Provided by: rdup_1.1.15-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       rdup-up - update a directory tree with a rdup archive

SYNOPSIS

       rdup-up [OPTION]...  DIRECTORY

DESCRIPTION

       With  rdup-up  you  can  update  an  (possibly)  existing  directory structure with a rdup
       archive.

       The rdup archive has to be given to rdup-up's standard input.

   Username and uids
       rdup outputs both the user name and uid, the receiving system  (which  may  be  a  totally
       different  system)  checks  if the user name and uid match. If the user name and uid don't
       match the (numeric) uid is used on the file. The same holds true for the  group  name  and
       gid.

   File ownership
       As  rdup supports backups via SSH the following situation can occur: locally rdup is run a
       root, but rdup-up is run as a non-root user (the one logged in via SSH). In this case  the
       original  owner-  and  group  name  can  not be set. If this happens rdup-up will create a
       ._rdup_. file which contains the user/group information, also see the -u flag for  rdup-tr
       (and rdup).

OPTIONS

       -n     Do a dry-run and do not create anything on disk.

       -t     Create DIRECTORY (ala mkdir -p) if it does not exist.

       -s N   Strip  N  path components from a pathname. If the resulting pathname is empty after
              this operation it is skipped. Be careful however with the following structure:

                  /foo
                  /foo/bar
                  /foo/bar/bla.txt
                  /foo/blork/bla.txt

              With rdup-up -s2 this will leave:

                  <empty>
                  <empty>
                  /bla.txt
                  /bla.txt

              And the last 'bla.txt' will over write the previous one, this will  happen  without
              warnings.

       -r PATH
              This  option  is  related to the -s option, but works different. The string PATH is
              removed from (the beginning of) each pathname. With -r  /home/backup  the  pathname
              /home/backup/bin/mycmd  becomes  /bin/mycmd.  The same could be done with -s 2, but
              then you need to count the slashes. Note -s is always performed before -r.

       -v     Be more verbose and echo the processed files to standard output.

       -T     Show a table of contents of the rdup stream received (ala tar -tf -).  With -T  the
              directory argument is optional. -T unsets any verbose (-v) options.

       -u     Do not create a ._rdup_. file which contains user/group information when failing to
              chown the actual file or directory. Useful when restoring a backup when you do  not
              want to see ._rdup._-files being created.

       -q     Silence  'chown'  failures  even when running as root. This can be helpful when the
              file system does not implement 'chown' or disallows it ('sshfs' for instance).

       -h     A short help message.

       -V     Show the version.

EXIT CODE

       rdup-up return a zero exit code on success, otherwise 1 is returned.

AUTHOR

       Written by Miek Gieben.

REPORTING BUGS

       Report bugs to <miek@miek.nl>.

SEE ALSO

       http:/www.miek.nl/projects/rdup/ is the main site of rdup. Also  see  rdup(1),  rdup-tr(1)
       and rdup-backups(7).

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2005-2010 Miek Gieben. This is free software. There is NO warranty; not even
       for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

       Licensed under the GPL version 3. See the file LICENSE in the source distribution of rdup.