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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to copy very large directory trees Post 302723251 by siegfried on Monday 29th of October 2012 06:51:34 PM
Old 10-29-2012
How to copy very large directory trees

I have constant trouble with XCOPY/s for multi-gigabyte transfers.
I need a utility like XCOPY/S that remembers where it left off if I reboot. Is there such a utility? How about a free utility (free as in free beer)?

How about an md5sum sanity check too?

I posted the above query in another forum. Answers to the above question are welcome here too. My question for this forum is: How feasible is it it write a script in groovy, python, cygwin bash, Activestate perl, powershell, etc... to implement a linux "cp -R" or windows "xcopy/s" program that can continue where it left off after a reboot?

I cannot think of clever way do do this easily -- can you?

I could write it in C++ -- but I'm hoping for something more quick and elegant.


Thanks
Siegfried
 

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time(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   time(1)

NAME
time - time a command SYNOPSIS
command utility [argument ...] DESCRIPTION
When a specified command or utility completes execution, prints the elapsed time during the command or utility, the time spent in the sys- tem, and the time spent executing the command or utility. Times are reported in seconds. Execution time can depend on the performance of the memory in which the program is running. The times are printed to standard error. Note that the shell also has a keyword that times an entire pipeline if used anywhere in the pipeline. This action is different than the command which times a particular command if used in a pipeline. Options recognizes the following options: command The command to be executed and timed. Writes the timing statistics to standard error. utility The name of a utility to be invoked and timed. If the utility operand names any of the shell special built-in utilities, the time results are undefined. See csh(1) and ksh(1) for information about special built-in utilities. argument Any string that is an argument to the utility. SEE ALSO
csh(1), ksh(1), sh(1), timex(1), times(2). STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
time(1)
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