONORSRC. Unless explicitly specified, --norsrc also implies --noextattr and --noacl to match the behavior of Mac OS X 10.4. --extattr Preserve extended attributes (requires --rsrc). As of Mac OS X 10.5, --extattr is the default. --noextattr Do not preserve extended attributes (requires --norsrc). --qtn Preserve quarantine information. As of Mac OS X 10.5, --qtn is the default. --noqtn Do not preserve quarantine information. --acl Preserve Access Control Lists (ACLs). As of Mac OS X 10.5, --acl is the default. --noacl Do not preserve ACLs. --nocache Do not perform copies using the Mac OS X Unified Buffer Cache. Files read and written will not be cached, although if the file is already present in the cache, the cached information will be used. --hfsCompression When copying files or extracting content from an archive, if the destination is an HFS+ volume that supports compression, all the content will be compressed if appropriate. This is only supported on Mac OS X 10.6 or later, and is only intended to be used in installation and backup scenarios that involve system files. Since files using HFS+ compression are not readable on versions of Mac OS X earlier than 10.6, this flag should not be used when dealing with non-system files or other user-generated content that will be used on a version of Mac OS X earlier than 10.6. --nohfsCompression Do not compress files with HFS+ compression when copying or extracting content from an archive unless the content is already compressed with HFS+ compression. This flag is only supported on Mac OS X 10.6 or later. --nohfsCompression is the default. --preserveHFSCompression When copying files to an HFS+ volume that supports compression, ditto will preserve the compression of any source files that were using HFS+ compression. This flag is only supported on Mac OS X 10.6 or later. --preserveHFSCompression is the default. --nopreserveHFSCompression Do not preserve HFS+ compression when copying files that are already compressed with HFS+ compression. This is only supported on Mac OS X 10.6 or later. --sequesterRsrc When creating a PKZip archive, preserve resource forks and HFS meta-data in the subdirectory __MACOSX. PKZip extraction will automatically find these resources. --zlibCompressionLevel num Sets the compression level to use when creating a PKZip archive. The compression level can be set from 0 to 9, where 0 repre- sents no compression, and 9 represents optimal (slowest) compression. By default, ditto will use the default compression level as defined by zlib. --password When extracting a password-encrypted ZIP archive, you must specify --password to allow ditto to prompt for a password to use to extract the contents of the file. If this option is not provided, and a password-encrypted file is encountered, ditto will emit an error message. EXAMPLES
The command: ditto src_directory dst_directory copies the contents of src_directory into dst_directory, creating dst_directory if it does not already exist. The command: ditto src_directory dir/dst_directory copies the contents of src_directory into dir/dst_directory, creating dir and dst_directory if they don't already exist. The command: ditto src-1 ... src-n dst_directory copies the contents of all of the src directories into dst_directory, creating dst_directory if it does not already exist. The command: ditto --arch ppc universal_file thin_file copies the contents of universal_file into thin_file, thinning executable code to ppc-only on the fly. The command: ditto -c --norsrc Scripts -|ssh rhost ditto -x --norsrc - ./Scripts copies Scripts, skipping any resources or meta-data, to rhost. The command: pax -f archive.cpio will list the files in the CPIO archive archive.cpio. The command: pax -zf archive.cpgz will list the files in the compressed CPIO archive archive.cpgz. The command: ditto -c -k --sequesterRsrc --keepParent src_directory archive.zip will create a PKZip archive similarly to the Finder's Compress functionality. The command: unzip -l archive.zip will list the files in the PKZip archive archive.zip. ERRORS
ditto returns 0 if everything is copied, otherwise non-zero. ditto almost never gives up, preferring to report errors along the way. Diag- nostic messages will be printed to standard error. ENVIRONMENT
DITTOABORT If the environment variable DITTOABORT is set, ditto will call abort(3) if it encounters a fatal error. DITTONORSRC If DITTONORSRC is set but --rsrc, --extattr, and --acl are not specified, ditto will not preserve those additional types of meta- data. BUGS
ditto doesn't copy directories into directories in the same way as cp(1). In particular, ditto foo bar will copy the contents of foo into bar, whereas cp -r foo bar copies foo itself into bar. Though this is not a bug, some may consider this bug-like behavior. --keepParent for non-archive copies will eventually alleviate this problem. SEE ALSO
bom(5), lsbom(8), mkbom(8), cpio(1), zip(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1), tar(1). Mac OS X December 19, 2008 Mac OS X
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:28 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy