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Have you tried rsync?
44 0 ReplyCan it resume interrupted writes?
17 0 ReplyHeck to the yeah. I usually run
rsync -av src/ dst/
Which is verbose and archive mode (keeps mod times, user, etc). You can also add -P for progress.
Here is the man page https://linux.die.net/man/1/rsync
If it gets interrupted, just run that same command again.
Edit: also it's usually preinstalled on every Linux distro and should be easy to install for Windows too.
46 0 ReplyBy the way,
--info=progress2
will show a total progress information.16 0 ReplyWoah, that's amazing! Can't believe I've been sleeping on it for so long
11 0 ReplyI feel like rsync may genuinely be one of the best, most slept on tools out there. It even works over ssh.
9 0 ReplyI like to add --ignore-existing to it aswell in case it gets interrupted. Useful when it's a timed backup or similar
5 0 ReplyIf it doesn’t ignore existing by default, what’s the difference between that and plain old copy?
1 0 ReplyRsync checks the files and only issues the copy if the file size/modified dates are different by default. Ignore existing will not overwrite a changed file afaik.
If the file is large it only sends the changed blocks (e.g. you have a 100gb database and only a dozen 4mb blocks have been modified it won't send the full 100gb across the network)
2 0 Reply