5.9 KiB
% MSYNK(1) msynk 1.1 % Matthias Quintern % March 2022
NAME
msynk - rsync helper that supports encryption and presets
SYNOPSIS
| Local: | msynk [OPTION...] -r DEST_DIR -s SOURCE_DIR PATHS...
| Via remote shell: | Push: | msynk [OPTION...] -r [USER@]HOST:DEST_DIR -s SOURCE_DIR PATHS... | Pull: | msynk [OPTION...] -r DEST_DIR -s [USER@]HOST:SOURCE_DIR PATHS...
| Using a configuration file: | msynk [OPTION...] -c CONFIG NAME [SELECTIONS...]
DESCRIPTION
msynk uses rsync to synchronise files or directories locally or between devices. In general, you should always add a trailing '/' to directories.
Encryption
Files can also be encrypted or decrypted using mkrypt. If encryption is used, the files are encrypted to a temporary directory and then synced with rsync. If you sync encrypted files to your system, the encrypted files are transferred with rsync to a temporary directory and then decrypted to your filesystem.
Configuration Files
msynk can read from config files usually stored in ~/.config/msynk. The config files are shellscripts run with bash to set certain environent variables. These are:\
- paths: array containing all paths (relative to sender) that should be synced\
- sender: the parent directory of the paths\
- receiver: the path where the files should be synced to\
- rsync_flags: array containing all the flags for rsync. If you just want to add a flag, use rsync_flags+=(-yourflag)\
- use_encryption: 0 for no, 1 for yes\ A template config file is stored in /usr/share/msynk. You can change the location of the configuration directory by replacing $CONFIG_DIR with your directory in /usr/bin/msynk
Example
To sync the directories "/home/user/foo" "/home/user/bar" and the file "/home/user/file.txt" to a remote server "user@foobar.com:~/backup" which is available with ssh at port 42, you could have a configuration file "my_backup":
sender=/home/user/
receiver=user@foobar.com:~/backup/
paths=(foo/ bar/ file.txt)
rsync_flags+=(--rsh="ssh -p 42")
You can then run this with: "msynk -c my_backup", or if you only want to sync the "foo" directory and ".txt" files: "msynk -c my_backup foo .txt"
OPTIONS
- -h, --help
- Show a list of arguments.
- --settings
- Show the current settings.
- -c, --config config-name
- Retrieve settings from a config file in $CONFIG_DIR, eg ~/.config/msynk/config-name
- --show-config config-name
- Print variables defined from a config with config-name.
- -s, --sender path
- Set sender to directory. This can also be a remote, like user@domain.com:/dir. Defaults to to the current working directory.
- -r, --receiver path
- Set the receiver directory. All files and directories will be placed inside this directory. This can also be a remote, like user@domain.com:/dir. This option always needs to be set. Note that this directory must already exist if it is on a remote.
- --reverse
- Swaps sender and receiver. Useful when you want to reverse a config file.
- --encrypt
- Encrypt files with mkrypt before sending them to the receiver.
- The files are encrypted to $TMP_DIR and then synced to the receiver. Does not work with --delete.
- --decrypt
- Decrypt files with mkrypt after receiving them from the sender. Assumes that all files are encrypted and fails if that is not the case.
- The files are synced to $TMP_DIR and then decrypted to the receiver directory. Does not work with --delete.
- --check-date
- Can be used with -c and --encrypt or --decrypt: When running msynk with a config, the current date is stored in the config file.
- When running with --check-date, only files that have been modified after the date stored in the config file are processed (by passing--date [date the config was last run] to mkrypt).
- --mkrypt-flag arg
- Additional argument for mkrypt, for example to set the key for the encryption.
- Only pass one argument at a time, so for passing two use '--mkrypt-flag "arg1" --mkrypt-flag "arg2"'
- -d, --delete
- rsync --delete option. Deletes all files on the receiver that do not exist on the sender. msynk will open less with a list of all files that will be deleted and prompt you wether you want continue (unless --skip-dryrun is set)
- --skip-dryrun
- Can be used with --delete. This skips listing the files that will be deleted and the prompt.
- --rsync-flag arg
- Additional argument for rsync, for example to set the port for the connection.
- Only pass one argument at a time, so for passing two use '--rsync-flag "arg1" --rsync-flag "arg2"'
- -v, --verbose
- Increase verbosity: Passes -v to rsync and mkrypt.
- --silent
- Decrease verbosity: Print only error messages and passes --silent to mkrypt.
- --debug
- Maximum verbosity: -v but also print out rsync and mkrypt commands.
- --exclude
- Interpret positional arguments as blacklist, not whitelist.
- positional arguments
- If you are using a config file: pos. args. are strings that have to be contained in a path in order for it to be synced. If no pos. args. are given, all files are synced.
- If you are not using a config file: pos. args. are filepaths relative to the sender directory.
Troubleshooting
Not enough space when using encryption
When using --encrypt, the data is encrypted to a temporary directory $TMP_DIR, when using --decrypt the encrypted date is copied to the $TMP_DIR and then decrypted. The $TMP_DIR defaults to /tmp/mksynk and /tmp is usually limited to half the size of your memory. You change the $TMP_DIR in the script in /usr/bin/msynk or temporarily increase the size of the tmpfs by running "sudo mount -o remount,size=XXG,noatime /tmp" if your $TMP_DIR is on /tmp and you have at least XXGB memory+swap space.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright © 2022 Matthias Quintern. License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html.
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.