In message <560c4a51.4040...@sanitarium.net>, Kevin Korb <k...@sanitarium.net> wrote:
>First off, --fileflags --force-change are not in my man rsync so I >don't know what those are. These are probably (Free)BSD specific. Here's what the man page says: --fileflags preserve file-flags (aka chflags) --force-change affect user/system immutable files/dirs >Second, you should look into using either ZFS subvolume snapshots or >rsync --link-dest to maintain multiple backups. Thank you, but I have no real interest in switching to ZFS just now. >Now, for your actual question... >Add --itemize-changes to your standard command line. -v is almost >entirely useless without it anyway. Thanks! I certainly did not know about that option! >To figure out and fix what is corrupt you have 2 paths: > >1. Add --checksum for a single pass. This will take forever as rsync >checksums everything even things it shouldn't expect to match (even >things that are only on one end!). Anything that checksum finds that >rsync wouldn't have otherwise found would have a 'c' but not a 't'. I don't understand what you mean about 'c' and 't'. Are you talking about what will appear in the (itemized) change log? I am guessing so. >2. Add --ignore-times for a single pass. NOW I am REALLY confused! I don't understand at all what the functional difference is between these two options: -c, --checksum skip based on checksum, not mod-time & size -I, --ignore-times don't skip files that match size and time Could you please explain? Both of these options would seem to me to have exactly the same/identical effect. >... Normally this doesn't take >as long as --checksum. However, since you are using an external USB >device which means you are also using --whole-file... No, I am *not* using the --whole-file option. Indeed, up until this moment, I didn't even know that option existed! I thank you for bringing it to my attention. Now I plan to be using --whole-file in future when making all of my backups. (Because most of the files I back up are binary media files, I think that the delta algorithm is not really saving me that much in terms of run-time.) Having said that however, I need also to say that your comment (just above) is, for me, puzzling and downright cryptic. Yes, I am doing my backups to an external USB-connected device. But what has that fact got to do with the --whole-file option? I see no obvious connection at all. >... this will probably be even slower than --checksum. Why would using the --whole-file option during my attempts to verify my backup files cause things to run even slower? (This is not at all obvious.) >Either way, you need to get your system writing files correctly. Oh yes, clearly. I believe (for now) that simply having proper cooling applied to the external drive in question may be sufficient to prevent corruption of files put on the drive in futire. (I did run one of the LONG built-in drive self-test passes on this drive after I found that some files on it had been corrupted, but results from that were 100% OK. So I think the drive perhaps just got a bit flaky during a time when I *did not* have an small utility fan right next to it and pointing at it. I _do_ have that now.) Thank you for all of your detailed responses. Regards, rfg -- Please use reply-all for most replies to avoid omitting the mailing list. To unsubscribe or change options: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/rsync Before posting, read: http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html