I'm copying lots of files that have changed from one server to another using rsync. I know I can use the -n
option to do a dry run, so I can see what files have been changed. However is it possible to get rsync to print a diff of the file contents that's changed? I'd like to see what's happening before doing a copy? Something I can save to a file and the apply with diff(1) later?
7 Answers
There might be a better way, but this might work, albeit not that efficiently:
rsync -vrn / dest:/ > ~/file_list
Then edit test to remove the stats, then:
while read file; do
diff $file <(ssh dest "cat $file")
done < ~/edited_file_list
Another Option:
You might also consider mounting the file system with something like sshfs/fuse, and then just using diff.
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Good start, but there's loads of extra output from rsync, such as the statistics, and "sending incremental file list", etc Sep 4, 2009 at 11:43
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If you use the out-format, drop the v, and grep -v 'skipping non-regular file' ... That should get it pretty clean Sep 4, 2009 at 11:51
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Just checking if by chance there is a new / better method to
rsync --diff
two years later...– Déjà vuJan 13, 2013 at 12:30
For create patch:
rsync -arv --only-write-batch=patch new/ old/
For apply it:
rsync -arv --read-batch=patch dir/
or use auto-generated script:
./patch.sh
Sources:
rsync can't do this natively, but if there's a possibility of using unison you can produce diff style format from that.
It's not possible natively because rsync only cares about binary differences between files.
You might be able to script it, using rsync's output. But it would be hackish.
I do believe it's natively possible with Unison though.
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Why not just use something like diff (for text files) or xdelta (for binary files) to generate the diffs? Why do you need to specifically get something out of rsync?
To expand on Kyle's answer, this automates the process. Note that it is totally untested, probably pretty fragile, and may delete your computer and kill your dog.
#!/bin/bash
REMOTE=${1?Missing Remote Path}
LOCAL=${2?Missing Local Path}
# Trim trailing slash since we'll be adding it as a separator later
REMOTE=${REMOTE%/}
LOCAL=${LOCAL%/}
#Break it down
RHOST=${REMOTE%:*}
RPATH=${REMOTE#*:}
while read FILE; do
diff -u ${LOCAL}/${FILE} <(ssh $RHOST "cat ${RPATH}/${FILE}")
done < <(rsync -vrn $REMOTE/ $LOCAL/ | sed '1d;/^$/q')
The rsync algorithm works by comparing binary chunks of the file. Such binary diff is not meant to be printable. There is a command called rdiff that uses the rsync algorithm to generate a binary diff, but I don't think it'd be useful for what you describe, it is commonly used to implement incremental backups.