Provided by: rclone_1.53.3-4ubuntu1.22.04.2_amd64
NAME
Rclone - syncs your files to cloud storage
DESCRIPTION
• About rclone • What can rclone do for you? • What features does rclone have? • What providers does rclone support? • Download (https://rclone.org/downloads/) • Install (https://rclone.org/install/) • Donate. (https://rclone.org/donate/) About rclone Rclone is a command line program to manage files on cloud storage. It is a feature rich alternative to cloud vendors’ web storage interfaces. Over 40 cloud storage products support rclone including S3 object stores, business & consumer file storage services, as well as standard transfer protocols. Rclone has powerful cloud equivalents to the unix commands rsync, cp, mv, mount, ls, ncdu, tree, rm, and cat. Rclone’s familiar syntax includes shell pipeline support, and --dry- run protection. It is used at the command line, in scripts or via its API. Users call rclone “The Swiss army knife of cloud storage”, and “Technology indistinguishable from magic”. Rclone really looks after your data. It preserves timestamps and verifies checksums at all times. Transfers over limited bandwidth; intermittent connections, or subject to quota can be restarted, from the last good file transferred. You can check (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_check/) the integrity of your files. Where possible, rclone employs server side transfers to minimise local bandwidth use and transfers from one provider to another without using local disk. Virtual backends wrap local and cloud file systems to apply encryption (https://rclone.org/crypt/), caching (https://rclone.org/cache/), chunking (https://rclone.org/chunker/) and joining (https://rclone.org/union/). Rclone mounts (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_mount/) any local, cloud or virtual filesystem as a disk on Windows, macOS, linux and FreeBSD, and also serves these over SFTP (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_sftp/), HTTP (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_http/), WebDAV (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_webdav/), FTP (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_ftp/) and DLNA (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_dlna/). Rclone is mature, open source software originally inspired by rsync and written in Go (https://golang.org). The friendly support community are familiar with varied use cases. Official Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, Brew and Chocolatey repos. include rclone. For the latest version downloading from rclone.org (https://rclone.org/downloads/) is recommended. Rclone is widely used on Linux, Windows and Mac. Third party developers create innovative backup, restore, GUI and business process solutions using the rclone command line or API. Rclone does the heavy lifting of communicating with cloud storage. What can rclone do for you? Rclone helps you: • Backup (and encrypt) files to cloud storage • Restore (and decrypt) files from cloud storage • Mirror cloud data to other cloud services or locally • Migrate data to cloud, or between cloud storage vendors • Mount multiple, encrypted, cached or diverse cloud storage as a disk • Analyse and account for data held on cloud storage using lsf (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_lsf/), ljson (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_lsjson/), size (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_size/), ncdu (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_ncdu/) • Union (https://rclone.org/union/) file systems together to present multiple local and/or cloud file systems as one Features • Transfers • MD5, SHA1 hashes are checked at all times for file integrity • Timestamps are preserved on files • Operations can be restarted at any time • Can be to and from network, eg two different cloud providers • Can use multi-threaded downloads to local disk • Copy (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_copy/) new or changed files to cloud storage • Sync (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_sync/) (one way) to make a directory identical • Move (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_move/) files to cloud storage deleting the local after verification • Check (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_check/) hashes and for missing/extra files • Mount (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_mount/) your cloud storage as a network disk • Serve (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve/) local or remote files over HTTP (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_http/)/WebDav (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_webdav/)/FTP (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_ftp/)/SFTP (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_sftp/)/dlna (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_dlna/) • Experimental Web based GUI (https://rclone.org/gui/) Supported providers (There are many others, built on standard protocols such as WebDAV or S3, that work out of the box.) • 1Fichier • Alibaba Cloud (Aliyun) Object Storage System (OSS) • Amazon Drive • Amazon S3 • Backblaze B2 • Box • Ceph • Citrix ShareFile • C14 • DigitalOcean Spaces • Dreamhost • Dropbox • FTP • Google Cloud Storage • Google Drive • Google Photos • HTTP • Hubic • Jottacloud • IBM COS S3 • Koofr • Mail.ru Cloud • Memset Memstore • Mega • Memory • Microsoft Azure Blob Storage • Microsoft OneDrive • Minio • Nextcloud • OVH • OpenDrive • OpenStack Swift • Oracle Cloud Storage • ownCloud • pCloud • premiumize.me • put.io • QingStor • Rackspace Cloud Files • rsync.net • Scaleway • Seafile • SFTP • StackPath • SugarSync • Tardigrade • Tencent Cloud Object Storage (COS) • Wasabi • WebDAV • Yandex Disk • The local filesystem Links • Home page (https://rclone.org/) • GitHub project page for source and bug tracker (https://github.com/rclone/rclone) • Rclone Forum (https://forum.rclone.org) • Downloads (https://rclone.org/downloads/) Configure First, you’ll need to configure rclone. As the object storage systems have quite complicated authentication these are kept in a config file. (See the --config entry for how to find the config file and choose its location.) The easiest way to make the config is to run rclone with the config option: rclone config See the following for detailed instructions for • 1Fichier (https://rclone.org/fichier/) • Alias (https://rclone.org/alias/) • Amazon Drive (https://rclone.org/amazonclouddrive/) • Amazon S3 (https://rclone.org/s3/) • Backblaze B2 (https://rclone.org/b2/) • Box (https://rclone.org/box/) • Cache (https://rclone.org/cache/) • Chunker (https://rclone.org/chunker/) - transparently splits large files for other remotes • Citrix ShareFile (https://rclone.org/sharefile/) • Crypt (https://rclone.org/crypt/) - to encrypt other remotes • DigitalOcean Spaces (https://rclone.org/s3/#digitalocean-spaces) • Dropbox (https://rclone.org/dropbox/) • FTP (https://rclone.org/ftp/) • Google Cloud Storage (https://rclone.org/googlecloudstorage/) • Google Drive (https://rclone.org/drive/) • Google Photos (https://rclone.org/googlephotos/) • HTTP (https://rclone.org/http/) • Hubic (https://rclone.org/hubic/) • Jottacloud / GetSky.no (https://rclone.org/jottacloud/) • Koofr (https://rclone.org/koofr/) • Mail.ru Cloud (https://rclone.org/mailru/) • Mega (https://rclone.org/mega/) • Memory (https://rclone.org/memory/) • Microsoft Azure Blob Storage (https://rclone.org/azureblob/) • Microsoft OneDrive (https://rclone.org/onedrive/) • OpenStack Swift / Rackspace Cloudfiles / Memset Memstore (https://rclone.org/swift/) • OpenDrive (https://rclone.org/opendrive/) • Pcloud (https://rclone.org/pcloud/) • premiumize.me (https://rclone.org/premiumizeme/) • put.io (https://rclone.org/putio/) • QingStor (https://rclone.org/qingstor/) • Seafile (https://rclone.org/seafile/) • SFTP (https://rclone.org/sftp/) • SugarSync (https://rclone.org/sugarsync/) • Tardigrade (https://rclone.org/tardigrade/) • Union (https://rclone.org/union/) • WebDAV (https://rclone.org/webdav/) • Yandex Disk (https://rclone.org/yandex/) • The local filesystem (https://rclone.org/local/) Usage Rclone syncs a directory tree from one storage system to another. Its syntax is like this Syntax: [options] subcommand <parameters> <parameters...> Source and destination paths are specified by the name you gave the storage system in the config file then the sub path, eg “drive:myfolder” to look at “myfolder” in Google drive. You can define as many storage paths as you like in the config file. Please use the -i / --interactive flag while learning rclone to avoid accidental data loss. Subcommands rclone uses a system of subcommands. For example rclone ls remote:path # lists a remote rclone copy /local/path remote:path # copies /local/path to the remote rclone sync -i /local/path remote:path # syncs /local/path to the remote
rclone config
Enter an interactive configuration session. Synopsis Enter an interactive configuration session where you can setup new remotes and manage existing ones. You may also set or remove a password to protect your configuration. rclone config [flags] Options -h, --help help for config See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends. • rclone config create (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_create/) - Create a new remote with name, type and options. • rclone config delete (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_delete/) - Delete an existing remote name. • rclone config disconnect (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_disconnect/) - Disconnects user from remote • rclone config dump (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_dump/) - Dump the config file as JSON. • rclone config edit (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_edit/) - Enter an interactive configuration session. • rclone config file (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_file/) - Show path of configuration file in use. • rclone config password (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_password/) - Update password in an existing remote. • rclone config providers (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_providers/) - List in JSON format all the providers and options. • rclone config reconnect (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_reconnect/) - Re- authenticates user with remote. • rclone config show (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_show/) - Print (decrypted) config file, or the config for a single remote. • rclone config update (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_update/) - Update options in an existing remote. • rclone config userinfo (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_userinfo/) - Prints info about logged in user of remote.
rclone copy
Copy files from source to dest, skipping already copied. Synopsis Copy the source to the destination. Doesn’t transfer unchanged files, testing by size and modification time or MD5SUM. Doesn’t delete files from the destination. Note that it is always the contents of the directory that is synced, not the directory so when source:path is a directory, it’s the contents of source:path that are copied, not the directory name and contents. If dest:path doesn’t exist, it is created and the source:path contents go there. For example rclone copy source:sourcepath dest:destpath Let’s say there are two files in sourcepath sourcepath/one.txt sourcepath/two.txt This copies them to destpath/one.txt destpath/two.txt Not to destpath/sourcepath/one.txt destpath/sourcepath/two.txt If you are familiar with rsync, rclone always works as if you had written a trailing / - meaning “copy the contents of this directory”. This applies to all commands and whether you are talking about the source or destination. See the –no-traverse (https://rclone.org/docs/#no-traverse) option for controlling whether rclone lists the destination directory or not. Supplying this option when copying a small number of files into a large destination can speed transfers up greatly. For example, if you have many files in /path/to/src but only a few of them change every day, you can copy all the files which have changed recently very efficiently like this: rclone copy --max-age 24h --no-traverse /path/to/src remote: Note: Use the -P/--progress flag to view real-time transfer statistics. Note: Use the --dry-run or the --interactive/-i flag to test without copying anything. rclone copy source:path dest:path [flags] Options --create-empty-src-dirs Create empty source dirs on destination after copy -h, --help help for copy See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone sync
Make source and dest identical, modifying destination only. Synopsis Sync the source to the destination, changing the destination only. Doesn’t transfer unchanged files, testing by size and modification time or MD5SUM. Destination is updated to match source, including deleting files if necessary. Important: Since this can cause data loss, test first with the --dry-run or the --interactive/-i flag. rclone sync -i SOURCE remote:DESTINATION Note that files in the destination won’t be deleted if there were any errors at any point. It is always the contents of the directory that is synced, not the directory so when source:path is a directory, it’s the contents of source:path that are copied, not the directory name and contents. See extended explanation in the copy command above if unsure. If dest:path doesn’t exist, it is created and the source:path contents go there. Note: Use the -P/--progress flag to view real-time transfer statistics rclone sync source:path dest:path [flags] Options --create-empty-src-dirs Create empty source dirs on destination after sync -h, --help help for sync See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone move
Move files from source to dest. Synopsis Moves the contents of the source directory to the destination directory. Rclone will error if the source and destination overlap and the remote does not support a server side directory move operation. If no filters are in use and if possible this will server side move source:path into dest:path. After this source:path will no longer exist. Otherwise for each file in source:path selected by the filters (if any) this will move it into dest:path. If possible a server side move will be used, otherwise it will copy it (server side if possible) into dest:path then delete the original (if no errors on copy) in source:path. If you want to delete empty source directories after move, use the –delete-empty-src-dirs flag. See the –no-traverse (https://rclone.org/docs/#no-traverse) option for controlling whether rclone lists the destination directory or not. Supplying this option when moving a small number of files into a large destination can speed transfers up greatly. Important: Since this can cause data loss, test first with the --dry-run or the --interactive/-i flag. Note: Use the -P/--progress flag to view real-time transfer statistics. rclone move source:path dest:path [flags] Options --create-empty-src-dirs Create empty source dirs on destination after move --delete-empty-src-dirs Delete empty source dirs after move -h, --help help for move See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone delete
Remove the contents of path. Synopsis Remove the files in path. Unlike purge it obeys include/exclude filters so can be used to selectively delete files. rclone delete only deletes objects but leaves the directory structure alone. If you want to delete a directory and all of its contents use rclone purge If you supply the –rmdirs flag, it will remove all empty directories along with it. Eg delete all files bigger than 100MBytes Check what would be deleted first (use either) rclone --min-size 100M lsl remote:path rclone --dry-run --min-size 100M delete remote:path Then delete rclone --min-size 100M delete remote:path That reads “delete everything with a minimum size of 100 MB”, hence delete all files bigger than 100MBytes. Important: Since this can cause data loss, test first with the --dry-run or the --interactive/-i flag. rclone delete remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for delete --rmdirs rmdirs removes empty directories but leaves root intact See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone purge
Remove the path and all of its contents. Synopsis Remove the path and all of its contents. Note that this does not obey include/exclude filters - everything will be removed. Use delete if you want to selectively delete files. Important: Since this can cause data loss, test first with the --dry-run or the --interactive/-i flag. rclone purge remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for purge See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone mkdir
Make the path if it doesn’t already exist. Synopsis Make the path if it doesn’t already exist. rclone mkdir remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for mkdir See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone rmdir
Remove the path if empty. Synopsis Remove the path. Note that you can’t remove a path with objects in it, use purge for that. rclone rmdir remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for rmdir See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone check
Checks the files in the source and destination match. Synopsis Checks the files in the source and destination match. It compares sizes and hashes (MD5 or SHA1) and logs a report of files which don’t match. It doesn’t alter the source or destination. If you supply the –size-only flag, it will only compare the sizes not the hashes as well. Use this for a quick check. If you supply the –download flag, it will download the data from both remotes and check them against each other on the fly. This can be useful for remotes that don’t support hashes or if you really want to check all the data. If you supply the --one-way flag, it will only check that files in the source match the files in the destination, not the other way around. This means that extra files in the destination that are not in the source will not be detected. The --differ, --missing-on-dst, --missing-on-src, --match and --error flags write paths, one per line, to the file name (or stdout if it is -) supplied. What they write is described in the help below. For example --differ will write all paths which are present on both the source and destination but different. The --combined flag will write a file (or stdout) which contains all file paths with a symbol and then a space and then the path to tell you what happened to it. These are reminiscent of diff files. • = path means path was found in source and destination and was identical • `- path` means path was missing on the source, so only in the destination • `+ path` means path was missing on the destination, so only in the source • `* path` means path was present in source and destination but different. • ! path means there was an error reading or hashing the source or dest. rclone check source:path dest:path [flags] Options --combined string Make a combined report of changes to this file --differ string Report all non-matching files to this file --download Check by downloading rather than with hash. --error string Report all files with errors (hashing or reading) to this file -h, --help help for check --match string Report all matching files to this file --missing-on-dst string Report all files missing from the destination to this file --missing-on-src string Report all files missing from the source to this file --one-way Check one way only, source files must exist on remote See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone ls
List the objects in the path with size and path. Synopsis Lists the objects in the source path to standard output in a human readable format with size and path. Recurses by default. Eg $ rclone ls swift:bucket 60295 bevajer5jef 90613 canole 94467 diwogej7 37600 fubuwic Any of the filtering options can be applied to this command. There are several related list commands • ls to list size and path of objects only • lsl to list modification time, size and path of objects only • lsd to list directories only • lsf to list objects and directories in easy to parse format • lsjson to list objects and directories in JSON format ls,lsl,lsd are designed to be human readable. lsf is designed to be human and machine readable. lsjson is designed to be machine readable. Note that ls and lsl recurse by default - use “–max-depth 1” to stop the recursion. The other list commands lsd,lsf,lsjson do not recurse by default - use “-R” to make them recurse. Listing a non existent directory will produce an error except for remotes which can’t have empty directories (eg s3, swift, gcs, etc - the bucket based remotes). rclone ls remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for ls See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone lsd
List all directories/containers/buckets in the path. Synopsis Lists the directories in the source path to standard output. Does not recurse by default. Use the -R flag to recurse. This command lists the total size of the directory (if known, -1 if not), the modification time (if known, the current time if not), the number of objects in the directory (if known, -1 if not) and the name of the directory, Eg $ rclone lsd swift: 494000 2018-04-26 08:43:20 10000 10000files 65 2018-04-26 08:43:20 1 1File Or $ rclone lsd drive:test -1 2016-10-17 17:41:53 -1 1000files -1 2017-01-03 14:40:54 -1 2500files -1 2017-07-08 14:39:28 -1 4000files If you just want the directory names use “rclone lsf –dirs-only”. Any of the filtering options can be applied to this command. There are several related list commands • ls to list size and path of objects only • lsl to list modification time, size and path of objects only • lsd to list directories only • lsf to list objects and directories in easy to parse format • lsjson to list objects and directories in JSON format ls,lsl,lsd are designed to be human readable. lsf is designed to be human and machine readable. lsjson is designed to be machine readable. Note that ls and lsl recurse by default - use “–max-depth 1” to stop the recursion. The other list commands lsd,lsf,lsjson do not recurse by default - use “-R” to make them recurse. Listing a non existent directory will produce an error except for remotes which can’t have empty directories (eg s3, swift, gcs, etc - the bucket based remotes). rclone lsd remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for lsd -R, --recursive Recurse into the listing. See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone lsl
List the objects in path with modification time, size and path. Synopsis Lists the objects in the source path to standard output in a human readable format with modification time, size and path. Recurses by default. Eg $ rclone lsl swift:bucket 60295 2016-06-25 18:55:41.062626927 bevajer5jef 90613 2016-06-25 18:55:43.302607074 canole 94467 2016-06-25 18:55:43.046609333 diwogej7 37600 2016-06-25 18:55:40.814629136 fubuwic Any of the filtering options can be applied to this command. There are several related list commands • ls to list size and path of objects only • lsl to list modification time, size and path of objects only • lsd to list directories only • lsf to list objects and directories in easy to parse format • lsjson to list objects and directories in JSON format ls,lsl,lsd are designed to be human readable. lsf is designed to be human and machine readable. lsjson is designed to be machine readable. Note that ls and lsl recurse by default - use “–max-depth 1” to stop the recursion. The other list commands lsd,lsf,lsjson do not recurse by default - use “-R” to make them recurse. Listing a non existent directory will produce an error except for remotes which can’t have empty directories (eg s3, swift, gcs, etc - the bucket based remotes). rclone lsl remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for lsl See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone md5sum
Produces an md5sum file for all the objects in the path. Synopsis Produces an md5sum file for all the objects in the path. This is in the same format as the standard md5sum tool produces. rclone md5sum remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for md5sum See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone sha1sum
Produces an sha1sum file for all the objects in the path. Synopsis Produces an sha1sum file for all the objects in the path. This is in the same format as the standard sha1sum tool produces. rclone sha1sum remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for sha1sum See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone size
Prints the total size and number of objects in remote:path. Synopsis Prints the total size and number of objects in remote:path. rclone size remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for size --json format output as JSON See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone version
Show the version number. Synopsis Show the version number, the go version and the architecture. Eg $ rclone version rclone v1.41 - os/arch: linux/amd64 - go version: go1.10 If you supply the –check flag, then it will do an online check to compare your version with the latest release and the latest beta. $ rclone version --check yours: 1.42.0.6 latest: 1.42 (released 2018-06-16) beta: 1.42.0.5 (released 2018-06-17) Or $ rclone version --check yours: 1.41 latest: 1.42 (released 2018-06-16) upgrade: https://downloads.rclone.org/v1.42 beta: 1.42.0.5 (released 2018-06-17) upgrade: https://beta.rclone.org/v1.42-005-g56e1e820 rclone version [flags] Options --check Check for new version. -h, --help help for version See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone cleanup
Clean up the remote if possible. Synopsis Clean up the remote if possible. Empty the trash or delete old file versions. Not supported by all remotes. rclone cleanup remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for cleanup See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone dedupe
Interactively find duplicate filenames and delete/rename them. Synopsis By default dedupe interactively finds files with duplicate names and offers to delete all but one or rename them to be different. This is only useful with backends like Google Drive which can have duplicate file names. It can be run on wrapping backends (eg crypt) if they wrap a backend which supports duplicate file names. In the first pass it will merge directories with the same name. It will do this iteratively until all the identically named directories have been merged. In the second pass, for every group of duplicate file names, it will delete all but one identical files it finds without confirmation. This means that for most duplicated files the dedupe command will not be interactive. dedupe considers files to be identical if they have the same hash. If the backend does not support hashes (eg crypt wrapping Google Drive) then they will never be found to be identical. If you use the --size-only flag then files will be considered identical if they have the same size (any hash will be ignored). This can be useful on crypt backends which do not support hashes. Important: Since this can cause data loss, test first with the --dry-run or the --interactive/-i flag. Here is an example run. Before - with duplicates $ rclone lsl drive:dupes 6048320 2016-03-05 16:23:16.798000000 one.txt 6048320 2016-03-05 16:23:11.775000000 one.txt 564374 2016-03-05 16:23:06.731000000 one.txt 6048320 2016-03-05 16:18:26.092000000 one.txt 6048320 2016-03-05 16:22:46.185000000 two.txt 1744073 2016-03-05 16:22:38.104000000 two.txt 564374 2016-03-05 16:22:52.118000000 two.txt Now the dedupe session $ rclone dedupe drive:dupes 2016/03/05 16:24:37 Google drive root 'dupes': Looking for duplicates using interactive mode. one.txt: Found 4 files with duplicate names one.txt: Deleting 2/3 identical duplicates (MD5 "1eedaa9fe86fd4b8632e2ac549403b36") one.txt: 2 duplicates remain 1: 6048320 bytes, 2016-03-05 16:23:16.798000000, MD5 1eedaa9fe86fd4b8632e2ac549403b36 2: 564374 bytes, 2016-03-05 16:23:06.731000000, MD5 7594e7dc9fc28f727c42ee3e0749de81 s) Skip and do nothing k) Keep just one (choose which in next step) r) Rename all to be different (by changing file.jpg to file-1.jpg) s/k/r> k Enter the number of the file to keep> 1 one.txt: Deleted 1 extra copies two.txt: Found 3 files with duplicates names two.txt: 3 duplicates remain 1: 564374 bytes, 2016-03-05 16:22:52.118000000, MD5 7594e7dc9fc28f727c42ee3e0749de81 2: 6048320 bytes, 2016-03-05 16:22:46.185000000, MD5 1eedaa9fe86fd4b8632e2ac549403b36 3: 1744073 bytes, 2016-03-05 16:22:38.104000000, MD5 851957f7fb6f0bc4ce76be966d336802 s) Skip and do nothing k) Keep just one (choose which in next step) r) Rename all to be different (by changing file.jpg to file-1.jpg) s/k/r> r two-1.txt: renamed from: two.txt two-2.txt: renamed from: two.txt two-3.txt: renamed from: two.txt The result being $ rclone lsl drive:dupes 6048320 2016-03-05 16:23:16.798000000 one.txt 564374 2016-03-05 16:22:52.118000000 two-1.txt 6048320 2016-03-05 16:22:46.185000000 two-2.txt 1744073 2016-03-05 16:22:38.104000000 two-3.txt Dedupe can be run non interactively using the --dedupe-mode flag or by using an extra parameter with the same value • --dedupe-mode interactive - interactive as above. • --dedupe-mode skip - removes identical files then skips anything left. • --dedupe-mode first - removes identical files then keeps the first one. • --dedupe-mode newest - removes identical files then keeps the newest one. • --dedupe-mode oldest - removes identical files then keeps the oldest one. • --dedupe-mode largest - removes identical files then keeps the largest one. • --dedupe-mode smallest - removes identical files then keeps the smallest one. • --dedupe-mode rename - removes identical files then renames the rest to be different. For example to rename all the identically named photos in your Google Photos directory, do rclone dedupe --dedupe-mode rename "drive:Google Photos" Or rclone dedupe rename "drive:Google Photos" rclone dedupe [mode] remote:path [flags] Options --dedupe-mode string Dedupe mode interactive|skip|first|newest|oldest|largest|smallest|rename. (default "interactive") -h, --help help for dedupe See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone about
Get quota information from the remote. Synopsis Get quota information from the remote, like bytes used/free/quota and bytes used in the trash. Not supported by all remotes. This will print to stdout something like this: Total: 17G Used: 7.444G Free: 1.315G Trashed: 100.000M Other: 8.241G Where the fields are: • Total: total size available. • Used: total size used • Free: total amount this user could upload. • Trashed: total amount in the trash • Other: total amount in other storage (eg Gmail, Google Photos) • Objects: total number of objects in the storage Note that not all the backends provide all the fields - they will be missing if they are not known for that backend. Where it is known that the value is unlimited the value will also be omitted. Use the –full flag to see the numbers written out in full, eg Total: 18253611008 Used: 7993453766 Free: 1411001220 Trashed: 104857602 Other: 8849156022 Use the –json flag for a computer readable output, eg { "total": 18253611008, "used": 7993453766, "trashed": 104857602, "other": 8849156022, "free": 1411001220 } rclone about remote: [flags] Options --full Full numbers instead of SI units -h, --help help for about --json Format output as JSON See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone authorize
Remote authorization. Synopsis Remote authorization. Used to authorize a remote or headless rclone from a machine with a browser - use as instructed by rclone config. Use the –auth-no-open-browser to prevent rclone to open auth link in default browser automatically. rclone authorize [flags] Options --auth-no-open-browser Do not automatically open auth link in default browser -h, --help help for authorize See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone backend
Run a backend specific command. Synopsis This runs a backend specific command. The commands themselves (except for “help” and “features”) are defined by the backends and you should see the backend docs for definitions. You can discover what commands a backend implements by using rclone backend help remote: rclone backend help <backendname> You can also discover information about the backend using (see operations/fsinfo (https://rclone.org/rc/#operations/fsinfo) in the remote control docs for more info). rclone backend features remote: Pass options to the backend command with -o. This should be key=value or key, eg: rclone backend stats remote:path stats -o format=json -o long Pass arguments to the backend by placing them on the end of the line rclone backend cleanup remote:path file1 file2 file3 Note to run these commands on a running backend then see backend/command (https://rclone.org/rc/#backend/command) in the rc docs. rclone backend <command> remote:path [opts] <args> [flags] Options -h, --help help for backend --json Always output in JSON format. -o, --option stringArray Option in the form name=value or name. See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone cat
Concatenates any files and sends them to stdout. Synopsis rclone cat sends any files to standard output. You can use it like this to output a single file rclone cat remote:path/to/file Or like this to output any file in dir or its subdirectories. rclone cat remote:path/to/dir Or like this to output any .txt files in dir or its subdirectories. rclone --include "*.txt" cat remote:path/to/dir Use the –head flag to print characters only at the start, –tail for the end and –offset and –count to print a section in the middle. Note that if offset is negative it will count from the end, so –offset -1 –count 1 is equivalent to –tail 1. rclone cat remote:path [flags] Options --count int Only print N characters. (default -1) --discard Discard the output instead of printing. --head int Only print the first N characters. -h, --help help for cat --offset int Start printing at offset N (or from end if -ve). --tail int Only print the last N characters. See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone config create
Create a new remote with name, type and options. Synopsis Create a new remote of name with type and options. The options should be passed in pairs of key value. For example to make a swift remote of name myremote using auto config you would do: rclone config create myremote swift env_auth true Note that if the config process would normally ask a question the default is taken. Each time that happens rclone will print a message saying how to affect the value taken. If any of the parameters passed is a password field, then rclone will automatically obscure them if they aren’t already obscured before putting them in the config file. NB If the password parameter is 22 characters or longer and consists only of base64 characters then rclone can get confused about whether the password is already obscured or not and put unobscured passwords into the config file. If you want to be 100% certain that the passwords get obscured then use the “–obscure” flag, or if you are 100% certain you are already passing obscured passwords then use “–no-obscure”. You can also set osbscured passwords using the “rclone config password” command. So for example if you wanted to configure a Google Drive remote but using remote authorization you would do this: rclone config create mydrive drive config_is_local false rclone config create `name` `type` [`key` `value`]* [flags] Options -h, --help help for create --no-obscure Force any passwords not to be obscured. --obscure Force any passwords to be obscured. See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) - Enter an interactive configuration session.
rclone config delete
Delete an existing remote name. Synopsis Delete an existing remote name. rclone config delete `name` [flags] Options -h, --help help for delete See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) - Enter an interactive configuration session.
rclone config disconnect
Disconnects user from remote Synopsis This disconnects the remote: passed in to the cloud storage system. This normally means revoking the oauth token. To reconnect use “rclone config reconnect”. rclone config disconnect remote: [flags] Options -h, --help help for disconnect See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) - Enter an interactive configuration session.
rclone config dump
Dump the config file as JSON. Synopsis Dump the config file as JSON. rclone config dump [flags] Options -h, --help help for dump See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) - Enter an interactive configuration session.
rclone config edit
Enter an interactive configuration session. Synopsis Enter an interactive configuration session where you can setup new remotes and manage existing ones. You may also set or remove a password to protect your configuration. rclone config edit [flags] Options -h, --help help for edit See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) - Enter an interactive configuration session.
rclone config file
Show path of configuration file in use. Synopsis Show path of configuration file in use. rclone config file [flags] Options -h, --help help for file See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) - Enter an interactive configuration session.
rclone config password
Update password in an existing remote. Synopsis Update an existing remote’s password. The password should be passed in pairs of key value. For example to set password of a remote of name myremote you would do: rclone config password myremote fieldname mypassword This command is obsolete now that “config update” and “config create” both support obscuring passwords directly. rclone config password `name` [`key` `value`]+ [flags] Options -h, --help help for password See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) - Enter an interactive configuration session.
rclone config providers
List in JSON format all the providers and options. Synopsis List in JSON format all the providers and options. rclone config providers [flags] Options -h, --help help for providers See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) - Enter an interactive configuration session.
rclone config reconnect
Re-authenticates user with remote. Synopsis This reconnects remote: passed in to the cloud storage system. To disconnect the remote use “rclone config disconnect”. This normally means going through the interactive oauth flow again. rclone config reconnect remote: [flags] Options -h, --help help for reconnect See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) - Enter an interactive configuration session.
rclone config show
Print (decrypted) config file, or the config for a single remote. Synopsis Print (decrypted) config file, or the config for a single remote. rclone config show [<remote>] [flags] Options -h, --help help for show See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) - Enter an interactive configuration session.
rclone config update
Update options in an existing remote. Synopsis Update an existing remote’s options. The options should be passed in in pairs of key value. For example to update the env_auth field of a remote of name myremote you would do: rclone config update myremote swift env_auth true If any of the parameters passed is a password field, then rclone will automatically obscure them if they aren’t already obscured before putting them in the config file. NB If the password parameter is 22 characters or longer and consists only of base64 characters then rclone can get confused about whether the password is already obscured or not and put unobscured passwords into the config file. If you want to be 100% certain that the passwords get obscured then use the “–obscure” flag, or if you are 100% certain you are already passing obscured passwords then use “–no-obscure”. You can also set osbscured passwords using the “rclone config password” command. If the remote uses OAuth the token will be updated, if you don’t require this add an extra parameter thus: rclone config update myremote swift env_auth true config_refresh_token false rclone config update `name` [`key` `value`]+ [flags] Options -h, --help help for update --no-obscure Force any passwords not to be obscured. --obscure Force any passwords to be obscured. See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) - Enter an interactive configuration session.
rclone config userinfo
Prints info about logged in user of remote. Synopsis This prints the details of the person logged in to the cloud storage system. rclone config userinfo remote: [flags] Options -h, --help help for userinfo --json Format output as JSON See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) - Enter an interactive configuration session.
rclone copyto
Copy files from source to dest, skipping already copied. Synopsis If source:path is a file or directory then it copies it to a file or directory named dest:path. This can be used to upload single files to other than their current name. If the source is a directory then it acts exactly like the copy command. So rclone copyto src dst where src and dst are rclone paths, either remote:path or /path/to/local or C:. This will: if src is file copy it to dst, overwriting an existing file if it exists if src is directory copy it to dst, overwriting existing files if they exist see copy command for full details This doesn’t transfer unchanged files, testing by size and modification time or MD5SUM. It doesn’t delete files from the destination. Note: Use the -P/--progress flag to view real-time transfer statistics rclone copyto source:path dest:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for copyto See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone copyurl
Copy url content to dest. Synopsis Download a URL’s content and copy it to the destination without saving it in temporary storage. Setting –auto-filename will cause the file name to be retrieved from the from URL (after any redirections) and used in the destination path. Setting –no-clobber will prevent overwriting file on the destination if there is one with the same name. Setting –stdout or making the output file name “-” will cause the output to be written to standard output. rclone copyurl https://example.com dest:path [flags] Options -a, --auto-filename Get the file name from the URL and use it for destination file path -h, --help help for copyurl --no-clobber Prevent overwriting file with same name --stdout Write the output to stdout rather than a file See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone cryptcheck
Cryptcheck checks the integrity of a crypted remote. Synopsis rclone cryptcheck checks a remote against a crypted remote. This is the equivalent of running rclone check, but able to check the checksums of the crypted remote. For it to work the underlying remote of the cryptedremote must support some kind of checksum. It works by reading the nonce from each file on the cryptedremote: and using that to encrypt each file on the remote:. It then checks the checksum of the underlying file on the cryptedremote: against the checksum of the file it has just encrypted. Use it like this rclone cryptcheck /path/to/files encryptedremote:path You can use it like this also, but that will involve downloading all the files in remote:path. rclone cryptcheck remote:path encryptedremote:path After it has run it will log the status of the encryptedremote:. If you supply the --one-way flag, it will only check that files in the source match the files in the destination, not the other way around. This means that extra files in the destination that are not in the source will not be detected. The --differ, --missing-on-dst, --missing-on-src, --match and --error flags write paths, one per line, to the file name (or stdout if it is -) supplied. What they write is described in the help below. For example --differ will write all paths which are present on both the source and destination but different. The --combined flag will write a file (or stdout) which contains all file paths with a symbol and then a space and then the path to tell you what happened to it. These are reminiscent of diff files. • = path means path was found in source and destination and was identical • `- path` means path was missing on the source, so only in the destination • `+ path` means path was missing on the destination, so only in the source • `* path` means path was present in source and destination but different. • ! path means there was an error reading or hashing the source or dest. rclone cryptcheck remote:path cryptedremote:path [flags] Options --combined string Make a combined report of changes to this file --differ string Report all non-matching files to this file --error string Report all files with errors (hashing or reading) to this file -h, --help help for cryptcheck --match string Report all matching files to this file --missing-on-dst string Report all files missing from the destination to this file --missing-on-src string Report all files missing from the source to this file --one-way Check one way only, source files must exist on remote See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone cryptdecode
Cryptdecode returns unencrypted file names. Synopsis rclone cryptdecode returns unencrypted file names when provided with a list of encrypted file names. List limit is 10 items. If you supply the –reverse flag, it will return encrypted file names. use it like this rclone cryptdecode encryptedremote: encryptedfilename1 encryptedfilename2 rclone cryptdecode --reverse encryptedremote: filename1 filename2 rclone cryptdecode encryptedremote: encryptedfilename [flags] Options -h, --help help for cryptdecode --reverse Reverse cryptdecode, encrypts filenames See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone deletefile
Remove a single file from remote. Synopsis Remove a single file from remote. Unlike delete it cannot be used to remove a directory and it doesn’t obey include/exclude filters - if the specified file exists, it will always be removed. rclone deletefile remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for deletefile See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone genautocomplete
Output completion script for a given shell. Synopsis Generates a shell completion script for rclone. Run with –help to list the supported shells. Options -h, --help help for genautocomplete See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends. • rclone genautocomplete bash (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_genautocomplete_bash/) - Output bash completion script for rclone. • rclone genautocomplete fish (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_genautocomplete_fish/) - Output fish completion script for rclone. • rclone genautocomplete zsh (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_genautocomplete_zsh/) - Output zsh completion script for rclone.
rclone genautocomplete bash
Output bash completion script for rclone. Synopsis Generates a bash shell autocompletion script for rclone. This writes to /etc/bash_completion.d/rclone by default so will probably need to be run with sudo or as root, eg sudo rclone genautocomplete bash Logout and login again to use the autocompletion scripts, or source them directly . /etc/bash_completion If you supply a command line argument the script will be written there. rclone genautocomplete bash [output_file] [flags] Options -h, --help help for bash See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone genautocomplete (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_genautocomplete/) - Output completion script for a given shell.
rclone genautocomplete fish
Output fish completion script for rclone. Synopsis Generates a fish autocompletion script for rclone. This writes to /etc/fish/completions/rclone.fish by default so will probably need to be run with sudo or as root, eg sudo rclone genautocomplete fish Logout and login again to use the autocompletion scripts, or source them directly . /etc/fish/completions/rclone.fish If you supply a command line argument the script will be written there. rclone genautocomplete fish [output_file] [flags] Options -h, --help help for fish See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone genautocomplete (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_genautocomplete/) - Output completion script for a given shell.
rclone genautocomplete zsh
Output zsh completion script for rclone. Synopsis Generates a zsh autocompletion script for rclone. This writes to /usr/share/zsh/vendor-completions/_rclone by default so will probably need to be run with sudo or as root, eg sudo rclone genautocomplete zsh Logout and login again to use the autocompletion scripts, or source them directly autoload -U compinit && compinit If you supply a command line argument the script will be written there. rclone genautocomplete zsh [output_file] [flags] Options -h, --help help for zsh See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone genautocomplete (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_genautocomplete/) - Output completion script for a given shell.
rclone gendocs
Output markdown docs for rclone to the directory supplied. Synopsis This produces markdown docs for the rclone commands to the directory supplied. These are in a format suitable for hugo to render into the rclone.org website. rclone gendocs output_directory [flags] Options -h, --help help for gendocs See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone hashsum
Produces a hashsum file for all the objects in the path. Synopsis Produces a hash file for all the objects in the path using the hash named. The output is in the same format as the standard md5sum/sha1sum tool. Run without a hash to see the list of supported hashes, eg $ rclone hashsum Supported hashes are: * MD5 * SHA-1 * DropboxHash * QuickXorHash Then $ rclone hashsum MD5 remote:path rclone hashsum <hash> remote:path [flags] Options --base64 Output base64 encoded hashsum -h, --help help for hashsum See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone link
Generate public link to file/folder. Synopsis rclone link will create, retrieve or remove a public link to the given file or folder. rclone link remote:path/to/file rclone link remote:path/to/folder/ rclone link --unlink remote:path/to/folder/ rclone link --expire 1d remote:path/to/file If you supply the –expire flag, it will set the expiration time otherwise it will use the default (100 years). Note not all backends support the –expire flag - if the backend doesn’t support it then the link returned won’t expire. Use the –unlink flag to remove existing public links to the file or folder. Note not all backends support “–unlink” flag - those that don’t will just ignore it. If successful, the last line of the output will contain the link. Exact capabilities depend on the remote, but the link will always by default be created with the least constraints – e.g. no expiry, no password protection, accessible without account. rclone link remote:path [flags] Options --expire Duration The amount of time that the link will be valid (default 100y) -h, --help help for link --unlink Remove existing public link to file/folder See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone listremotes
List all the remotes in the config file. Synopsis rclone listremotes lists all the available remotes from the config file. When uses with the -l flag it lists the types too. rclone listremotes [flags] Options -h, --help help for listremotes --long Show the type as well as names. See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone lsf
List directories and objects in remote:path formatted for parsing. Synopsis List the contents of the source path (directories and objects) to standard output in a form which is easy to parse by scripts. By default this will just be the names of the objects and directories, one per line. The directories will have a / suffix. Eg $ rclone lsf swift:bucket bevajer5jef canole diwogej7 ferejej3gux/ fubuwic Use the –format option to control what gets listed. By default this is just the path, but you can use these parameters to control the output: p - path s - size t - modification time h - hash i - ID of object o - Original ID of underlying object m - MimeType of object if known e - encrypted name T - tier of storage if known, eg "Hot" or "Cool" So if you wanted the path, size and modification time, you would use –format “pst”, or maybe –format “tsp” to put the path last. Eg $ rclone lsf --format "tsp" swift:bucket 2016-06-25 18:55:41;60295;bevajer5jef 2016-06-25 18:55:43;90613;canole 2016-06-25 18:55:43;94467;diwogej7 2018-04-26 08:50:45;0;ferejej3gux/ 2016-06-25 18:55:40;37600;fubuwic If you specify “h” in the format you will get the MD5 hash by default, use the “–hash” flag to change which hash you want. Note that this can be returned as an empty string if it isn’t available on the object (and for directories), “ERROR” if there was an error reading it from the object and “UNSUPPORTED” if that object does not support that hash type. For example to emulate the md5sum command you can use rclone lsf -R --hash MD5 --format hp --separator " " --files-only . Eg $ rclone lsf -R --hash MD5 --format hp --separator " " --files-only swift:bucket 7908e352297f0f530b84a756f188baa3 bevajer5jef cd65ac234e6fea5925974a51cdd865cc canole 03b5341b4f234b9d984d03ad076bae91 diwogej7 8fd37c3810dd660778137ac3a66cc06d fubuwic 99713e14a4c4ff553acaf1930fad985b gixacuh7ku (Though “rclone md5sum .” is an easier way of typing this.) By default the separator is “;” this can be changed with the –separator flag. Note that separators aren’t escaped in the path so putting it last is a good strategy. Eg $ rclone lsf --separator "," --format "tshp" swift:bucket 2016-06-25 18:55:41,60295,7908e352297f0f530b84a756f188baa3,bevajer5jef 2016-06-25 18:55:43,90613,cd65ac234e6fea5925974a51cdd865cc,canole 2016-06-25 18:55:43,94467,03b5341b4f234b9d984d03ad076bae91,diwogej7 2018-04-26 08:52:53,0,,ferejej3gux/ 2016-06-25 18:55:40,37600,8fd37c3810dd660778137ac3a66cc06d,fubuwic You can output in CSV standard format. This will escape things in " if they contain , Eg $ rclone lsf --csv --files-only --format ps remote:path test.log,22355 test.sh,449 "this file contains a comma, in the file name.txt",6 Note that the –absolute parameter is useful for making lists of files to pass to an rclone copy with the –files-from-raw flag. For example to find all the files modified within one day and copy those only (without traversing the whole directory structure): rclone lsf --absolute --files-only --max-age 1d /path/to/local > new_files rclone copy --files-from-raw new_files /path/to/local remote:path Any of the filtering options can be applied to this command. There are several related list commands • ls to list size and path of objects only • lsl to list modification time, size and path of objects only • lsd to list directories only • lsf to list objects and directories in easy to parse format • lsjson to list objects and directories in JSON format ls,lsl,lsd are designed to be human readable. lsf is designed to be human and machine readable. lsjson is designed to be machine readable. Note that ls and lsl recurse by default - use “–max-depth 1” to stop the recursion. The other list commands lsd,lsf,lsjson do not recurse by default - use “-R” to make them recurse. Listing a non existent directory will produce an error except for remotes which can’t have empty directories (eg s3, swift, gcs, etc - the bucket based remotes). rclone lsf remote:path [flags] Options --absolute Put a leading / in front of path names. --csv Output in CSV format. -d, --dir-slash Append a slash to directory names. (default true) --dirs-only Only list directories. --files-only Only list files. -F, --format string Output format - see help for details (default "p") --hash h Use this hash when h is used in the format MD5|SHA-1|DropboxHash (default "MD5") -h, --help help for lsf -R, --recursive Recurse into the listing. -s, --separator string Separator for the items in the format. (default ";") See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone lsjson
List directories and objects in the path in JSON format. Synopsis List directories and objects in the path in JSON format. The output is an array of Items, where each Item looks like this { “Hashes” : { “SHA-1” : “f572d396fae9206628714fb2ce00f72e94f2258f”, “MD5” : “b1946ac92492d2347c6235b4d2611184”, “DropboxHash” : “ecb65bb98f9d905b70458986c39fcbad7715e5f2fcc3b1f07767d7c83e2438cc” }, “ID”: “y2djkhiujf83u33”, “OrigID”: “UYOJVTUW00Q1RzTDA”, “IsBucket” : false, “IsDir” : false, “MimeType” : “application/octet-stream”, “ModTime” : “2017-05-31T16:15:57.034468261+01:00”, “Name” : “file.txt”, “Encrypted” : “v0qpsdq8anpci8n929v3uu9338”, “EncryptedPath” : “kja9098349023498/v0qpsdq8anpci8n929v3uu9338”, “Path” : “full/path/goes/here/file.txt”, “Size” : 6, “Tier” : “hot”, } If –hash is not specified the Hashes property won’t be emitted. The types of hash can be specified with the –hash-type parameter (which may be repeated). If –hash-type is set then it implies –hash. If –no-modtime is specified then ModTime will be blank. This can speed things up on remotes where reading the ModTime takes an extra request (eg s3, swift). If –no-mimetype is specified then MimeType will be blank. This can speed things up on remotes where reading the MimeType takes an extra request (eg s3, swift). If –encrypted is not specified the Encrypted won’t be emitted. If –dirs-only is not specified files in addition to directories are returned If –files-only is not specified directories in addition to the files will be returned. The Path field will only show folders below the remote path being listed. If “remote:path” contains the file “subfolder/file.txt”, the Path for “file.txt” will be “subfolder/file.txt”, not “remote:path/subfolder/file.txt”. When used without –recursive the Path will always be the same as Name. If the directory is a bucket in a bucket based backend, then “IsBucket” will be set to true. This key won’t be present unless it is “true”. The time is in RFC3339 format with up to nanosecond precision. The number of decimal digits in the seconds will depend on the precision that the remote can hold the times, so if times are accurate to the nearest millisecond (eg Google Drive) then 3 digits will always be shown (“2017-05-31T16:15:57.034+01:00”) whereas if the times are accurate to the nearest second (Dropbox, Box, WebDav etc) no digits will be shown (“2017-05-31T16:15:57+01:00”). The whole output can be processed as a JSON blob, or alternatively it can be processed line by line as each item is written one to a line. Any of the filtering options can be applied to this command. There are several related list commands • ls to list size and path of objects only • lsl to list modification time, size and path of objects only • lsd to list directories only • lsf to list objects and directories in easy to parse format • lsjson to list objects and directories in JSON format ls,lsl,lsd are designed to be human readable. lsf is designed to be human and machine readable. lsjson is designed to be machine readable. Note that ls and lsl recurse by default - use “–max-depth 1” to stop the recursion. The other list commands lsd,lsf,lsjson do not recurse by default - use “-R” to make them recurse. Listing a non existent directory will produce an error except for remotes which can’t have empty directories (eg s3, swift, gcs, etc - the bucket based remotes). rclone lsjson remote:path [flags] Options --dirs-only Show only directories in the listing. -M, --encrypted Show the encrypted names. --files-only Show only files in the listing. --hash Include hashes in the output (may take longer). --hash-type stringArray Show only this hash type (may be repeated). -h, --help help for lsjson --no-mimetype Don't read the mime type (can speed things up). --no-modtime Don't read the modification time (can speed things up). --original Show the ID of the underlying Object. -R, --recursive Recurse into the listing. See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone mount
Mount the remote as file system on a mountpoint. Synopsis rclone mount allows Linux, FreeBSD, macOS and Windows to mount any of Rclone’s cloud storage systems as a file system with FUSE. First set up your remote using rclone config. Check it works with rclone ls etc. You can either run mount in foreground mode or background (daemon) mode. Mount runs in foreground mode by default, use the –daemon flag to specify background mode mode. Background mode is only supported on Linux and OSX, you can only run mount in foreground mode on Windows. On Linux/macOS/FreeBSD Start the mount like this where /path/to/local/mount is an empty existing directory. rclone mount remote:path/to/files /path/to/local/mount Or on Windows like this where X: is an unused drive letter or use a path to non-existent directory. rclone mount remote:path/to/files X: rclone mount remote:path/to/files C:\path\to\nonexistent\directory When running in background mode the user will have to stop the mount manually (specified below). When the program ends while in foreground mode, either via Ctrl+C or receiving a SIGINT or SIGTERM signal, the mount is automatically stopped. The umount operation can fail, for example when the mountpoint is busy. When that happens, it is the user’s responsibility to stop the mount manually. Stopping the mount manually: # Linux fusermount -u /path/to/local/mount # OS X umount /path/to/local/mount Note: As of rclone 1.52.2, rclone mount now requires Go version 1.13 or newer on some platforms depending on the underlying FUSE library in use. Installing on Windows To run rclone mount on Windows, you will need to download and install WinFsp (http://www.secfs.net/winfsp/). WinFsp (https://github.com/billziss-gh/winfsp) is an open source Windows File System Proxy which makes it easy to write user space file systems for Windows. It provides a FUSE emulation layer which rclone uses combination with cgofuse (https://github.com/billziss- gh/cgofuse). Both of these packages are by Bill Zissimopoulos who was very helpful during the implementation of rclone mount for Windows. Windows caveats Note that drives created as Administrator are not visible by other accounts (including the account that was elevated as Administrator). So if you start a Windows drive from an Administrative Command Prompt and then try to access the same drive from Explorer (which does not run as Administrator), you will not be able to see the new drive. The easiest way around this is to start the drive from a normal command prompt. It is also possible to start a drive from the SYSTEM account (using the WinFsp.Launcher infrastructure (https://github.com/billziss-gh/winfsp/wiki/WinFsp-Service-Architecture)) which creates drives accessible for everyone on the system or alternatively using the nssm service manager (https://nssm.cc/usage). Mount as a network drive By default, rclone will mount the remote as a normal drive. However, you can also mount it as a Network Drive (or Network Share, as mentioned in some places) Unlike other systems, Windows provides a different filesystem type for network drives. Windows and other programs treat the network drives and fixed/removable drives differently: In network drives, many I/O operations are optimized, as the high latency and low reliability (compared to a normal drive) of a network is expected. Although many people prefer network shares to be mounted as normal system drives, this might cause some issues, such as programs not working as expected or freezes and errors while operating with the mounted remote in Windows Explorer. If you experience any of those, consider mounting rclone remotes as network shares, as Windows expects normal drives to be fast and reliable, while cloud storage is far from that. See also Limitations section below for more info Add “–fuse-flag –VolumePrefix=” to your “mount” command, replacing “share” with any other name of your choice if you are mounting more than one remote. Otherwise, the mountpoints will conflict and your mounted filesystems will overlap. Read more about drive mapping (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drive_mapping) Limitations Without the use of “–vfs-cache-mode” this can only write files sequentially, it can only seek when reading. This means that many applications won’t work with their files on an rclone mount without “–vfs-cache-mode writes” or “–vfs-cache-mode full”. See the File Caching section for more info. The bucket based remotes (eg Swift, S3, Google Compute Storage, B2, Hubic) do not support the concept of empty directories, so empty directories will have a tendency to disappear once they fall out of the directory cache. Only supported on Linux, FreeBSD, OS X and Windows at the moment. rclone mount vs rclone sync/copy File systems expect things to be 100% reliable, whereas cloud storage systems are a long way from 100% reliable. The rclone sync/copy commands cope with this with lots of retries. However rclone mount can’t use retries in the same way without making local copies of the uploads. Look at the file caching for solutions to make mount more reliable. Attribute caching You can use the flag –attr-timeout to set the time the kernel caches the attributes (size, modification time etc) for directory entries. The default is “1s” which caches files just long enough to avoid too many callbacks to rclone from the kernel. In theory 0s should be the correct value for filesystems which can change outside the control of the kernel. However this causes quite a few problems such as rclone using too much memory (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2157), rclone not serving files to samba (https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-1-39-vs-1-40-mount-issue/5112) and excessive time listing directories (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2095#issuecomment-371141147). The kernel can cache the info about a file for the time given by “–attr-timeout”. You may see corruption if the remote file changes length during this window. It will show up as either a truncated file or a file with garbage on the end. With “–attr-timeout 1s” this is very unlikely but not impossible. The higher you set “–attr-timeout” the more likely it is. The default setting of “1s” is the lowest setting which mitigates the problems above. If you set it higher (`10s' or `1m' say) then the kernel will call back to rclone less often making it more efficient, however there is more chance of the corruption issue above. If files don’t change on the remote outside of the control of rclone then there is no chance of corruption. This is the same as setting the attr_timeout option in mount.fuse. Filters Note that all the rclone filters can be used to select a subset of the files to be visible in the mount. systemd When running rclone mount as a systemd service, it is possible to use Type=notify. In this case the service will enter the started state after the mountpoint has been successfully set up. Units having the rclone mount service specified as a requirement will see all files and folders immediately in this mode. chunked reading –vfs-read-chunk-size will enable reading the source objects in parts. This can reduce the used download quota for some remotes by requesting only chunks from the remote that are actually read at the cost of an increased number of requests. When –vfs-read-chunk-size-limit is also specified and greater than –vfs-read-chunk-size, the chunk size for each open file will get doubled for each chunk read, until the specified value is reached. A value of -1 will disable the limit and the chunk size will grow indefinitely. With –vfs-read-chunk-size 100M and –vfs-read-chunk-size-limit 0 the following parts will be downloaded: 0-100M, 100M-200M, 200M-300M, 300M-400M and so on. When –vfs-read-chunk- size-limit 500M is specified, the result would be 0-100M, 100M-300M, 300M-700M, 700M-1200M, 1200M-1700M and so on. VFS - Virtual File System This command uses the VFS layer. This adapts the cloud storage objects that rclone uses into something which looks much more like a disk filing system. Cloud storage objects have lots of properties which aren’t like disk files - you can’t extend them or write to the middle of them, so the VFS layer has to deal with that. Because there is no one right way of doing this there are various options explained below. The VFS layer also implements a directory cache - this caches info about files and directories (but not the data) in memory. VFS Directory Cache Using the --dir-cache-time flag, you can control how long a directory should be considered up to date and not refreshed from the backend. Changes made through the mount will appear immediately or invalidate the cache. --dir-cache-time duration Time to cache directory entries for. (default 5m0s) --poll-interval duration Time to wait between polling for changes. However, changes made directly on the cloud storage by the web interface or a different copy of rclone will only be picked up once the directory cache expires if the backend configured does not support polling for changes. If the backend supports polling, changes will be picked up within the polling interval. You can send a SIGHUP signal to rclone for it to flush all directory caches, regardless of how old they are. Assuming only one rclone instance is running, you can reset the cache like this: kill -SIGHUP $(pidof rclone) If you configure rclone with a remote control then you can use rclone rc to flush the whole directory cache: rclone rc vfs/forget Or individual files or directories: rclone rc vfs/forget file=path/to/file dir=path/to/dir VFS File Buffering The --buffer-size flag determines the amount of memory, that will be used to buffer data in advance. Each open file will try to keep the specified amount of data in memory at all times. The buffered data is bound to one open file and won’t be shared. This flag is a upper limit for the used memory per open file. The buffer will only use memory for data that is downloaded but not not yet read. If the buffer is empty, only a small amount of memory will be used. The maximum memory used by rclone for buffering can be up to --buffer-size * open files. VFS File Caching These flags control the VFS file caching options. File caching is necessary to make the VFS layer appear compatible with a normal file system. It can be disabled at the cost of some compatibility. For example you’ll need to enable VFS caching if you want to read and write simultaneously to a file. See below for more details. Note that the VFS cache is separate from the cache backend and you may find that you need one or the other or both. --cache-dir string Directory rclone will use for caching. --vfs-cache-mode CacheMode Cache mode off|minimal|writes|full (default off) --vfs-cache-max-age duration Max age of objects in the cache. (default 1h0m0s) --vfs-cache-max-size SizeSuffix Max total size of objects in the cache. (default off) --vfs-cache-poll-interval duration Interval to poll the cache for stale objects. (default 1m0s) --vfs-write-back duration Time to writeback files after last use when using cache. (default 5s) If run with -vv rclone will print the location of the file cache. The files are stored in the user cache file area which is OS dependent but can be controlled with --cache-dir or setting the appropriate environment variable. The cache has 4 different modes selected by --vfs-cache-mode. The higher the cache mode the more compatible rclone becomes at the cost of using disk space. Note that files are written back to the remote only when they are closed and if they haven’t been accessed for –vfs-write-back second. If rclone is quit or dies with files that haven’t been uploaded, these will be uploaded next time rclone is run with the same flags. If using –vfs-cache-max-size note that the cache may exceed this size for two reasons. Firstly because it is only checked every –vfs-cache-poll-interval. Secondly because open files cannot be evicted from the cache. –vfs-cache-mode off In this mode (the default) the cache will read directly from the remote and write directly to the remote without caching anything on disk. This will mean some operations are not possible • Files can’t be opened for both read AND write • Files opened for write can’t be seeked • Existing files opened for write must have O_TRUNC set • Files open for read with O_TRUNC will be opened write only • Files open for write only will behave as if O_TRUNC was supplied • Open modes O_APPEND, O_TRUNC are ignored • If an upload fails it can’t be retried –vfs-cache-mode minimal This is very similar to “off” except that files opened for read AND write will be buffered to disk. This means that files opened for write will be a lot more compatible, but uses the minimal disk space. These operations are not possible • Files opened for write only can’t be seeked • Existing files opened for write must have O_TRUNC set • Files opened for write only will ignore O_APPEND, O_TRUNC • If an upload fails it can’t be retried –vfs-cache-mode writes In this mode files opened for read only are still read directly from the remote, write only and read/write files are buffered to disk first. This mode should support all normal file system operations. If an upload fails it will be retried at exponentially increasing intervals up to 1 minute. –vfs-cache-mode full In this mode all reads and writes are buffered to and from disk. When data is read from the remote this is buffered to disk as well. In this mode the files in the cache will be sparse files and rclone will keep track of which bits of the files it has dowloaded. So if an application only reads the starts of each file, then rclone will only buffer the start of the file. These files will appear to be their full size in the cache, but they will be sparse files with only the data that has been downloaded present in them. This mode should support all normal file system operations and is otherwise identical to –vfs-cache-mode writes. When reading a file rclone will read –buffer-size plus –vfs-read-ahead bytes ahead. The –buffer-size is buffered in memory whereas the –vfs-read-ahead is buffered on disk. When using this mode it is recommended that –buffer-size is not set too big and –vfs-read- ahead is set large if required. IMPORTANT not all file systems support sparse files. In particular FAT/exFAT do not. Rclone will perform very badly if the cache directory is on a filesystem which doesn’t support sparse files and it will log an ERROR message if one is detected. VFS Performance These flags may be used to enable/disable features of the VFS for performance or other reasons. In particular S3 and Swift benefit hugely from the –no-modtime flag (or use –use-server- modtime for a slightly different effect) as each read of the modification time takes a transaction. --no-checksum Don't compare checksums on up/download. --no-modtime Don't read/write the modification time (can speed things up). --no-seek Don't allow seeking in files. --read-only Mount read-only. When rclone reads files from a remote it reads them in chunks. This means that rather than requesting the whole file rclone reads the chunk specified. This is advantageous because some cloud providers account for reads being all the data requested, not all the data delivered. Rclone will keep doubling the chunk size requested starting at –vfs-read-chunk-size with a maximum of –vfs-read-chunk-size-limit unless it is set to “off” in which case there will be no limit. --vfs-read-chunk-size SizeSuffix Read the source objects in chunks. (default 128M) --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit SizeSuffix Max chunk doubling size (default "off") Sometimes rclone is delivered reads or writes out of order. Rather than seeking rclone will wait a short time for the in sequence read or write to come in. These flags only come into effect when not using an on disk cache file. --vfs-read-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence read before seeking. (default 20ms) --vfs-write-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence write before giving error. (default 1s) VFS Case Sensitivity Linux file systems are case-sensitive: two files can differ only by case, and the exact case must be used when opening a file. File systems in modern Windows are case-insensitive but case-preserving: although existing files can be opened using any case, the exact case used to create the file is preserved and available for programs to query. It is not allowed for two files in the same directory to differ only by case. Usually file systems on macOS are case-insensitive. It is possible to make macOS file systems case-sensitive but that is not the default The “–vfs-case-insensitive” mount flag controls how rclone handles these two cases. If its value is “false”, rclone passes file names to the mounted file system as-is. If the flag is “true” (or appears without a value on command line), rclone may perform a “fixup” as explained below. The user may specify a file name to open/delete/rename/etc with a case different than what is stored on mounted file system. If an argument refers to an existing file with exactly the same name, then the case of the existing file on the disk will be used. However, if a file name with exactly the same name is not found but a name differing only by case exists, rclone will transparently fixup the name. This fixup happens only when an existing file is requested. Case sensitivity of file names created anew by rclone is controlled by an underlying mounted file system. Note that case sensitivity of the operating system running rclone (the target) may differ from case sensitivity of a file system mounted by rclone (the source). The flag controls whether “fixup” is performed to satisfy the target. If the flag is not provided on the command line, then its default value depends on the operating system where rclone runs: “true” on Windows and macOS, “false” otherwise. If the flag is provided without a value, then it is “true”. rclone mount remote:path /path/to/mountpoint [flags] Options --allow-non-empty Allow mounting over a non-empty directory (not Windows). --allow-other Allow access to other users. --allow-root Allow access to root user. --async-read Use asynchronous reads. (default true) --attr-timeout duration Time for which file/directory attributes are cached. (default 1s) --daemon Run mount as a daemon (background mode). --daemon-timeout duration Time limit for rclone to respond to kernel (not supported by all OSes). --debug-fuse Debug the FUSE internals - needs -v. --default-permissions Makes kernel enforce access control based on the file mode. --dir-cache-time duration Time to cache directory entries for. (default 5m0s) --dir-perms FileMode Directory permissions (default 0777) --file-perms FileMode File permissions (default 0666) --fuse-flag stringArray Flags or arguments to be passed direct to libfuse/WinFsp. Repeat if required. --gid uint32 Override the gid field set by the filesystem. (default 1000) -h, --help help for mount --max-read-ahead SizeSuffix The number of bytes that can be prefetched for sequential reads. (default 128k) --no-checksum Don't compare checksums on up/download. --no-modtime Don't read/write the modification time (can speed things up). --no-seek Don't allow seeking in files. -o, --option stringArray Option for libfuse/WinFsp. Repeat if required. --poll-interval duration Time to wait between polling for changes. Must be smaller than dir-cache-time. Only on supported remotes. Set to 0 to disable. (default 1m0s) --read-only Mount read-only. --uid uint32 Override the uid field set by the filesystem. (default 1000) --umask int Override the permission bits set by the filesystem. --vfs-cache-max-age duration Max age of objects in the cache. (default 1h0m0s) --vfs-cache-max-size SizeSuffix Max total size of objects in the cache. (default off) --vfs-cache-mode CacheMode Cache mode off|minimal|writes|full (default off) --vfs-cache-poll-interval duration Interval to poll the cache for stale objects. (default 1m0s) --vfs-case-insensitive If a file name not found, find a case insensitive match. --vfs-read-ahead SizeSuffix Extra read ahead over --buffer-size when using cache-mode full. --vfs-read-chunk-size SizeSuffix Read the source objects in chunks. (default 128M) --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit SizeSuffix If greater than --vfs-read-chunk-size, double the chunk size after each chunk read, until the limit is reached. 'off' is unlimited. (default off) --vfs-read-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence read before seeking. (default 20ms) --vfs-write-back duration Time to writeback files after last use when using cache. (default 5s) --vfs-write-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence write before giving error. (default 1s) --volname string Set the volume name (not supported by all OSes). --write-back-cache Makes kernel buffer writes before sending them to rclone. Without this, writethrough caching is used. See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone moveto
Move file or directory from source to dest. Synopsis If source:path is a file or directory then it moves it to a file or directory named dest:path. This can be used to rename files or upload single files to other than their existing name. If the source is a directory then it acts exactly like the move command. So rclone moveto src dst where src and dst are rclone paths, either remote:path or /path/to/local or C:. This will: if src is file move it to dst, overwriting an existing file if it exists if src is directory move it to dst, overwriting existing files if they exist see move command for full details This doesn’t transfer unchanged files, testing by size and modification time or MD5SUM. src will be deleted on successful transfer. Important: Since this can cause data loss, test first with the --dry-run or the --interactive/-i flag. Note: Use the -P/--progress flag to view real-time transfer statistics. rclone moveto source:path dest:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for moveto See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone ncdu
Explore a remote with a text based user interface. Synopsis This displays a text based user interface allowing the navigation of a remote. It is most useful for answering the question - “What is using all my disk space?”. To make the user interface it first scans the entire remote given and builds an in memory representation. rclone ncdu can be used during this scanning phase and you will see it building up the directory structure as it goes along. Here are the keys - press `?' to toggle the help on and off ↑,↓ or k,j to Move →,l to enter ←,h to return c toggle counts g toggle graph n,s,C sort by name,size,count d delete file/directory y copy current path to clipbard Y display current path ^L refresh screen ? to toggle help on and off q/ESC/c-C to quit This an homage to the ncdu tool (https://dev.yorhel.nl/ncdu) but for rclone remotes. It is missing lots of features at the moment but is useful as it stands. Note that it might take some time to delete big files/folders. The UI won’t respond in the meantime since the deletion is done synchronously. rclone ncdu remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for ncdu See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone obscure
Obscure password for use in the rclone config file. Synopsis In the rclone config file, human readable passwords are obscured. Obscuring them is done by encrypting them and writing them out in base64. This is not a secure way of encrypting these passwords as rclone can decrypt them - it is to prevent “eyedropping” - namely someone seeing a password in the rclone config file by accident. Many equally important things (like access tokens) are not obscured in the config file. However it is very hard to shoulder surf a 64 character hex token. This command can also accept a password through STDIN instead of an argument by passing a hyphen as an argument. Example: echo “secretpassword” | rclone obscure - If there is no data on STDIN to read, rclone obscure will default to obfuscating the hyphen itself. If you want to encrypt the config file then please use config file encryption - see rclone config (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/) for more info. rclone obscure password [flags] Options -h, --help help for obscure See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone rc
Run a command against a running rclone. Synopsis This runs a command against a running rclone. Use the –url flag to specify an non default URL to connect on. This can be either a “:port” which is taken to mean “http://localhost:port” or a “host:port” which is taken to mean “http://host:port” A username and password can be passed in with –user and –pass. Note that –rc-addr, –rc-user, –rc-pass will be read also for –url, –user, –pass. Arguments should be passed in as parameter=value. The result will be returned as a JSON object by default. The –json parameter can be used to pass in a JSON blob as an input instead of key=value arguments. This is the only way of passing in more complicated values. The -o/–opt option can be used to set a key “opt” with key, value options in the form “-o key=value” or “-o key”. It can be repeated as many times as required. This is useful for rc commands which take the “opt” parameter which by convention is a dictionary of strings. -o key=value -o key2 Will place this in the “opt” value {"key":"value", "key2","") The -a/–arg option can be used to set strings in the “arg” value. It can be repeated as many times as required. This is useful for rc commands which take the “arg” parameter which by convention is a list of strings. -a value -a value2 Will place this in the “arg” value ["value", "value2"] Use –loopback to connect to the rclone instance running “rclone rc”. This is very useful for testing commands without having to run an rclone rc server, eg: rclone rc --loopback operations/about fs=/ Use “rclone rc” to see a list of all possible commands. rclone rc commands parameter [flags] Options -a, --arg stringArray Argument placed in the "arg" array. -h, --help help for rc --json string Input JSON - use instead of key=value args. --loopback If set connect to this rclone instance not via HTTP. --no-output If set don't output the JSON result. -o, --opt stringArray Option in the form name=value or name placed in the "opt" array. --pass string Password to use to connect to rclone remote control. --url string URL to connect to rclone remote control. (default "http://localhost:5572/") --user string Username to use to rclone remote control. See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone rcat
Copies standard input to file on remote. Synopsis rclone rcat reads from standard input (stdin) and copies it to a single remote file. echo "hello world" | rclone rcat remote:path/to/file ffmpeg - | rclone rcat remote:path/to/file If the remote file already exists, it will be overwritten. rcat will try to upload small files in a single request, which is usually more efficient than the streaming/chunked upload endpoints, which use multiple requests. Exact behaviour depends on the remote. What is considered a small file may be set through --streaming- upload-cutoff. Uploading only starts after the cutoff is reached or if the file ends before that. The data must fit into RAM. The cutoff needs to be small enough to adhere the limits of your remote, please see there. Generally speaking, setting this cutoff too high will decrease your performance. Note that the upload can also not be retried because the data is not kept around until the upload succeeds. If you need to transfer a lot of data, you’re better off caching locally and then rclone move it to the destination. rclone rcat remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for rcat See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone rcd
Run rclone listening to remote control commands only. Synopsis This runs rclone so that it only listens to remote control commands. This is useful if you are controlling rclone via the rc API. If you pass in a path to a directory, rclone will serve that directory for GET requests on the URL passed in. It will also open the URL in the browser when rclone is run. See the rc documentation (https://rclone.org/rc/) for more info on the rc flags. rclone rcd <path to files to serve>* [flags] Options -h, --help help for rcd See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone rmdirs
Remove empty directories under the path. Synopsis This removes any empty directories (or directories that only contain empty directories) under the path that it finds, including the path if it has nothing in. If you supply the –leave-root flag, it will not remove the root directory. This is useful for tidying up remotes that rclone has left a lot of empty directories in. rclone rmdirs remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for rmdirs --leave-root Do not remove root directory if empty See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone serve
Serve a remote over a protocol. Synopsis rclone serve is used to serve a remote over a given protocol. This command requires the use of a subcommand to specify the protocol, eg rclone serve http remote: Each subcommand has its own options which you can see in their help. rclone serve <protocol> [opts] <remote> [flags] Options -h, --help help for serve See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends. • rclone serve dlna (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_dlna/) - Serve remote:path over DLNA • rclone serve ftp (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_ftp/) - Serve remote:path over FTP. • rclone serve http (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_http/) - Serve the remote over HTTP. • rclone serve restic (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_restic/) - Serve the remote for restic’s REST API. • rclone serve sftp (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_sftp/) - Serve the remote over SFTP. • rclone serve webdav (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve_webdav/) - Serve remote:path over webdav.
rclone serve dlna
Serve remote:path over DLNA Synopsis rclone serve dlna is a DLNA media server for media stored in an rclone remote. Many devices, such as the Xbox and PlayStation, can automatically discover this server in the LAN and play audio/video from it. VLC is also supported. Service discovery uses UDP multicast packets (SSDP) and will thus only work on LANs. Rclone will list all files present in the remote, without filtering based on media formats or file extensions. Additionally, there is no media transcoding support. This means that some players might show files that they are not able to play back correctly. Server options Use --addr to specify which IP address and port the server should listen on, eg --addr 1.2.3.4:8000 or --addr :8080 to listen to all IPs. Use --name to choose the friendly server name, which is by default “rclone (hostname)”. Use --log-trace in conjunction with -vv to enable additional debug logging of all UPNP traffic. VFS - Virtual File System This command uses the VFS layer. This adapts the cloud storage objects that rclone uses into something which looks much more like a disk filing system. Cloud storage objects have lots of properties which aren’t like disk files - you can’t extend them or write to the middle of them, so the VFS layer has to deal with that. Because there is no one right way of doing this there are various options explained below. The VFS layer also implements a directory cache - this caches info about files and directories (but not the data) in memory. VFS Directory Cache Using the --dir-cache-time flag, you can control how long a directory should be considered up to date and not refreshed from the backend. Changes made through the mount will appear immediately or invalidate the cache. --dir-cache-time duration Time to cache directory entries for. (default 5m0s) --poll-interval duration Time to wait between polling for changes. However, changes made directly on the cloud storage by the web interface or a different copy of rclone will only be picked up once the directory cache expires if the backend configured does not support polling for changes. If the backend supports polling, changes will be picked up within the polling interval. You can send a SIGHUP signal to rclone for it to flush all directory caches, regardless of how old they are. Assuming only one rclone instance is running, you can reset the cache like this: kill -SIGHUP $(pidof rclone) If you configure rclone with a remote control then you can use rclone rc to flush the whole directory cache: rclone rc vfs/forget Or individual files or directories: rclone rc vfs/forget file=path/to/file dir=path/to/dir VFS File Buffering The --buffer-size flag determines the amount of memory, that will be used to buffer data in advance. Each open file will try to keep the specified amount of data in memory at all times. The buffered data is bound to one open file and won’t be shared. This flag is a upper limit for the used memory per open file. The buffer will only use memory for data that is downloaded but not not yet read. If the buffer is empty, only a small amount of memory will be used. The maximum memory used by rclone for buffering can be up to --buffer-size * open files. VFS File Caching These flags control the VFS file caching options. File caching is necessary to make the VFS layer appear compatible with a normal file system. It can be disabled at the cost of some compatibility. For example you’ll need to enable VFS caching if you want to read and write simultaneously to a file. See below for more details. Note that the VFS cache is separate from the cache backend and you may find that you need one or the other or both. --cache-dir string Directory rclone will use for caching. --vfs-cache-mode CacheMode Cache mode off|minimal|writes|full (default off) --vfs-cache-max-age duration Max age of objects in the cache. (default 1h0m0s) --vfs-cache-max-size SizeSuffix Max total size of objects in the cache. (default off) --vfs-cache-poll-interval duration Interval to poll the cache for stale objects. (default 1m0s) --vfs-write-back duration Time to writeback files after last use when using cache. (default 5s) If run with -vv rclone will print the location of the file cache. The files are stored in the user cache file area which is OS dependent but can be controlled with --cache-dir or setting the appropriate environment variable. The cache has 4 different modes selected by --vfs-cache-mode. The higher the cache mode the more compatible rclone becomes at the cost of using disk space. Note that files are written back to the remote only when they are closed and if they haven’t been accessed for –vfs-write-back second. If rclone is quit or dies with files that haven’t been uploaded, these will be uploaded next time rclone is run with the same flags. If using –vfs-cache-max-size note that the cache may exceed this size for two reasons. Firstly because it is only checked every –vfs-cache-poll-interval. Secondly because open files cannot be evicted from the cache. –vfs-cache-mode off In this mode (the default) the cache will read directly from the remote and write directly to the remote without caching anything on disk. This will mean some operations are not possible • Files can’t be opened for both read AND write • Files opened for write can’t be seeked • Existing files opened for write must have O_TRUNC set • Files open for read with O_TRUNC will be opened write only • Files open for write only will behave as if O_TRUNC was supplied • Open modes O_APPEND, O_TRUNC are ignored • If an upload fails it can’t be retried –vfs-cache-mode minimal This is very similar to “off” except that files opened for read AND write will be buffered to disk. This means that files opened for write will be a lot more compatible, but uses the minimal disk space. These operations are not possible • Files opened for write only can’t be seeked • Existing files opened for write must have O_TRUNC set • Files opened for write only will ignore O_APPEND, O_TRUNC • If an upload fails it can’t be retried –vfs-cache-mode writes In this mode files opened for read only are still read directly from the remote, write only and read/write files are buffered to disk first. This mode should support all normal file system operations. If an upload fails it will be retried at exponentially increasing intervals up to 1 minute. –vfs-cache-mode full In this mode all reads and writes are buffered to and from disk. When data is read from the remote this is buffered to disk as well. In this mode the files in the cache will be sparse files and rclone will keep track of which bits of the files it has dowloaded. So if an application only reads the starts of each file, then rclone will only buffer the start of the file. These files will appear to be their full size in the cache, but they will be sparse files with only the data that has been downloaded present in them. This mode should support all normal file system operations and is otherwise identical to –vfs-cache-mode writes. When reading a file rclone will read –buffer-size plus –vfs-read-ahead bytes ahead. The –buffer-size is buffered in memory whereas the –vfs-read-ahead is buffered on disk. When using this mode it is recommended that –buffer-size is not set too big and –vfs-read- ahead is set large if required. IMPORTANT not all file systems support sparse files. In particular FAT/exFAT do not. Rclone will perform very badly if the cache directory is on a filesystem which doesn’t support sparse files and it will log an ERROR message if one is detected. VFS Performance These flags may be used to enable/disable features of the VFS for performance or other reasons. In particular S3 and Swift benefit hugely from the –no-modtime flag (or use –use-server- modtime for a slightly different effect) as each read of the modification time takes a transaction. --no-checksum Don't compare checksums on up/download. --no-modtime Don't read/write the modification time (can speed things up). --no-seek Don't allow seeking in files. --read-only Mount read-only. When rclone reads files from a remote it reads them in chunks. This means that rather than requesting the whole file rclone reads the chunk specified. This is advantageous because some cloud providers account for reads being all the data requested, not all the data delivered. Rclone will keep doubling the chunk size requested starting at –vfs-read-chunk-size with a maximum of –vfs-read-chunk-size-limit unless it is set to “off” in which case there will be no limit. --vfs-read-chunk-size SizeSuffix Read the source objects in chunks. (default 128M) --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit SizeSuffix Max chunk doubling size (default "off") Sometimes rclone is delivered reads or writes out of order. Rather than seeking rclone will wait a short time for the in sequence read or write to come in. These flags only come into effect when not using an on disk cache file. --vfs-read-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence read before seeking. (default 20ms) --vfs-write-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence write before giving error. (default 1s) VFS Case Sensitivity Linux file systems are case-sensitive: two files can differ only by case, and the exact case must be used when opening a file. File systems in modern Windows are case-insensitive but case-preserving: although existing files can be opened using any case, the exact case used to create the file is preserved and available for programs to query. It is not allowed for two files in the same directory to differ only by case. Usually file systems on macOS are case-insensitive. It is possible to make macOS file systems case-sensitive but that is not the default The “–vfs-case-insensitive” mount flag controls how rclone handles these two cases. If its value is “false”, rclone passes file names to the mounted file system as-is. If the flag is “true” (or appears without a value on command line), rclone may perform a “fixup” as explained below. The user may specify a file name to open/delete/rename/etc with a case different than what is stored on mounted file system. If an argument refers to an existing file with exactly the same name, then the case of the existing file on the disk will be used. However, if a file name with exactly the same name is not found but a name differing only by case exists, rclone will transparently fixup the name. This fixup happens only when an existing file is requested. Case sensitivity of file names created anew by rclone is controlled by an underlying mounted file system. Note that case sensitivity of the operating system running rclone (the target) may differ from case sensitivity of a file system mounted by rclone (the source). The flag controls whether “fixup” is performed to satisfy the target. If the flag is not provided on the command line, then its default value depends on the operating system where rclone runs: “true” on Windows and macOS, “false” otherwise. If the flag is provided without a value, then it is “true”. rclone serve dlna remote:path [flags] Options --addr string ip:port or :port to bind the DLNA http server to. (default ":7879") --dir-cache-time duration Time to cache directory entries for. (default 5m0s) --dir-perms FileMode Directory permissions (default 0777) --file-perms FileMode File permissions (default 0666) --gid uint32 Override the gid field set by the filesystem. (default 1000) -h, --help help for dlna --log-trace enable trace logging of SOAP traffic --name string name of DLNA server --no-checksum Don't compare checksums on up/download. --no-modtime Don't read/write the modification time (can speed things up). --no-seek Don't allow seeking in files. --poll-interval duration Time to wait between polling for changes. Must be smaller than dir-cache-time. Only on supported remotes. Set to 0 to disable. (default 1m0s) --read-only Mount read-only. --uid uint32 Override the uid field set by the filesystem. (default 1000) --umask int Override the permission bits set by the filesystem. (default 2) --vfs-cache-max-age duration Max age of objects in the cache. (default 1h0m0s) --vfs-cache-max-size SizeSuffix Max total size of objects in the cache. (default off) --vfs-cache-mode CacheMode Cache mode off|minimal|writes|full (default off) --vfs-cache-poll-interval duration Interval to poll the cache for stale objects. (default 1m0s) --vfs-case-insensitive If a file name not found, find a case insensitive match. --vfs-read-ahead SizeSuffix Extra read ahead over --buffer-size when using cache-mode full. --vfs-read-chunk-size SizeSuffix Read the source objects in chunks. (default 128M) --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit SizeSuffix If greater than --vfs-read-chunk-size, double the chunk size after each chunk read, until the limit is reached. 'off' is unlimited. (default off) --vfs-read-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence read before seeking. (default 20ms) --vfs-write-back duration Time to writeback files after last use when using cache. (default 5s) --vfs-write-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence write before giving error. (default 1s) See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone serve (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve/) - Serve a remote over a protocol.
rclone serve ftp
Serve remote:path over FTP. Synopsis rclone serve ftp implements a basic ftp server to serve the remote over FTP protocol. This can be viewed with a ftp client or you can make a remote of type ftp to read and write it. Server options Use –addr to specify which IP address and port the server should listen on, eg –addr 1.2.3.4:8000 or –addr :8080 to listen to all IPs. By default it only listens on localhost. You can use port :0 to let the OS choose an available port. If you set –addr to listen on a public or LAN accessible IP address then using Authentication is advised - see the next section for info. Authentication By default this will serve files without needing a login. You can set a single username and password with the –user and –pass flags. VFS - Virtual File System This command uses the VFS layer. This adapts the cloud storage objects that rclone uses into something which looks much more like a disk filing system. Cloud storage objects have lots of properties which aren’t like disk files - you can’t extend them or write to the middle of them, so the VFS layer has to deal with that. Because there is no one right way of doing this there are various options explained below. The VFS layer also implements a directory cache - this caches info about files and directories (but not the data) in memory. VFS Directory Cache Using the --dir-cache-time flag, you can control how long a directory should be considered up to date and not refreshed from the backend. Changes made through the mount will appear immediately or invalidate the cache. --dir-cache-time duration Time to cache directory entries for. (default 5m0s) --poll-interval duration Time to wait between polling for changes. However, changes made directly on the cloud storage by the web interface or a different copy of rclone will only be picked up once the directory cache expires if the backend configured does not support polling for changes. If the backend supports polling, changes will be picked up within the polling interval. You can send a SIGHUP signal to rclone for it to flush all directory caches, regardless of how old they are. Assuming only one rclone instance is running, you can reset the cache like this: kill -SIGHUP $(pidof rclone) If you configure rclone with a remote control then you can use rclone rc to flush the whole directory cache: rclone rc vfs/forget Or individual files or directories: rclone rc vfs/forget file=path/to/file dir=path/to/dir VFS File Buffering The --buffer-size flag determines the amount of memory, that will be used to buffer data in advance. Each open file will try to keep the specified amount of data in memory at all times. The buffered data is bound to one open file and won’t be shared. This flag is a upper limit for the used memory per open file. The buffer will only use memory for data that is downloaded but not not yet read. If the buffer is empty, only a small amount of memory will be used. The maximum memory used by rclone for buffering can be up to --buffer-size * open files. VFS File Caching These flags control the VFS file caching options. File caching is necessary to make the VFS layer appear compatible with a normal file system. It can be disabled at the cost of some compatibility. For example you’ll need to enable VFS caching if you want to read and write simultaneously to a file. See below for more details. Note that the VFS cache is separate from the cache backend and you may find that you need one or the other or both. --cache-dir string Directory rclone will use for caching. --vfs-cache-mode CacheMode Cache mode off|minimal|writes|full (default off) --vfs-cache-max-age duration Max age of objects in the cache. (default 1h0m0s) --vfs-cache-max-size SizeSuffix Max total size of objects in the cache. (default off) --vfs-cache-poll-interval duration Interval to poll the cache for stale objects. (default 1m0s) --vfs-write-back duration Time to writeback files after last use when using cache. (default 5s) If run with -vv rclone will print the location of the file cache. The files are stored in the user cache file area which is OS dependent but can be controlled with --cache-dir or setting the appropriate environment variable. The cache has 4 different modes selected by --vfs-cache-mode. The higher the cache mode the more compatible rclone becomes at the cost of using disk space. Note that files are written back to the remote only when they are closed and if they haven’t been accessed for –vfs-write-back second. If rclone is quit or dies with files that haven’t been uploaded, these will be uploaded next time rclone is run with the same flags. If using –vfs-cache-max-size note that the cache may exceed this size for two reasons. Firstly because it is only checked every –vfs-cache-poll-interval. Secondly because open files cannot be evicted from the cache. –vfs-cache-mode off In this mode (the default) the cache will read directly from the remote and write directly to the remote without caching anything on disk. This will mean some operations are not possible • Files can’t be opened for both read AND write • Files opened for write can’t be seeked • Existing files opened for write must have O_TRUNC set • Files open for read with O_TRUNC will be opened write only • Files open for write only will behave as if O_TRUNC was supplied • Open modes O_APPEND, O_TRUNC are ignored • If an upload fails it can’t be retried –vfs-cache-mode minimal This is very similar to “off” except that files opened for read AND write will be buffered to disk. This means that files opened for write will be a lot more compatible, but uses the minimal disk space. These operations are not possible • Files opened for write only can’t be seeked • Existing files opened for write must have O_TRUNC set • Files opened for write only will ignore O_APPEND, O_TRUNC • If an upload fails it can’t be retried –vfs-cache-mode writes In this mode files opened for read only are still read directly from the remote, write only and read/write files are buffered to disk first. This mode should support all normal file system operations. If an upload fails it will be retried at exponentially increasing intervals up to 1 minute. –vfs-cache-mode full In this mode all reads and writes are buffered to and from disk. When data is read from the remote this is buffered to disk as well. In this mode the files in the cache will be sparse files and rclone will keep track of which bits of the files it has dowloaded. So if an application only reads the starts of each file, then rclone will only buffer the start of the file. These files will appear to be their full size in the cache, but they will be sparse files with only the data that has been downloaded present in them. This mode should support all normal file system operations and is otherwise identical to –vfs-cache-mode writes. When reading a file rclone will read –buffer-size plus –vfs-read-ahead bytes ahead. The –buffer-size is buffered in memory whereas the –vfs-read-ahead is buffered on disk. When using this mode it is recommended that –buffer-size is not set too big and –vfs-read- ahead is set large if required. IMPORTANT not all file systems support sparse files. In particular FAT/exFAT do not. Rclone will perform very badly if the cache directory is on a filesystem which doesn’t support sparse files and it will log an ERROR message if one is detected. VFS Performance These flags may be used to enable/disable features of the VFS for performance or other reasons. In particular S3 and Swift benefit hugely from the –no-modtime flag (or use –use-server- modtime for a slightly different effect) as each read of the modification time takes a transaction. --no-checksum Don't compare checksums on up/download. --no-modtime Don't read/write the modification time (can speed things up). --no-seek Don't allow seeking in files. --read-only Mount read-only. When rclone reads files from a remote it reads them in chunks. This means that rather than requesting the whole file rclone reads the chunk specified. This is advantageous because some cloud providers account for reads being all the data requested, not all the data delivered. Rclone will keep doubling the chunk size requested starting at –vfs-read-chunk-size with a maximum of –vfs-read-chunk-size-limit unless it is set to “off” in which case there will be no limit. --vfs-read-chunk-size SizeSuffix Read the source objects in chunks. (default 128M) --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit SizeSuffix Max chunk doubling size (default "off") Sometimes rclone is delivered reads or writes out of order. Rather than seeking rclone will wait a short time for the in sequence read or write to come in. These flags only come into effect when not using an on disk cache file. --vfs-read-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence read before seeking. (default 20ms) --vfs-write-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence write before giving error. (default 1s) VFS Case Sensitivity Linux file systems are case-sensitive: two files can differ only by case, and the exact case must be used when opening a file. File systems in modern Windows are case-insensitive but case-preserving: although existing files can be opened using any case, the exact case used to create the file is preserved and available for programs to query. It is not allowed for two files in the same directory to differ only by case. Usually file systems on macOS are case-insensitive. It is possible to make macOS file systems case-sensitive but that is not the default The “–vfs-case-insensitive” mount flag controls how rclone handles these two cases. If its value is “false”, rclone passes file names to the mounted file system as-is. If the flag is “true” (or appears without a value on command line), rclone may perform a “fixup” as explained below. The user may specify a file name to open/delete/rename/etc with a case different than what is stored on mounted file system. If an argument refers to an existing file with exactly the same name, then the case of the existing file on the disk will be used. However, if a file name with exactly the same name is not found but a name differing only by case exists, rclone will transparently fixup the name. This fixup happens only when an existing file is requested. Case sensitivity of file names created anew by rclone is controlled by an underlying mounted file system. Note that case sensitivity of the operating system running rclone (the target) may differ from case sensitivity of a file system mounted by rclone (the source). The flag controls whether “fixup” is performed to satisfy the target. If the flag is not provided on the command line, then its default value depends on the operating system where rclone runs: “true” on Windows and macOS, “false” otherwise. If the flag is provided without a value, then it is “true”. Auth Proxy If you supply the parameter --auth-proxy /path/to/program then rclone will use that program to generate backends on the fly which then are used to authenticate incoming requests. This uses a simple JSON based protocl with input on STDIN and output on STDOUT. PLEASE NOTE: --auth-proxy and --authorized-keys cannot be used together, if --auth-proxy is set the authorized keys option will be ignored. There is an example program bin/test_proxy.py (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/blob/master/test_proxy.py) in the rclone source code. The program’s job is to take a user and pass on the input and turn those into the config for a backend on STDOUT in JSON format. This config will have any default parameters for the backend added, but it won’t use configuration from environment variables or command line options - it is the job of the proxy program to make a complete config. This config generated must have this extra parameter - _root - root to use for the backend And it may have this parameter - _obscure - comma separated strings for parameters to obscure If password authentication was used by the client, input to the proxy process (on STDIN) would look similar to this: { "user": "me", "pass": "mypassword" } If public-key authentication was used by the client, input to the proxy process (on STDIN) would look similar to this: { "user": "me", "public_key": "AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAABAQDuwESFdAe14hVS6omeyX7edc...JQdf" } And as an example return this on STDOUT { "type": "sftp", "_root": "", "_obscure": "pass", "user": "me", "pass": "mypassword", "host": "sftp.example.com" } This would mean that an SFTP backend would be created on the fly for the user and pass/public_key returned in the output to the host given. Note that since _obscure is set to pass, rclone will obscure the pass parameter before creating the backend (which is required for sftp backends). The program can manipulate the supplied user in any way, for example to make proxy to many different sftp backends, you could make the user be user@example.com and then set the host to example.com in the output and the user to user. For security you’d probably want to restrict the host to a limited list. Note that an internal cache is keyed on user so only use that for configuration, don’t use pass or public_key. This also means that if a user’s password or public-key is changed the cache will need to expire (which takes 5 mins) before it takes effect. This can be used to build general purpose proxies to any kind of backend that rclone supports. rclone serve ftp remote:path [flags] Options --addr string IPaddress:Port or :Port to bind server to. (default "localhost:2121") --auth-proxy string A program to use to create the backend from the auth. --dir-cache-time duration Time to cache directory entries for. (default 5m0s) --dir-perms FileMode Directory permissions (default 0777) --file-perms FileMode File permissions (default 0666) --gid uint32 Override the gid field set by the filesystem. (default 1000) -h, --help help for ftp --no-checksum Don't compare checksums on up/download. --no-modtime Don't read/write the modification time (can speed things up). --no-seek Don't allow seeking in files. --pass string Password for authentication. (empty value allow every password) --passive-port string Passive port range to use. (default "30000-32000") --poll-interval duration Time to wait between polling for changes. Must be smaller than dir-cache-time. Only on supported remotes. Set to 0 to disable. (default 1m0s) --public-ip string Public IP address to advertise for passive connections. --read-only Mount read-only. --uid uint32 Override the uid field set by the filesystem. (default 1000) --umask int Override the permission bits set by the filesystem. (default 2) --user string User name for authentication. (default "anonymous") --vfs-cache-max-age duration Max age of objects in the cache. (default 1h0m0s) --vfs-cache-max-size SizeSuffix Max total size of objects in the cache. (default off) --vfs-cache-mode CacheMode Cache mode off|minimal|writes|full (default off) --vfs-cache-poll-interval duration Interval to poll the cache for stale objects. (default 1m0s) --vfs-case-insensitive If a file name not found, find a case insensitive match. --vfs-read-ahead SizeSuffix Extra read ahead over --buffer-size when using cache-mode full. --vfs-read-chunk-size SizeSuffix Read the source objects in chunks. (default 128M) --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit SizeSuffix If greater than --vfs-read-chunk-size, double the chunk size after each chunk read, until the limit is reached. 'off' is unlimited. (default off) --vfs-read-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence read before seeking. (default 20ms) --vfs-write-back duration Time to writeback files after last use when using cache. (default 5s) --vfs-write-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence write before giving error. (default 1s) See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone serve (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve/) - Serve a remote over a protocol.
rclone serve http
Serve the remote over HTTP. Synopsis rclone serve http implements a basic web server to serve the remote over HTTP. This can be viewed in a web browser or you can make a remote of type http read from it. You can use the filter flags (eg –include, –exclude) to control what is served. The server will log errors. Use -v to see access logs. –bwlimit will be respected for file transfers. Use –stats to control the stats printing. Server options Use –addr to specify which IP address and port the server should listen on, eg –addr 1.2.3.4:8000 or –addr :8080 to listen to all IPs. By default it only listens on localhost. You can use port :0 to let the OS choose an available port. If you set –addr to listen on a public or LAN accessible IP address then using Authentication is advised - see the next section for info. –server-read-timeout and –server-write-timeout can be used to control the timeouts on the server. Note that this is the total time for a transfer. –max-header-bytes controls the maximum number of bytes the server will accept in the HTTP header. –baseurl controls the URL prefix that rclone serves from. By default rclone will serve from the root. If you used –baseurl “/rclone” then rclone would serve from a URL starting with “/rclone/”. This is useful if you wish to proxy rclone serve. Rclone automatically inserts leading and trailing “/” on –baseurl, so –baseurl “rclone”, –baseurl “/rclone” and –baseurl “/rclone/” are all treated identically. –template allows a user to specify a custom markup template for http and webdav serve functions. The server exports the following markup to be used within the template to server pages: Parameter Description ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── .Name The full path of a file/directory. .Title Directory listing of .Name .Sort The current sort used. This is changeable via ?sort= parameter Sort Options: namedirfist,name,size,time (default namedirfirst) .Order The current ordering used. This is changeable via ?order= parameter Order Options: asc,desc (default asc) .Query Currently unused. .Breadcrumb Allows for creating a relative navigation – .Link The relative to the root link of the Text. – .Text The Name of the directory. .Entries Information about a specific file/directory. – .URL The `url' of an entry. – .Leaf Currently same as `URL' but intended to be `just' the name. – .IsDir Boolean for if an entry is a directory or not. – .Size Size in Bytes of the entry. – .ModTime The UTC timestamp of an entry. Authentication By default this will serve files without needing a login. You can either use an htpasswd file which can take lots of users, or set a single username and password with the –user and –pass flags. Use –htpasswd /path/to/htpasswd to provide an htpasswd file. This is in standard apache format and supports MD5, SHA1 and BCrypt for basic authentication. Bcrypt is recommended. To create an htpasswd file: touch htpasswd htpasswd -B htpasswd user htpasswd -B htpasswd anotherUser The password file can be updated while rclone is running. Use –realm to set the authentication realm. SSL/TLS By default this will serve over http. If you want you can serve over https. You will need to supply the –cert and –key flags. If you wish to do client side certificate validation then you will need to supply –client-ca also. –cert should be either a PEM encoded certificate or a concatenation of that with the CA certificate. –key should be the PEM encoded private key and –client-ca should be the PEM encoded client certificate authority certificate. VFS - Virtual File System This command uses the VFS layer. This adapts the cloud storage objects that rclone uses into something which looks much more like a disk filing system. Cloud storage objects have lots of properties which aren’t like disk files - you can’t extend them or write to the middle of them, so the VFS layer has to deal with that. Because there is no one right way of doing this there are various options explained below. The VFS layer also implements a directory cache - this caches info about files and directories (but not the data) in memory. VFS Directory Cache Using the --dir-cache-time flag, you can control how long a directory should be considered up to date and not refreshed from the backend. Changes made through the mount will appear immediately or invalidate the cache. --dir-cache-time duration Time to cache directory entries for. (default 5m0s) --poll-interval duration Time to wait between polling for changes. However, changes made directly on the cloud storage by the web interface or a different copy of rclone will only be picked up once the directory cache expires if the backend configured does not support polling for changes. If the backend supports polling, changes will be picked up within the polling interval. You can send a SIGHUP signal to rclone for it to flush all directory caches, regardless of how old they are. Assuming only one rclone instance is running, you can reset the cache like this: kill -SIGHUP $(pidof rclone) If you configure rclone with a remote control then you can use rclone rc to flush the whole directory cache: rclone rc vfs/forget Or individual files or directories: rclone rc vfs/forget file=path/to/file dir=path/to/dir VFS File Buffering The --buffer-size flag determines the amount of memory, that will be used to buffer data in advance. Each open file will try to keep the specified amount of data in memory at all times. The buffered data is bound to one open file and won’t be shared. This flag is a upper limit for the used memory per open file. The buffer will only use memory for data that is downloaded but not not yet read. If the buffer is empty, only a small amount of memory will be used. The maximum memory used by rclone for buffering can be up to --buffer-size * open files. VFS File Caching These flags control the VFS file caching options. File caching is necessary to make the VFS layer appear compatible with a normal file system. It can be disabled at the cost of some compatibility. For example you’ll need to enable VFS caching if you want to read and write simultaneously to a file. See below for more details. Note that the VFS cache is separate from the cache backend and you may find that you need one or the other or both. --cache-dir string Directory rclone will use for caching. --vfs-cache-mode CacheMode Cache mode off|minimal|writes|full (default off) --vfs-cache-max-age duration Max age of objects in the cache. (default 1h0m0s) --vfs-cache-max-size SizeSuffix Max total size of objects in the cache. (default off) --vfs-cache-poll-interval duration Interval to poll the cache for stale objects. (default 1m0s) --vfs-write-back duration Time to writeback files after last use when using cache. (default 5s) If run with -vv rclone will print the location of the file cache. The files are stored in the user cache file area which is OS dependent but can be controlled with --cache-dir or setting the appropriate environment variable. The cache has 4 different modes selected by --vfs-cache-mode. The higher the cache mode the more compatible rclone becomes at the cost of using disk space. Note that files are written back to the remote only when they are closed and if they haven’t been accessed for –vfs-write-back second. If rclone is quit or dies with files that haven’t been uploaded, these will be uploaded next time rclone is run with the same flags. If using –vfs-cache-max-size note that the cache may exceed this size for two reasons. Firstly because it is only checked every –vfs-cache-poll-interval. Secondly because open files cannot be evicted from the cache. –vfs-cache-mode off In this mode (the default) the cache will read directly from the remote and write directly to the remote without caching anything on disk. This will mean some operations are not possible • Files can’t be opened for both read AND write • Files opened for write can’t be seeked • Existing files opened for write must have O_TRUNC set • Files open for read with O_TRUNC will be opened write only • Files open for write only will behave as if O_TRUNC was supplied • Open modes O_APPEND, O_TRUNC are ignored • If an upload fails it can’t be retried –vfs-cache-mode minimal This is very similar to “off” except that files opened for read AND write will be buffered to disk. This means that files opened for write will be a lot more compatible, but uses the minimal disk space. These operations are not possible • Files opened for write only can’t be seeked • Existing files opened for write must have O_TRUNC set • Files opened for write only will ignore O_APPEND, O_TRUNC • If an upload fails it can’t be retried –vfs-cache-mode writes In this mode files opened for read only are still read directly from the remote, write only and read/write files are buffered to disk first. This mode should support all normal file system operations. If an upload fails it will be retried at exponentially increasing intervals up to 1 minute. –vfs-cache-mode full In this mode all reads and writes are buffered to and from disk. When data is read from the remote this is buffered to disk as well. In this mode the files in the cache will be sparse files and rclone will keep track of which bits of the files it has dowloaded. So if an application only reads the starts of each file, then rclone will only buffer the start of the file. These files will appear to be their full size in the cache, but they will be sparse files with only the data that has been downloaded present in them. This mode should support all normal file system operations and is otherwise identical to –vfs-cache-mode writes. When reading a file rclone will read –buffer-size plus –vfs-read-ahead bytes ahead. The –buffer-size is buffered in memory whereas the –vfs-read-ahead is buffered on disk. When using this mode it is recommended that –buffer-size is not set too big and –vfs-read- ahead is set large if required. IMPORTANT not all file systems support sparse files. In particular FAT/exFAT do not. Rclone will perform very badly if the cache directory is on a filesystem which doesn’t support sparse files and it will log an ERROR message if one is detected. VFS Performance These flags may be used to enable/disable features of the VFS for performance or other reasons. In particular S3 and Swift benefit hugely from the –no-modtime flag (or use –use-server- modtime for a slightly different effect) as each read of the modification time takes a transaction. --no-checksum Don't compare checksums on up/download. --no-modtime Don't read/write the modification time (can speed things up). --no-seek Don't allow seeking in files. --read-only Mount read-only. When rclone reads files from a remote it reads them in chunks. This means that rather than requesting the whole file rclone reads the chunk specified. This is advantageous because some cloud providers account for reads being all the data requested, not all the data delivered. Rclone will keep doubling the chunk size requested starting at –vfs-read-chunk-size with a maximum of –vfs-read-chunk-size-limit unless it is set to “off” in which case there will be no limit. --vfs-read-chunk-size SizeSuffix Read the source objects in chunks. (default 128M) --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit SizeSuffix Max chunk doubling size (default "off") Sometimes rclone is delivered reads or writes out of order. Rather than seeking rclone will wait a short time for the in sequence read or write to come in. These flags only come into effect when not using an on disk cache file. --vfs-read-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence read before seeking. (default 20ms) --vfs-write-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence write before giving error. (default 1s) VFS Case Sensitivity Linux file systems are case-sensitive: two files can differ only by case, and the exact case must be used when opening a file. File systems in modern Windows are case-insensitive but case-preserving: although existing files can be opened using any case, the exact case used to create the file is preserved and available for programs to query. It is not allowed for two files in the same directory to differ only by case. Usually file systems on macOS are case-insensitive. It is possible to make macOS file systems case-sensitive but that is not the default The “–vfs-case-insensitive” mount flag controls how rclone handles these two cases. If its value is “false”, rclone passes file names to the mounted file system as-is. If the flag is “true” (or appears without a value on command line), rclone may perform a “fixup” as explained below. The user may specify a file name to open/delete/rename/etc with a case different than what is stored on mounted file system. If an argument refers to an existing file with exactly the same name, then the case of the existing file on the disk will be used. However, if a file name with exactly the same name is not found but a name differing only by case exists, rclone will transparently fixup the name. This fixup happens only when an existing file is requested. Case sensitivity of file names created anew by rclone is controlled by an underlying mounted file system. Note that case sensitivity of the operating system running rclone (the target) may differ from case sensitivity of a file system mounted by rclone (the source). The flag controls whether “fixup” is performed to satisfy the target. If the flag is not provided on the command line, then its default value depends on the operating system where rclone runs: “true” on Windows and macOS, “false” otherwise. If the flag is provided without a value, then it is “true”. rclone serve http remote:path [flags] Options --addr string IPaddress:Port or :Port to bind server to. (default "localhost:8080") --baseurl string Prefix for URLs - leave blank for root. --cert string SSL PEM key (concatenation of certificate and CA certificate) --client-ca string Client certificate authority to verify clients with --dir-cache-time duration Time to cache directory entries for. (default 5m0s) --dir-perms FileMode Directory permissions (default 0777) --file-perms FileMode File permissions (default 0666) --gid uint32 Override the gid field set by the filesystem. (default 1000) -h, --help help for http --htpasswd string htpasswd file - if not provided no authentication is done --key string SSL PEM Private key --max-header-bytes int Maximum size of request header (default 4096) --no-checksum Don't compare checksums on up/download. --no-modtime Don't read/write the modification time (can speed things up). --no-seek Don't allow seeking in files. --pass string Password for authentication. --poll-interval duration Time to wait between polling for changes. Must be smaller than dir-cache-time. Only on supported remotes. Set to 0 to disable. (default 1m0s) --read-only Mount read-only. --realm string realm for authentication (default "rclone") --server-read-timeout duration Timeout for server reading data (default 1h0m0s) --server-write-timeout duration Timeout for server writing data (default 1h0m0s) --template string User Specified Template. --uid uint32 Override the uid field set by the filesystem. (default 1000) --umask int Override the permission bits set by the filesystem. (default 2) --user string User name for authentication. --vfs-cache-max-age duration Max age of objects in the cache. (default 1h0m0s) --vfs-cache-max-size SizeSuffix Max total size of objects in the cache. (default off) --vfs-cache-mode CacheMode Cache mode off|minimal|writes|full (default off) --vfs-cache-poll-interval duration Interval to poll the cache for stale objects. (default 1m0s) --vfs-case-insensitive If a file name not found, find a case insensitive match. --vfs-read-ahead SizeSuffix Extra read ahead over --buffer-size when using cache-mode full. --vfs-read-chunk-size SizeSuffix Read the source objects in chunks. (default 128M) --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit SizeSuffix If greater than --vfs-read-chunk-size, double the chunk size after each chunk read, until the limit is reached. 'off' is unlimited. (default off) --vfs-read-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence read before seeking. (default 20ms) --vfs-write-back duration Time to writeback files after last use when using cache. (default 5s) --vfs-write-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence write before giving error. (default 1s) See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone serve (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve/) - Serve a remote over a protocol.
rclone serve restic
Serve the remote for restic’s REST API. Synopsis rclone serve restic implements restic’s REST backend API over HTTP. This allows restic to use rclone as a data storage mechanism for cloud providers that restic does not support directly. Restic (https://restic.net/) is a command line program for doing backups. The server will log errors. Use -v to see access logs. –bwlimit will be respected for file transfers. Use –stats to control the stats printing. Setting up rclone for use by restic First set up a remote for your chosen cloud provider (https://rclone.org/docs/#configure). Once you have set up the remote, check it is working with, for example “rclone lsd remote:”. You may have called the remote something other than “remote:” - just substitute whatever you called it in the following instructions. Now start the rclone restic server rclone serve restic -v remote:backup Where you can replace “backup” in the above by whatever path in the remote you wish to use. By default this will serve on “localhost:8080” you can change this with use of the “–addr” flag. You might wish to start this server on boot. Setting up restic to use rclone Now you can follow the restic instructions (http://restic.readthedocs.io/en/latest/030_preparing_a_new_repo.html#rest-server) on setting up restic. Note that you will need restic 0.8.2 or later to interoperate with rclone. For the example above you will want to use “http://localhost:8080/” as the URL for the REST server. For example: $ export RESTIC_REPOSITORY=rest:http://localhost:8080/ $ export RESTIC_PASSWORD=yourpassword $ restic init created restic backend 8b1a4b56ae at rest:http://localhost:8080/ Please note that knowledge of your password is required to access the repository. Losing your password means that your data is irrecoverably lost. $ restic backup /path/to/files/to/backup scan [/path/to/files/to/backup] scanned 189 directories, 312 files in 0:00 [0:00] 100.00% 38.128 MiB / 38.128 MiB 501 / 501 items 0 errors ETA 0:00 duration: 0:00 snapshot 45c8fdd8 saved Multiple repositories Note that you can use the endpoint to host multiple repositories. Do this by adding a directory name or path after the URL. Note that these must end with /. Eg $ export RESTIC_REPOSITORY=rest:http://localhost:8080/user1repo/ # backup user1 stuff $ export RESTIC_REPOSITORY=rest:http://localhost:8080/user2repo/ # backup user2 stuff Private repositories The “–private-repos” flag can be used to limit users to repositories starting with a path of /<username>/. Server options Use –addr to specify which IP address and port the server should listen on, eg –addr 1.2.3.4:8000 or –addr :8080 to listen to all IPs. By default it only listens on localhost. You can use port :0 to let the OS choose an available port. If you set –addr to listen on a public or LAN accessible IP address then using Authentication is advised - see the next section for info. –server-read-timeout and –server-write-timeout can be used to control the timeouts on the server. Note that this is the total time for a transfer. –max-header-bytes controls the maximum number of bytes the server will accept in the HTTP header. –baseurl controls the URL prefix that rclone serves from. By default rclone will serve from the root. If you used –baseurl “/rclone” then rclone would serve from a URL starting with “/rclone/”. This is useful if you wish to proxy rclone serve. Rclone automatically inserts leading and trailing “/” on –baseurl, so –baseurl “rclone”, –baseurl “/rclone” and –baseurl “/rclone/” are all treated identically. –template allows a user to specify a custom markup template for http and webdav serve functions. The server exports the following markup to be used within the template to server pages: Parameter Description ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── .Name The full path of a file/directory. .Title Directory listing of .Name .Sort The current sort used. This is changeable via ?sort= parameter Sort Options: namedirfist,name,size,time (default namedirfirst) .Order The current ordering used. This is changeable via ?order= parameter Order Options: asc,desc (default asc) .Query Currently unused. .Breadcrumb Allows for creating a relative navigation – .Link The relative to the root link of the Text. – .Text The Name of the directory. .Entries Information about a specific file/directory. – .URL The `url' of an entry. – .Leaf Currently same as `URL' but intended to be `just' the name. – .IsDir Boolean for if an entry is a directory or not. – .Size Size in Bytes of the entry. – .ModTime The UTC timestamp of an entry. Authentication By default this will serve files without needing a login. You can either use an htpasswd file which can take lots of users, or set a single username and password with the –user and –pass flags. Use –htpasswd /path/to/htpasswd to provide an htpasswd file. This is in standard apache format and supports MD5, SHA1 and BCrypt for basic authentication. Bcrypt is recommended. To create an htpasswd file: touch htpasswd htpasswd -B htpasswd user htpasswd -B htpasswd anotherUser The password file can be updated while rclone is running. Use –realm to set the authentication realm. SSL/TLS By default this will serve over http. If you want you can serve over https. You will need to supply the –cert and –key flags. If you wish to do client side certificate validation then you will need to supply –client-ca also. –cert should be either a PEM encoded certificate or a concatenation of that with the CA certificate. –key should be the PEM encoded private key and –client-ca should be the PEM encoded client certificate authority certificate. rclone serve restic remote:path [flags] Options --addr string IPaddress:Port or :Port to bind server to. (default "localhost:8080") --append-only disallow deletion of repository data --baseurl string Prefix for URLs - leave blank for root. --cert string SSL PEM key (concatenation of certificate and CA certificate) --client-ca string Client certificate authority to verify clients with -h, --help help for restic --htpasswd string htpasswd file - if not provided no authentication is done --key string SSL PEM Private key --max-header-bytes int Maximum size of request header (default 4096) --pass string Password for authentication. --private-repos users can only access their private repo --realm string realm for authentication (default "rclone") --server-read-timeout duration Timeout for server reading data (default 1h0m0s) --server-write-timeout duration Timeout for server writing data (default 1h0m0s) --stdio run an HTTP2 server on stdin/stdout --template string User Specified Template. --user string User name for authentication. See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone serve (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve/) - Serve a remote over a protocol.
rclone serve sftp
Serve the remote over SFTP. Synopsis rclone serve sftp implements an SFTP server to serve the remote over SFTP. This can be used with an SFTP client or you can make a remote of type sftp to use with it. You can use the filter flags (eg –include, –exclude) to control what is served. The server will log errors. Use -v to see access logs. –bwlimit will be respected for file transfers. Use –stats to control the stats printing. You must provide some means of authentication, either with –user/–pass, an authorized keys file (specify location with –authorized-keys - the default is the same as ssh), an –auth- proxy, or set the –no-auth flag for no authentication when logging in. Note that this also implements a small number of shell commands so that it can provide md5sum/sha1sum/df information for the rclone sftp backend. This means that is can support SHA1SUMs, MD5SUMs and the about command when paired with the rclone sftp backend. If you don’t supply a –key then rclone will generate one and cache it for later use. By default the server binds to localhost:2022 - if you want it to be reachable externally then supply “–addr :2022” for example. Note that the default of “–vfs-cache-mode off” is fine for the rclone sftp backend, but it may not be with other SFTP clients. VFS - Virtual File System This command uses the VFS layer. This adapts the cloud storage objects that rclone uses into something which looks much more like a disk filing system. Cloud storage objects have lots of properties which aren’t like disk files - you can’t extend them or write to the middle of them, so the VFS layer has to deal with that. Because there is no one right way of doing this there are various options explained below. The VFS layer also implements a directory cache - this caches info about files and directories (but not the data) in memory. VFS Directory Cache Using the --dir-cache-time flag, you can control how long a directory should be considered up to date and not refreshed from the backend. Changes made through the mount will appear immediately or invalidate the cache. --dir-cache-time duration Time to cache directory entries for. (default 5m0s) --poll-interval duration Time to wait between polling for changes. However, changes made directly on the cloud storage by the web interface or a different copy of rclone will only be picked up once the directory cache expires if the backend configured does not support polling for changes. If the backend supports polling, changes will be picked up within the polling interval. You can send a SIGHUP signal to rclone for it to flush all directory caches, regardless of how old they are. Assuming only one rclone instance is running, you can reset the cache like this: kill -SIGHUP $(pidof rclone) If you configure rclone with a remote control then you can use rclone rc to flush the whole directory cache: rclone rc vfs/forget Or individual files or directories: rclone rc vfs/forget file=path/to/file dir=path/to/dir VFS File Buffering The --buffer-size flag determines the amount of memory, that will be used to buffer data in advance. Each open file will try to keep the specified amount of data in memory at all times. The buffered data is bound to one open file and won’t be shared. This flag is a upper limit for the used memory per open file. The buffer will only use memory for data that is downloaded but not not yet read. If the buffer is empty, only a small amount of memory will be used. The maximum memory used by rclone for buffering can be up to --buffer-size * open files. VFS File Caching These flags control the VFS file caching options. File caching is necessary to make the VFS layer appear compatible with a normal file system. It can be disabled at the cost of some compatibility. For example you’ll need to enable VFS caching if you want to read and write simultaneously to a file. See below for more details. Note that the VFS cache is separate from the cache backend and you may find that you need one or the other or both. --cache-dir string Directory rclone will use for caching. --vfs-cache-mode CacheMode Cache mode off|minimal|writes|full (default off) --vfs-cache-max-age duration Max age of objects in the cache. (default 1h0m0s) --vfs-cache-max-size SizeSuffix Max total size of objects in the cache. (default off) --vfs-cache-poll-interval duration Interval to poll the cache for stale objects. (default 1m0s) --vfs-write-back duration Time to writeback files after last use when using cache. (default 5s) If run with -vv rclone will print the location of the file cache. The files are stored in the user cache file area which is OS dependent but can be controlled with --cache-dir or setting the appropriate environment variable. The cache has 4 different modes selected by --vfs-cache-mode. The higher the cache mode the more compatible rclone becomes at the cost of using disk space. Note that files are written back to the remote only when they are closed and if they haven’t been accessed for –vfs-write-back second. If rclone is quit or dies with files that haven’t been uploaded, these will be uploaded next time rclone is run with the same flags. If using –vfs-cache-max-size note that the cache may exceed this size for two reasons. Firstly because it is only checked every –vfs-cache-poll-interval. Secondly because open files cannot be evicted from the cache. –vfs-cache-mode off In this mode (the default) the cache will read directly from the remote and write directly to the remote without caching anything on disk. This will mean some operations are not possible • Files can’t be opened for both read AND write • Files opened for write can’t be seeked • Existing files opened for write must have O_TRUNC set • Files open for read with O_TRUNC will be opened write only • Files open for write only will behave as if O_TRUNC was supplied • Open modes O_APPEND, O_TRUNC are ignored • If an upload fails it can’t be retried –vfs-cache-mode minimal This is very similar to “off” except that files opened for read AND write will be buffered to disk. This means that files opened for write will be a lot more compatible, but uses the minimal disk space. These operations are not possible • Files opened for write only can’t be seeked • Existing files opened for write must have O_TRUNC set • Files opened for write only will ignore O_APPEND, O_TRUNC • If an upload fails it can’t be retried –vfs-cache-mode writes In this mode files opened for read only are still read directly from the remote, write only and read/write files are buffered to disk first. This mode should support all normal file system operations. If an upload fails it will be retried at exponentially increasing intervals up to 1 minute. –vfs-cache-mode full In this mode all reads and writes are buffered to and from disk. When data is read from the remote this is buffered to disk as well. In this mode the files in the cache will be sparse files and rclone will keep track of which bits of the files it has dowloaded. So if an application only reads the starts of each file, then rclone will only buffer the start of the file. These files will appear to be their full size in the cache, but they will be sparse files with only the data that has been downloaded present in them. This mode should support all normal file system operations and is otherwise identical to –vfs-cache-mode writes. When reading a file rclone will read –buffer-size plus –vfs-read-ahead bytes ahead. The –buffer-size is buffered in memory whereas the –vfs-read-ahead is buffered on disk. When using this mode it is recommended that –buffer-size is not set too big and –vfs-read- ahead is set large if required. IMPORTANT not all file systems support sparse files. In particular FAT/exFAT do not. Rclone will perform very badly if the cache directory is on a filesystem which doesn’t support sparse files and it will log an ERROR message if one is detected. VFS Performance These flags may be used to enable/disable features of the VFS for performance or other reasons. In particular S3 and Swift benefit hugely from the –no-modtime flag (or use –use-server- modtime for a slightly different effect) as each read of the modification time takes a transaction. --no-checksum Don't compare checksums on up/download. --no-modtime Don't read/write the modification time (can speed things up). --no-seek Don't allow seeking in files. --read-only Mount read-only. When rclone reads files from a remote it reads them in chunks. This means that rather than requesting the whole file rclone reads the chunk specified. This is advantageous because some cloud providers account for reads being all the data requested, not all the data delivered. Rclone will keep doubling the chunk size requested starting at –vfs-read-chunk-size with a maximum of –vfs-read-chunk-size-limit unless it is set to “off” in which case there will be no limit. --vfs-read-chunk-size SizeSuffix Read the source objects in chunks. (default 128M) --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit SizeSuffix Max chunk doubling size (default "off") Sometimes rclone is delivered reads or writes out of order. Rather than seeking rclone will wait a short time for the in sequence read or write to come in. These flags only come into effect when not using an on disk cache file. --vfs-read-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence read before seeking. (default 20ms) --vfs-write-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence write before giving error. (default 1s) VFS Case Sensitivity Linux file systems are case-sensitive: two files can differ only by case, and the exact case must be used when opening a file. File systems in modern Windows are case-insensitive but case-preserving: although existing files can be opened using any case, the exact case used to create the file is preserved and available for programs to query. It is not allowed for two files in the same directory to differ only by case. Usually file systems on macOS are case-insensitive. It is possible to make macOS file systems case-sensitive but that is not the default The “–vfs-case-insensitive” mount flag controls how rclone handles these two cases. If its value is “false”, rclone passes file names to the mounted file system as-is. If the flag is “true” (or appears without a value on command line), rclone may perform a “fixup” as explained below. The user may specify a file name to open/delete/rename/etc with a case different than what is stored on mounted file system. If an argument refers to an existing file with exactly the same name, then the case of the existing file on the disk will be used. However, if a file name with exactly the same name is not found but a name differing only by case exists, rclone will transparently fixup the name. This fixup happens only when an existing file is requested. Case sensitivity of file names created anew by rclone is controlled by an underlying mounted file system. Note that case sensitivity of the operating system running rclone (the target) may differ from case sensitivity of a file system mounted by rclone (the source). The flag controls whether “fixup” is performed to satisfy the target. If the flag is not provided on the command line, then its default value depends on the operating system where rclone runs: “true” on Windows and macOS, “false” otherwise. If the flag is provided without a value, then it is “true”. Auth Proxy If you supply the parameter --auth-proxy /path/to/program then rclone will use that program to generate backends on the fly which then are used to authenticate incoming requests. This uses a simple JSON based protocl with input on STDIN and output on STDOUT. PLEASE NOTE: --auth-proxy and --authorized-keys cannot be used together, if --auth-proxy is set the authorized keys option will be ignored. There is an example program bin/test_proxy.py (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/blob/master/test_proxy.py) in the rclone source code. The program’s job is to take a user and pass on the input and turn those into the config for a backend on STDOUT in JSON format. This config will have any default parameters for the backend added, but it won’t use configuration from environment variables or command line options - it is the job of the proxy program to make a complete config. This config generated must have this extra parameter - _root - root to use for the backend And it may have this parameter - _obscure - comma separated strings for parameters to obscure If password authentication was used by the client, input to the proxy process (on STDIN) would look similar to this: { "user": "me", "pass": "mypassword" } If public-key authentication was used by the client, input to the proxy process (on STDIN) would look similar to this: { "user": "me", "public_key": "AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAABAQDuwESFdAe14hVS6omeyX7edc...JQdf" } And as an example return this on STDOUT { "type": "sftp", "_root": "", "_obscure": "pass", "user": "me", "pass": "mypassword", "host": "sftp.example.com" } This would mean that an SFTP backend would be created on the fly for the user and pass/public_key returned in the output to the host given. Note that since _obscure is set to pass, rclone will obscure the pass parameter before creating the backend (which is required for sftp backends). The program can manipulate the supplied user in any way, for example to make proxy to many different sftp backends, you could make the user be user@example.com and then set the host to example.com in the output and the user to user. For security you’d probably want to restrict the host to a limited list. Note that an internal cache is keyed on user so only use that for configuration, don’t use pass or public_key. This also means that if a user’s password or public-key is changed the cache will need to expire (which takes 5 mins) before it takes effect. This can be used to build general purpose proxies to any kind of backend that rclone supports. rclone serve sftp remote:path [flags] Options --addr string IPaddress:Port or :Port to bind server to. (default "localhost:2022") --auth-proxy string A program to use to create the backend from the auth. --authorized-keys string Authorized keys file (default "~/.ssh/authorized_keys") --dir-cache-time duration Time to cache directory entries for. (default 5m0s) --dir-perms FileMode Directory permissions (default 0777) --file-perms FileMode File permissions (default 0666) --gid uint32 Override the gid field set by the filesystem. (default 1000) -h, --help help for sftp --key stringArray SSH private host key file (Can be multi-valued, leave blank to auto generate) --no-auth Allow connections with no authentication if set. --no-checksum Don't compare checksums on up/download. --no-modtime Don't read/write the modification time (can speed things up). --no-seek Don't allow seeking in files. --pass string Password for authentication. --poll-interval duration Time to wait between polling for changes. Must be smaller than dir-cache-time. Only on supported remotes. Set to 0 to disable. (default 1m0s) --read-only Mount read-only. --uid uint32 Override the uid field set by the filesystem. (default 1000) --umask int Override the permission bits set by the filesystem. (default 2) --user string User name for authentication. --vfs-cache-max-age duration Max age of objects in the cache. (default 1h0m0s) --vfs-cache-max-size SizeSuffix Max total size of objects in the cache. (default off) --vfs-cache-mode CacheMode Cache mode off|minimal|writes|full (default off) --vfs-cache-poll-interval duration Interval to poll the cache for stale objects. (default 1m0s) --vfs-case-insensitive If a file name not found, find a case insensitive match. --vfs-read-ahead SizeSuffix Extra read ahead over --buffer-size when using cache-mode full. --vfs-read-chunk-size SizeSuffix Read the source objects in chunks. (default 128M) --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit SizeSuffix If greater than --vfs-read-chunk-size, double the chunk size after each chunk read, until the limit is reached. 'off' is unlimited. (default off) --vfs-read-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence read before seeking. (default 20ms) --vfs-write-back duration Time to writeback files after last use when using cache. (default 5s) --vfs-write-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence write before giving error. (default 1s) See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone serve (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve/) - Serve a remote over a protocol.
rclone serve webdav
Serve remote:path over webdav. Synopsis rclone serve webdav implements a basic webdav server to serve the remote over HTTP via the webdav protocol. This can be viewed with a webdav client, through a web browser, or you can make a remote of type webdav to read and write it. Webdav options –etag-hash This controls the ETag header. Without this flag the ETag will be based on the ModTime and Size of the object. If this flag is set to “auto” then rclone will choose the first supported hash on the backend or you can use a named hash such as “MD5” or “SHA-1”. Use “rclone hashsum” to see the full list. Server options Use –addr to specify which IP address and port the server should listen on, eg –addr 1.2.3.4:8000 or –addr :8080 to listen to all IPs. By default it only listens on localhost. You can use port :0 to let the OS choose an available port. If you set –addr to listen on a public or LAN accessible IP address then using Authentication is advised - see the next section for info. –server-read-timeout and –server-write-timeout can be used to control the timeouts on the server. Note that this is the total time for a transfer. –max-header-bytes controls the maximum number of bytes the server will accept in the HTTP header. –baseurl controls the URL prefix that rclone serves from. By default rclone will serve from the root. If you used –baseurl “/rclone” then rclone would serve from a URL starting with “/rclone/”. This is useful if you wish to proxy rclone serve. Rclone automatically inserts leading and trailing “/” on –baseurl, so –baseurl “rclone”, –baseurl “/rclone” and –baseurl “/rclone/” are all treated identically. –template allows a user to specify a custom markup template for http and webdav serve functions. The server exports the following markup to be used within the template to server pages: Parameter Description ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── .Name The full path of a file/directory. .Title Directory listing of .Name .Sort The current sort used. This is changeable via ?sort= parameter Sort Options: namedirfist,name,size,time (default namedirfirst) .Order The current ordering used. This is changeable via ?order= parameter Order Options: asc,desc (default asc) .Query Currently unused. .Breadcrumb Allows for creating a relative navigation – .Link The relative to the root link of the Text. – .Text The Name of the directory. .Entries Information about a specific file/directory. – .URL The `url' of an entry. – .Leaf Currently same as `URL' but intended to be `just' the name. – .IsDir Boolean for if an entry is a directory or not. – .Size Size in Bytes of the entry. – .ModTime The UTC timestamp of an entry. Authentication By default this will serve files without needing a login. You can either use an htpasswd file which can take lots of users, or set a single username and password with the –user and –pass flags. Use –htpasswd /path/to/htpasswd to provide an htpasswd file. This is in standard apache format and supports MD5, SHA1 and BCrypt for basic authentication. Bcrypt is recommended. To create an htpasswd file: touch htpasswd htpasswd -B htpasswd user htpasswd -B htpasswd anotherUser The password file can be updated while rclone is running. Use –realm to set the authentication realm. SSL/TLS By default this will serve over http. If you want you can serve over https. You will need to supply the –cert and –key flags. If you wish to do client side certificate validation then you will need to supply –client-ca also. –cert should be either a PEM encoded certificate or a concatenation of that with the CA certificate. –key should be the PEM encoded private key and –client-ca should be the PEM encoded client certificate authority certificate. VFS - Virtual File System This command uses the VFS layer. This adapts the cloud storage objects that rclone uses into something which looks much more like a disk filing system. Cloud storage objects have lots of properties which aren’t like disk files - you can’t extend them or write to the middle of them, so the VFS layer has to deal with that. Because there is no one right way of doing this there are various options explained below. The VFS layer also implements a directory cache - this caches info about files and directories (but not the data) in memory. VFS Directory Cache Using the --dir-cache-time flag, you can control how long a directory should be considered up to date and not refreshed from the backend. Changes made through the mount will appear immediately or invalidate the cache. --dir-cache-time duration Time to cache directory entries for. (default 5m0s) --poll-interval duration Time to wait between polling for changes. However, changes made directly on the cloud storage by the web interface or a different copy of rclone will only be picked up once the directory cache expires if the backend configured does not support polling for changes. If the backend supports polling, changes will be picked up within the polling interval. You can send a SIGHUP signal to rclone for it to flush all directory caches, regardless of how old they are. Assuming only one rclone instance is running, you can reset the cache like this: kill -SIGHUP $(pidof rclone) If you configure rclone with a remote control then you can use rclone rc to flush the whole directory cache: rclone rc vfs/forget Or individual files or directories: rclone rc vfs/forget file=path/to/file dir=path/to/dir VFS File Buffering The --buffer-size flag determines the amount of memory, that will be used to buffer data in advance. Each open file will try to keep the specified amount of data in memory at all times. The buffered data is bound to one open file and won’t be shared. This flag is a upper limit for the used memory per open file. The buffer will only use memory for data that is downloaded but not not yet read. If the buffer is empty, only a small amount of memory will be used. The maximum memory used by rclone for buffering can be up to --buffer-size * open files. VFS File Caching These flags control the VFS file caching options. File caching is necessary to make the VFS layer appear compatible with a normal file system. It can be disabled at the cost of some compatibility. For example you’ll need to enable VFS caching if you want to read and write simultaneously to a file. See below for more details. Note that the VFS cache is separate from the cache backend and you may find that you need one or the other or both. --cache-dir string Directory rclone will use for caching. --vfs-cache-mode CacheMode Cache mode off|minimal|writes|full (default off) --vfs-cache-max-age duration Max age of objects in the cache. (default 1h0m0s) --vfs-cache-max-size SizeSuffix Max total size of objects in the cache. (default off) --vfs-cache-poll-interval duration Interval to poll the cache for stale objects. (default 1m0s) --vfs-write-back duration Time to writeback files after last use when using cache. (default 5s) If run with -vv rclone will print the location of the file cache. The files are stored in the user cache file area which is OS dependent but can be controlled with --cache-dir or setting the appropriate environment variable. The cache has 4 different modes selected by --vfs-cache-mode. The higher the cache mode the more compatible rclone becomes at the cost of using disk space. Note that files are written back to the remote only when they are closed and if they haven’t been accessed for –vfs-write-back second. If rclone is quit or dies with files that haven’t been uploaded, these will be uploaded next time rclone is run with the same flags. If using –vfs-cache-max-size note that the cache may exceed this size for two reasons. Firstly because it is only checked every –vfs-cache-poll-interval. Secondly because open files cannot be evicted from the cache. –vfs-cache-mode off In this mode (the default) the cache will read directly from the remote and write directly to the remote without caching anything on disk. This will mean some operations are not possible • Files can’t be opened for both read AND write • Files opened for write can’t be seeked • Existing files opened for write must have O_TRUNC set • Files open for read with O_TRUNC will be opened write only • Files open for write only will behave as if O_TRUNC was supplied • Open modes O_APPEND, O_TRUNC are ignored • If an upload fails it can’t be retried –vfs-cache-mode minimal This is very similar to “off” except that files opened for read AND write will be buffered to disk. This means that files opened for write will be a lot more compatible, but uses the minimal disk space. These operations are not possible • Files opened for write only can’t be seeked • Existing files opened for write must have O_TRUNC set • Files opened for write only will ignore O_APPEND, O_TRUNC • If an upload fails it can’t be retried –vfs-cache-mode writes In this mode files opened for read only are still read directly from the remote, write only and read/write files are buffered to disk first. This mode should support all normal file system operations. If an upload fails it will be retried at exponentially increasing intervals up to 1 minute. –vfs-cache-mode full In this mode all reads and writes are buffered to and from disk. When data is read from the remote this is buffered to disk as well. In this mode the files in the cache will be sparse files and rclone will keep track of which bits of the files it has dowloaded. So if an application only reads the starts of each file, then rclone will only buffer the start of the file. These files will appear to be their full size in the cache, but they will be sparse files with only the data that has been downloaded present in them. This mode should support all normal file system operations and is otherwise identical to –vfs-cache-mode writes. When reading a file rclone will read –buffer-size plus –vfs-read-ahead bytes ahead. The –buffer-size is buffered in memory whereas the –vfs-read-ahead is buffered on disk. When using this mode it is recommended that –buffer-size is not set too big and –vfs-read- ahead is set large if required. IMPORTANT not all file systems support sparse files. In particular FAT/exFAT do not. Rclone will perform very badly if the cache directory is on a filesystem which doesn’t support sparse files and it will log an ERROR message if one is detected. VFS Performance These flags may be used to enable/disable features of the VFS for performance or other reasons. In particular S3 and Swift benefit hugely from the –no-modtime flag (or use –use-server- modtime for a slightly different effect) as each read of the modification time takes a transaction. --no-checksum Don't compare checksums on up/download. --no-modtime Don't read/write the modification time (can speed things up). --no-seek Don't allow seeking in files. --read-only Mount read-only. When rclone reads files from a remote it reads them in chunks. This means that rather than requesting the whole file rclone reads the chunk specified. This is advantageous because some cloud providers account for reads being all the data requested, not all the data delivered. Rclone will keep doubling the chunk size requested starting at –vfs-read-chunk-size with a maximum of –vfs-read-chunk-size-limit unless it is set to “off” in which case there will be no limit. --vfs-read-chunk-size SizeSuffix Read the source objects in chunks. (default 128M) --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit SizeSuffix Max chunk doubling size (default "off") Sometimes rclone is delivered reads or writes out of order. Rather than seeking rclone will wait a short time for the in sequence read or write to come in. These flags only come into effect when not using an on disk cache file. --vfs-read-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence read before seeking. (default 20ms) --vfs-write-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence write before giving error. (default 1s) VFS Case Sensitivity Linux file systems are case-sensitive: two files can differ only by case, and the exact case must be used when opening a file. File systems in modern Windows are case-insensitive but case-preserving: although existing files can be opened using any case, the exact case used to create the file is preserved and available for programs to query. It is not allowed for two files in the same directory to differ only by case. Usually file systems on macOS are case-insensitive. It is possible to make macOS file systems case-sensitive but that is not the default The “–vfs-case-insensitive” mount flag controls how rclone handles these two cases. If its value is “false”, rclone passes file names to the mounted file system as-is. If the flag is “true” (or appears without a value on command line), rclone may perform a “fixup” as explained below. The user may specify a file name to open/delete/rename/etc with a case different than what is stored on mounted file system. If an argument refers to an existing file with exactly the same name, then the case of the existing file on the disk will be used. However, if a file name with exactly the same name is not found but a name differing only by case exists, rclone will transparently fixup the name. This fixup happens only when an existing file is requested. Case sensitivity of file names created anew by rclone is controlled by an underlying mounted file system. Note that case sensitivity of the operating system running rclone (the target) may differ from case sensitivity of a file system mounted by rclone (the source). The flag controls whether “fixup” is performed to satisfy the target. If the flag is not provided on the command line, then its default value depends on the operating system where rclone runs: “true” on Windows and macOS, “false” otherwise. If the flag is provided without a value, then it is “true”. Auth Proxy If you supply the parameter --auth-proxy /path/to/program then rclone will use that program to generate backends on the fly which then are used to authenticate incoming requests. This uses a simple JSON based protocl with input on STDIN and output on STDOUT. PLEASE NOTE: --auth-proxy and --authorized-keys cannot be used together, if --auth-proxy is set the authorized keys option will be ignored. There is an example program bin/test_proxy.py (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/blob/master/test_proxy.py) in the rclone source code. The program’s job is to take a user and pass on the input and turn those into the config for a backend on STDOUT in JSON format. This config will have any default parameters for the backend added, but it won’t use configuration from environment variables or command line options - it is the job of the proxy program to make a complete config. This config generated must have this extra parameter - _root - root to use for the backend And it may have this parameter - _obscure - comma separated strings for parameters to obscure If password authentication was used by the client, input to the proxy process (on STDIN) would look similar to this: { "user": "me", "pass": "mypassword" } If public-key authentication was used by the client, input to the proxy process (on STDIN) would look similar to this: { "user": "me", "public_key": "AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAABAQDuwESFdAe14hVS6omeyX7edc...JQdf" } And as an example return this on STDOUT { "type": "sftp", "_root": "", "_obscure": "pass", "user": "me", "pass": "mypassword", "host": "sftp.example.com" } This would mean that an SFTP backend would be created on the fly for the user and pass/public_key returned in the output to the host given. Note that since _obscure is set to pass, rclone will obscure the pass parameter before creating the backend (which is required for sftp backends). The program can manipulate the supplied user in any way, for example to make proxy to many different sftp backends, you could make the user be user@example.com and then set the host to example.com in the output and the user to user. For security you’d probably want to restrict the host to a limited list. Note that an internal cache is keyed on user so only use that for configuration, don’t use pass or public_key. This also means that if a user’s password or public-key is changed the cache will need to expire (which takes 5 mins) before it takes effect. This can be used to build general purpose proxies to any kind of backend that rclone supports. rclone serve webdav remote:path [flags] Options --addr string IPaddress:Port or :Port to bind server to. (default "localhost:8080") --auth-proxy string A program to use to create the backend from the auth. --baseurl string Prefix for URLs - leave blank for root. --cert string SSL PEM key (concatenation of certificate and CA certificate) --client-ca string Client certificate authority to verify clients with --dir-cache-time duration Time to cache directory entries for. (default 5m0s) --dir-perms FileMode Directory permissions (default 0777) --disable-dir-list Disable HTML directory list on GET request for a directory --etag-hash string Which hash to use for the ETag, or auto or blank for off --file-perms FileMode File permissions (default 0666) --gid uint32 Override the gid field set by the filesystem. (default 1000) -h, --help help for webdav --htpasswd string htpasswd file - if not provided no authentication is done --key string SSL PEM Private key --max-header-bytes int Maximum size of request header (default 4096) --no-checksum Don't compare checksums on up/download. --no-modtime Don't read/write the modification time (can speed things up). --no-seek Don't allow seeking in files. --pass string Password for authentication. --poll-interval duration Time to wait between polling for changes. Must be smaller than dir-cache-time. Only on supported remotes. Set to 0 to disable. (default 1m0s) --read-only Mount read-only. --realm string realm for authentication (default "rclone") --server-read-timeout duration Timeout for server reading data (default 1h0m0s) --server-write-timeout duration Timeout for server writing data (default 1h0m0s) --template string User Specified Template. --uid uint32 Override the uid field set by the filesystem. (default 1000) --umask int Override the permission bits set by the filesystem. (default 2) --user string User name for authentication. --vfs-cache-max-age duration Max age of objects in the cache. (default 1h0m0s) --vfs-cache-max-size SizeSuffix Max total size of objects in the cache. (default off) --vfs-cache-mode CacheMode Cache mode off|minimal|writes|full (default off) --vfs-cache-poll-interval duration Interval to poll the cache for stale objects. (default 1m0s) --vfs-case-insensitive If a file name not found, find a case insensitive match. --vfs-read-ahead SizeSuffix Extra read ahead over --buffer-size when using cache-mode full. --vfs-read-chunk-size SizeSuffix Read the source objects in chunks. (default 128M) --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit SizeSuffix If greater than --vfs-read-chunk-size, double the chunk size after each chunk read, until the limit is reached. 'off' is unlimited. (default off) --vfs-read-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence read before seeking. (default 20ms) --vfs-write-back duration Time to writeback files after last use when using cache. (default 5s) --vfs-write-wait duration Time to wait for in-sequence write before giving error. (default 1s) See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone serve (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_serve/) - Serve a remote over a protocol.
rclone settier
Changes storage class/tier of objects in remote. Synopsis rclone settier changes storage tier or class at remote if supported. Few cloud storage services provides different storage classes on objects, for example AWS S3 and Glacier, Azure Blob storage - Hot, Cool and Archive, Google Cloud Storage, Regional Storage, Nearline, Coldline etc. Note that, certain tier changes make objects not available to access immediately. For example tiering to archive in azure blob storage makes objects in frozen state, user can restore by setting tier to Hot/Cool, similarly S3 to Glacier makes object inaccessible.true You can use it to tier single object rclone settier Cool remote:path/file Or use rclone filters to set tier on only specific files rclone --include "*.txt" settier Hot remote:path/dir Or just provide remote directory and all files in directory will be tiered rclone settier tier remote:path/dir rclone settier tier remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for settier See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone touch
Create new file or change file modification time. Synopsis Set the modification time on object(s) as specified by remote:path to have the current time. If remote:path does not exist then a zero sized object will be created unless the –no- create flag is provided. If –timestamp is used then it will set the modification time to that time instead of the current time. Times may be specified as one of: • `YYMMDD' - eg. 17.10.30 • `YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS' - eg. 2006-01-02T15:04:05 • `YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS.SSS' - eg. 2006-01-02T15:04:05.123456789 Note that –timestamp is in UTC if you want local time then add the –localtime flag. rclone touch remote:path [flags] Options -h, --help help for touch --localtime Use localtime for timestamp, not UTC. -C, --no-create Do not create the file if it does not exist. -t, --timestamp string Use specified time instead of the current time of day. See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
rclone tree
List the contents of the remote in a tree like fashion. Synopsis rclone tree lists the contents of a remote in a similar way to the unix tree command. For example $ rclone tree remote:path / ├── file1 ├── file2 ├── file3 └── subdir ├── file4 └── file5 1 directories, 5 files You can use any of the filtering options with the tree command (eg –include and –exclude). You can also use –fast-list. The tree command has many options for controlling the listing which are compatible with the tree command. Note that not all of them have short options as they conflict with rclone’s short options. rclone tree remote:path [flags] Options -a, --all All files are listed (list . files too). -C, --color Turn colorization on always. -d, --dirs-only List directories only. --dirsfirst List directories before files (-U disables). --full-path Print the full path prefix for each file. -h, --help help for tree --human Print the size in a more human readable way. --level int Descend only level directories deep. -D, --modtime Print the date of last modification. --noindent Don't print indentation lines. --noreport Turn off file/directory count at end of tree listing. -o, --output string Output to file instead of stdout. -p, --protections Print the protections for each file. -Q, --quote Quote filenames with double quotes. -s, --size Print the size in bytes of each file. --sort string Select sort: name,version,size,mtime,ctime. --sort-ctime Sort files by last status change time. -t, --sort-modtime Sort files by last modification time. -r, --sort-reverse Reverse the order of the sort. -U, --unsorted Leave files unsorted. --version Sort files alphanumerically by version. See the global flags page (https://rclone.org/flags/) for global options not listed here. SEE ALSO • rclone (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone/) - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends. Copying single files rclone normally syncs or copies directories. However, if the source remote points to a file, rclone will just copy that file. The destination remote must point to a directory - rclone will give the error Failed to create file system for "remote:file": is a file not a directory if it isn’t. For example, suppose you have a remote with a file in called test.jpg, then you could copy just that file like this rclone copy remote:test.jpg /tmp/download The file test.jpg will be placed inside /tmp/download. This is equivalent to specifying rclone copy --files-from /tmp/files remote: /tmp/download Where /tmp/files contains the single line test.jpg It is recommended to use copy when copying individual files, not sync. They have pretty much the same effect but copy will use a lot less memory. Syntax of remote paths The syntax of the paths passed to the rclone command are as follows. /path/to/dir This refers to the local file system. On Windows only \ may be used instead of / in local paths only, non local paths must use /. These paths needn’t start with a leading / - if they don’t then they will be relative to the current directory. remote:path/to/dir This refers to a directory path/to/dir on remote: as defined in the config file (configured with rclone config). remote:/path/to/dir On most backends this is refers to the same directory as remote:path/to/dir and that format should be preferred. On a very small number of remotes (FTP, SFTP, Dropbox for business) this will refer to a different directory. On these, paths without a leading / will refer to your “home” directory and paths with a leading / will refer to the root. :backend:path/to/dir This is an advanced form for creating remotes on the fly. backend should be the name or prefix of a backend (the type in the config file) and all the configuration for the backend should be provided on the command line (or in environment variables). Here are some examples: rclone lsd --http-url https://pub.rclone.org :http: To list all the directories in the root of https://pub.rclone.org/. rclone lsf --http-url https://example.com :http:path/to/dir To list files and directories in https://example.com/path/to/dir/ rclone copy --http-url https://example.com :http:path/to/dir /tmp/dir To copy files and directories in https://example.com/path/to/dir to /tmp/dir. rclone copy --sftp-host example.com :sftp:path/to/dir /tmp/dir To copy files and directories from example.com in the relative directory path/to/dir to /tmp/dir using sftp. Valid remote names • Remote names may only contain 0-9, A-Z ,a-z ,_ , - and space. • Remote names may not start with -. Quoting and the shell When you are typing commands to your computer you are using something called the command line shell. This interprets various characters in an OS specific way. Here are some gotchas which may help users unfamiliar with the shell rules Linux / OSX If your names have spaces or shell metacharacters (eg *, ?, $, ', " etc) then you must quote them. Use single quotes ' by default. rclone copy 'Important files?' remote:backup If you want to send a ' you will need to use ", eg rclone copy "O'Reilly Reviews" remote:backup The rules for quoting metacharacters are complicated and if you want the full details you’ll have to consult the manual page for your shell. Windows If your names have spaces in you need to put them in ", eg rclone copy "E:\folder name\folder name\folder name" remote:backup If you are using the root directory on its own then don’t quote it (see #464 (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/464) for why), eg rclone copy E:\ remote:backup Copying files or directories with : in the names rclone uses : to mark a remote name. This is, however, a valid filename component in non- Windows OSes. The remote name parser will only search for a : up to the first / so if you need to act on a file or directory like this then use the full path starting with a /, or use ./ as a current directory prefix. So to sync a directory called sync:me to a remote called remote: use rclone sync -i ./sync:me remote:path or rclone sync -i /full/path/to/sync:me remote:path Server Side Copy Most remotes (but not all - see the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#optional- features)) support server side copy. This means if you want to copy one folder to another then rclone won’t download all the files and re-upload them; it will instruct the server to copy them in place. Eg rclone copy s3:oldbucket s3:newbucket Will copy the contents of oldbucket to newbucket without downloading and re-uploading. Remotes which don’t support server side copy will download and re-upload in this case. Server side copies are used with sync and copy and will be identified in the log when using the -v flag. The move command may also use them if remote doesn’t support server side move directly. This is done by issuing a server side copy then a delete which is much quicker than a download and re-upload. Server side copies will only be attempted if the remote names are the same. This can be used when scripting to make aged backups efficiently, eg rclone sync -i remote:current-backup remote:previous-backup rclone sync -i /path/to/files remote:current-backup Options Rclone has a number of options to control its behaviour. Options that take parameters can have the values passed in two ways, --option=value or --option value. However boolean (true/false) options behave slightly differently to the other options in that --boolean sets the option to true and the absence of the flag sets it to false. It is also possible to specify --boolean=false or --boolean=true. Note that --boolean false is not valid - this is parsed as --boolean and the false is parsed as an extra command line argument for rclone. Options which use TIME use the go time parser. A duration string is a possibly signed sequence of decimal numbers, each with optional fraction and a unit suffix, such as “300ms”, “-1.5h” or “2h45m”. Valid time units are “ns”, “us” (or “µs”), “ms”, “s”, “m”, “h”. Options which use SIZE use kByte by default. However, a suffix of b for bytes, k for kBytes, M for MBytes, G for GBytes, T for TBytes and P for PBytes may be used. These are the binary units, eg 1, 2**10, 2**20, 2**30 respectively. –backup-dir=DIR When using sync, copy or move any files which would have been overwritten or deleted are moved in their original hierarchy into this directory. If --suffix is set, then the moved files will have the suffix added to them. If there is a file with the same path (after the suffix has been added) in DIR, then it will be overwritten. The remote in use must support server side move or copy and you must use the same remote as the destination of the sync. The backup directory must not overlap the destination directory. For example rclone sync -i /path/to/local remote:current --backup-dir remote:old will sync /path/to/local to remote:current, but for any files which would have been updated or deleted will be stored in remote:old. If running rclone from a script you might want to use today’s date as the directory name passed to --backup-dir to store the old files, or you might want to pass --suffix with today’s date. See --compare-dest and --copy-dest. –bind string Local address to bind to for outgoing connections. This can be an IPv4 address (1.2.3.4), an IPv6 address (1234::789A) or host name. If the host name doesn’t resolve or resolves to more than one IP address it will give an error. –bwlimit=BANDWIDTH_SPEC This option controls the bandwidth limit. Limits can be specified in two ways: As a single limit, or as a timetable. Single limits last for the duration of the session. To use a single limit, specify the desired bandwidth in kBytes/s, or use a suffix b|k|M|G. The default is 0 which means to not limit bandwidth. For example, to limit bandwidth usage to 10 MBytes/s use --bwlimit 10M It is also possible to specify a “timetable” of limits, which will cause certain limits to be applied at certain times. To specify a timetable, format your entries as WEEKDAY- HH:MM,BANDWIDTH WEEKDAY-HH:MM,BANDWIDTH... where: WEEKDAY is optional element. It could be written as whole world or only using 3 first characters. HH:MM is an hour from 00:00 to 23:59. An example of a typical timetable to avoid link saturation during daytime working hours could be: --bwlimit "08:00,512 12:00,10M 13:00,512 18:00,30M 23:00,off" In this example, the transfer bandwidth will be every day set to 512kBytes/sec at 8am. At noon, it will raise to 10Mbytes/s, and drop back to 512kBytes/sec at 1pm. At 6pm, the bandwidth limit will be set to 30MBytes/s, and at 11pm it will be completely disabled (full speed). Anything between 11pm and 8am will remain unlimited. An example of timetable with WEEKDAY could be: --bwlimit "Mon-00:00,512 Fri-23:59,10M Sat-10:00,1M Sun-20:00,off" It mean that, the transfer bandwidth will be set to 512kBytes/sec on Monday. It will raise to 10Mbytes/s before the end of Friday. At 10:00 on Sunday it will be set to 1Mbyte/s. From 20:00 at Sunday will be unlimited. Timeslots without weekday are extended to whole week. So this one example: --bwlimit "Mon-00:00,512 12:00,1M Sun-20:00,off" Is equal to this: --bwlimit "Mon-00:00,512Mon-12:00,1M Tue-12:00,1M Wed-12:00,1M Thu-12:00,1M Fri-12:00,1M Sat-12:00,1M Sun-12:00,1M Sun-20:00,off" Bandwidth limits only apply to the data transfer. They don’t apply to the bandwidth of the directory listings etc. Note that the units are Bytes/s, not Bits/s. Typically connections are measured in Bits/s - to convert divide by 8. For example, let’s say you have a 10 Mbit/s connection and you wish rclone to use half of it - 5 Mbit/s. This is 5/8 = 0.625MByte/s so you would use a --bwlimit 0.625M parameter for rclone. On Unix systems (Linux, macOS, ...) the bandwidth limiter can be toggled by sending a SIGUSR2 signal to rclone. This allows to remove the limitations of a long running rclone transfer and to restore it back to the value specified with --bwlimit quickly when needed. Assuming there is only one rclone instance running, you can toggle the limiter like this: kill -SIGUSR2 $(pidof rclone) If you configure rclone with a remote control then you can use change the bwlimit dynamically: rclone rc core/bwlimit rate=1M –bwlimit-file=BANDWIDTH_SPEC This option controls per file bandwidth limit. For the options see the --bwlimit flag. For example use this to allow no transfers to be faster than 1MByte/s --bwlimit-file 1M This can be used in conjunction with --bwlimit. Note that if a schedule is provided the file will use the schedule in effect at the start of the transfer. –buffer-size=SIZE Use this sized buffer to speed up file transfers. Each --transfer will use this much memory for buffering. When using mount or cmount each open file descriptor will use this much memory for buffering. See the mount (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_mount/#file-buffering) documentation for more details. Set to 0 to disable the buffering for the minimum memory usage. Note that the memory allocation of the buffers is influenced by the –use-mmap flag. –check-first If this flag is set then in a sync, copy or move, rclone will do all the checks to see whether files need to be transferred before doing any of the transfers. Normally rclone would start running transfers as soon as possible. This flag can be useful on IO limited systems where transfers interfere with checking. Using this flag can use more memory as it effectively sets --max-backlog to infinite. This means that all the info on the objects to transfer is held in memory before the transfers start. –checkers=N The number of checkers to run in parallel. Checkers do the equality checking of files during a sync. For some storage systems (eg S3, Swift, Dropbox) this can take a significant amount of time so they are run in parallel. The default is to run 8 checkers in parallel. -c, –checksum Normally rclone will look at modification time and size of files to see if they are equal. If you set this flag then rclone will check the file hash and size to determine if files are equal. This is useful when the remote doesn’t support setting modified time and a more accurate sync is desired than just checking the file size. This is very useful when transferring between remotes which store the same hash type on the object, eg Drive and Swift. For details of which remotes support which hash type see the table in the overview section (https://rclone.org/overview/). Eg rclone --checksum sync s3:/bucket swift:/bucket would run much quicker than without the --checksum flag. When using this flag, rclone won’t update mtimes of remote files if they are incorrect as it would normally. –compare-dest=DIR When using sync, copy or move DIR is checked in addition to the destination for files. If a file identical to the source is found that file is NOT copied from source. This is useful to copy just files that have changed since the last backup. You must use the same remote as the destination of the sync. The compare directory must not overlap the destination directory. See --copy-dest and --backup-dir. –config=CONFIG_FILE Specify the location of the rclone config file. Normally the config file is in your home directory as a file called .config/rclone/rclone.conf (or .rclone.conf if created with an older version). If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is set it will be at $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/rclone/rclone.conf. If there is a file rclone.conf in the same directory as the rclone executable it will be preferred. This file must be created manually for Rclone to use it, it will never be created automatically. If you run rclone config file you will see where the default location is for you. Use this flag to override the config location, eg rclone --config=".myconfig" .config. –contimeout=TIME Set the connection timeout. This should be in go time format which looks like 5s for 5 seconds, 10m for 10 minutes, or 3h30m. The connection timeout is the amount of time rclone will wait for a connection to go through to a remote object storage system. It is 1m by default. –copy-dest=DIR When using sync, copy or move DIR is checked in addition to the destination for files. If a file identical to the source is found that file is server side copied from DIR to the destination. This is useful for incremental backup. The remote in use must support server side copy and you must use the same remote as the destination of the sync. The compare directory must not overlap the destination directory. See --compare-dest and --backup-dir. –dedupe-mode MODE Mode to run dedupe command in. One of interactive, skip, first, newest, oldest, rename. The default is interactive. See the dedupe command for more information as to what these options mean. –disable FEATURE,FEATURE,... This disables a comma separated list of optional features. For example to disable server side move and server side copy use: --disable move,copy The features can be put in any case. To see a list of which features can be disabled use: --disable help See the overview features (https://rclone.org/overview/#features) and optional features (https://rclone.org/overview/#optional-features) to get an idea of which feature does what. This flag can be useful for debugging and in exceptional circumstances (eg Google Drive limiting the total volume of Server Side Copies to 100GB/day). -n, –dry-run Do a trial run with no permanent changes. Use this to see what rclone would do without actually doing it. Useful when setting up the sync command which deletes files in the destination. –expect-continue-timeout=TIME This specifies the amount of time to wait for a server’s first response headers after fully writing the request headers if the request has an “Expect: 100-continue” header. Not all backends support using this. Zero means no timeout and causes the body to be sent immediately, without waiting for the server to approve. This time does not include the time to send the request header. The default is 1s. Set to 0 to disable. –error-on-no-transfer By default, rclone will exit with return code 0 if there were no errors. This option allows rclone to return exit code 9 if no files were transferred between the source and destination. This allows using rclone in scripts, and triggering follow-on actions if data was copied, or skipping if not. NB: Enabling this option turns a usually non-fatal error into a potentially fatal one - please check and adjust your scripts accordingly! –header Add an HTTP header for all transactions. The flag can be repeated to add multiple headers. If you want to add headers only for uploads use --header-upload and if you want to add headers only for downloads use --header-download. This flag is supported for all HTTP based backends even those not supported by --header- upload and --header-download so may be used as a workaround for those with care. rclone ls remote:test --header "X-Rclone: Foo" --header "X-LetMeIn: Yes" –header-download Add an HTTP header for all download transactions. The flag can be repeated to add multiple headers. rclone sync -i s3:test/src ~/dst --header-download "X-Amz-Meta-Test: Foo" --header-download "X-Amz-Meta-Test2: Bar" See the GitHub issue here (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/59) for currently supported backends. –header-upload Add an HTTP header for all upload transactions. The flag can be repeated to add multiple headers. rclone sync -i ~/src s3:test/dst --header-upload "Content-Disposition: attachment; filename='cool.html'" --header-upload "X-Amz-Meta-Test: FooBar" See the GitHub issue here (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/59) for currently supported backends. –ignore-case-sync Using this option will cause rclone to ignore the case of the files when synchronizing so files will not be copied/synced when the existing filenames are the same, even if the casing is different. –ignore-checksum Normally rclone will check that the checksums of transferred files match, and give an error “corrupted on transfer” if they don’t. You can use this option to skip that check. You should only use it if you have had the “corrupted on transfer” error message and you are sure you might want to transfer potentially corrupted data. –ignore-existing Using this option will make rclone unconditionally skip all files that exist on the destination, no matter the content of these files. While this isn’t a generally recommended option, it can be useful in cases where your files change due to encryption. However, it cannot correct partial transfers in case a transfer was interrupted. –ignore-size Normally rclone will look at modification time and size of files to see if they are equal. If you set this flag then rclone will check only the modification time. If --checksum is set then it only checks the checksum. It will also cause rclone to skip verifying the sizes are the same after transfer. This can be useful for transferring files to and from OneDrive which occasionally misreports the size of image files (see #399 (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/399) for more info). -I, –ignore-times Using this option will cause rclone to unconditionally upload all files regardless of the state of files on the destination. Normally rclone would skip any files that have the same modification time and are the same size (or have the same checksum if using --checksum). –immutable Treat source and destination files as immutable and disallow modification. With this option set, files will be created and deleted as requested, but existing files will never be updated. If an existing file does not match between the source and destination, rclone will give the error Source and destination exist but do not match: immutable file modified. Note that only commands which transfer files (e.g. sync, copy, move) are affected by this behavior, and only modification is disallowed. Files may still be deleted explicitly (e.g. delete, purge) or implicitly (e.g. sync, move). Use copy --immutable if it is desired to avoid deletion as well as modification. This can be useful as an additional layer of protection for immutable or append-only data sets (notably backup archives), where modification implies corruption and should not be propagated. -i / –interactive This flag can be used to tell rclone that you wish a manual confirmation before destructive operations. It is recommended that you use this flag while learning rclone especially with rclone sync. For example $ rclone delete -i /tmp/dir rclone: delete "important-file.txt"? y) Yes, this is OK (default) n) No, skip this s) Skip all delete operations with no more questions !) Do all delete operations with no more questions q) Exit rclone now. y/n/s/!/q> n The options mean • y: Yes, this operation should go ahead. You can also press Return for this to happen. You’ll be asked every time unless you choose s or !. • n: No, do not do this operation. You’ll be asked every time unless you choose s or !. • s: Skip all the following operations of this type with no more questions. This takes effect until rclone exits. If there are any different kind of operations you’ll be prompted for them. • !: Do all the following operations with no more questions. Useful if you’ve decided that you don’t mind rclone doing that kind of operation. This takes effect until rclone exits . If there are any different kind of operations you’ll be prompted for them. • q: Quit rclone now, just in case! –leave-root During rmdirs it will not remove root directory, even if it’s empty. –log-file=FILE Log all of rclone’s output to FILE. This is not active by default. This can be useful for tracking down problems with syncs in combination with the -v flag. See the Logging section for more info. If FILE exists then rclone will append to it. Note that if you are using the logrotate program to manage rclone’s logs, then you should use the copytruncate option as rclone doesn’t have a signal to rotate logs. –log-format LIST Comma separated list of log format options. date, time, microseconds, longfile, shortfile, UTC. The default is “date,time”. –log-level LEVEL This sets the log level for rclone. The default log level is NOTICE. DEBUG is equivalent to -vv. It outputs lots of debug info - useful for bug reports and really finding out what rclone is doing. INFO is equivalent to -v. It outputs information about each transfer and prints stats once a minute by default. NOTICE is the default log level if no logging flags are supplied. It outputs very little when things are working normally. It outputs warnings and significant events. ERROR is equivalent to -q. It only outputs error messages. –use-json-log This switches the log format to JSON for rclone. The fields of json log are level, msg, source, time. –low-level-retries NUMBER This controls the number of low level retries rclone does. A low level retry is used to retry a failing operation - typically one HTTP request. This might be uploading a chunk of a big file for example. You will see low level retries in the log with the -v flag. This shouldn’t need to be changed from the default in normal operations. However, if you get a lot of low level retries you may wish to reduce the value so rclone moves on to a high level retry (see the --retries flag) quicker. Disable low level retries with --low-level-retries 1. –max-backlog=N This is the maximum allowable backlog of files in a sync/copy/move queued for being checked or transferred. This can be set arbitrarily large. It will only use memory when the queue is in use. Note that it will use in the order of N kB of memory when the backlog is in use. Setting this large allows rclone to calculate how many files are pending more accurately, give a more accurate estimated finish time and make --order-by work more accurately. Setting this small will make rclone more synchronous to the listings of the remote which may be desirable. Setting this to a negative number will make the backlog as large as possible. –max-delete=N This tells rclone not to delete more than N files. If that limit is exceeded then a fatal error will be generated and rclone will stop the operation in progress. –max-depth=N This modifies the recursion depth for all the commands except purge. So if you do rclone --max-depth 1 ls remote:path you will see only the files in the top level directory. Using --max-depth 2 means you will see all the files in first two directory levels and so on. For historical reasons the lsd command defaults to using a --max-depth of 1 - you can override this with the command line flag. You can use this command to disable recursion (with --max-depth 1). Note that if you use this with sync and --delete-excluded the files not recursed through are considered excluded and will be deleted on the destination. Test first with --dry-run if you are not sure what will happen. –max-duration=TIME Rclone will stop scheduling new transfers when it has run for the duration specified. Defaults to off. When the limit is reached any existing transfers will complete. Rclone won’t exit with an error if the transfer limit is reached. –max-transfer=SIZE Rclone will stop transferring when it has reached the size specified. Defaults to off. When the limit is reached all transfers will stop immediately. Rclone will exit with exit code 8 if the transfer limit is reached. –cutoff-mode=hard|soft|cautious This modifies the behavior of --max-transfer Defaults to --cutoff-mode=hard. Specifying --cutoff-mode=hard will stop transferring immediately when Rclone reaches the limit. Specifying --cutoff-mode=soft will stop starting new transfers when Rclone reaches the limit. Specifying --cutoff-mode=cautious will try to prevent Rclone from reaching the limit. –modify-window=TIME When checking whether a file has been modified, this is the maximum allowed time difference that a file can have and still be considered equivalent. The default is 1ns unless this is overridden by a remote. For example OS X only stores modification times to the nearest second so if you are reading and writing to an OS X filing system this will be 1s by default. This command line flag allows you to override that computed default. –multi-thread-cutoff=SIZE When downloading files to the local backend above this size, rclone will use multiple threads to download the file (default 250M). Rclone preallocates the file (using fallocate(FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE) on unix or NTSetInformationFile on Windows both of which takes no time) then each thread writes directly into the file at the correct place. This means that rclone won’t create fragmented or sparse files and there won’t be any assembly time at the end of the transfer. The number of threads used to download is controlled by --multi-thread-streams. Use -vv if you wish to see info about the threads. This will work with the sync/copy/move commands and friends copyto/moveto. Multi thread downloads will be used with rclone mount and rclone serve if --vfs-cache-mode is set to writes or above. NB that this only works for a local destination but will work with any source. NB that multi thread copies are disabled for local to local copies as they are faster without unless --multi-thread-streams is set explicitly. NB on Windows using multi-thread downloads will cause the resulting files to be sparse (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sparse_file). Use --local-no-sparse to disable sparse files (which may cause long delays at the start of downloads) or disable multi-thread downloads with --multi-thread-streams 0 –multi-thread-streams=N When using multi thread downloads (see above --multi-thread-cutoff) this sets the maximum number of streams to use. Set to 0 to disable multi thread downloads (Default 4). Exactly how many streams rclone uses for the download depends on the size of the file. To calculate the number of download streams Rclone divides the size of the file by the --multi-thread-cutoff and rounds up, up to the maximum set with --multi-thread-streams. So if --multi-thread-cutoff 250MB and --multi-thread-streams 4 are in effect (the defaults): • 0MB..250MB files will be downloaded with 1 stream • 250MB..500MB files will be downloaded with 2 streams • 500MB..750MB files will be downloaded with 3 streams • 750MB+ files will be downloaded with 4 streams –no-check-dest The --no-check-dest can be used with move or copy and it causes rclone not to check the destination at all when copying files. This means that: • the destination is not listed minimising the API calls • files are always transferred • this can cause duplicates on remotes which allow it (eg Google Drive) • --retries 1 is recommended otherwise you’ll transfer everything again on a retry This flag is useful to minimise the transactions if you know that none of the files are on the destination. This is a specialized flag which should be ignored by most users! –no-gzip-encoding Don’t set Accept-Encoding: gzip. This means that rclone won’t ask the server for compressed files automatically. Useful if you’ve set the server to return files with Content-Encoding: gzip but you uploaded compressed files. There is no need to set this in normal operation, and doing so will decrease the network transfer efficiency of rclone. –no-traverse The --no-traverse flag controls whether the destination file system is traversed when using the copy or move commands. --no-traverse is not compatible with sync and will be ignored if you supply it with sync. If you are only copying a small number of files (or are filtering most of the files) and/or have a large number of files on the destination then --no-traverse will stop rclone listing the destination and save time. However, if you are copying a large number of files, especially if you are doing a copy where lots of the files under consideration haven’t changed and won’t need copying then you shouldn’t use --no-traverse. See rclone copy (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_copy/) for an example of how to use it. –no-unicode-normalization Don’t normalize unicode characters in filenames during the sync routine. Sometimes, an operating system will store filenames containing unicode parts in their decomposed form (particularly macOS). Some cloud storage systems will then recompose the unicode, resulting in duplicate files if the data is ever copied back to a local filesystem. Using this flag will disable that functionality, treating each unicode character as unique. For example, by default é and é will be normalized into the same character. With --no-unicode-normalization they will be treated as unique characters. –no-update-modtime When using this flag, rclone won’t update modification times of remote files if they are incorrect as it would normally. This can be used if the remote is being synced with another tool also (eg the Google Drive client). –order-by string The --order-by flag controls the order in which files in the backlog are processed in rclone sync, rclone copy and rclone move. The order by string is constructed like this. The first part describes what aspect is being measured: • size - order by the size of the files • name - order by the full path of the files • modtime - order by the modification date of the files This can have a modifier appended with a comma: • ascending or asc - order so that the smallest (or oldest) is processed first • descending or desc - order so that the largest (or newest) is processed first • mixed - order so that the smallest is processed first for some threads and the largest for others If the modifier is mixed then it can have an optional percentage (which defaults to 50), eg size,mixed,25 which means that 25% of the threads should be taking the smallest items and 75% the largest. The threads which take the smallest first will always take the smallest first and likewise the largest first threads. The mixed mode can be useful to minimise the transfer time when you are transferring a mixture of large and small files - the large files are guaranteed upload threads and bandwidth and the small files will be processed continuously. If no modifier is supplied then the order is ascending. For example • --order-by size,desc - send the largest files first • --order-by modtime,ascending - send the oldest files first • --order-by name - send the files with alphabetically by path first If the --order-by flag is not supplied or it is supplied with an empty string then the default ordering will be used which is as scanned. With --checkers 1 this is mostly alphabetical, however with the default --checkers 8 it is somewhat random. Limitations The --order-by flag does not do a separate pass over the data. This means that it may transfer some files out of the order specified if • there are no files in the backlog or the source has not been fully scanned yet • there are more than –max-backlog files in the backlog Rclone will do its best to transfer the best file it has so in practice this should not cause a problem. Think of --order-by as being more of a best efforts flag rather than a perfect ordering. –password-command SpaceSepList This flag supplies a program which should supply the config password when run. This is an alternative to rclone prompting for the password or setting the RCLONE_CONFIG_PASS variable. The argument to this should be a command with a space separated list of arguments. If one of the arguments has a space in then enclose it in ", if you want a literal " in an argument then enclose the argument in " and double the ". See CSV encoding (https://godoc.org/encoding/csv) for more info. Eg --password-command echo hello --password-command echo "hello with space" --password-command echo "hello with ""quotes"" and space" See the Configuration Encryption for more info. See a Windows PowerShell example on the Wiki (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/wiki/Windows-Powershell-use-rclone-password-command-for- Config-file-password). -P, –progress This flag makes rclone update the stats in a static block in the terminal providing a realtime overview of the transfer. Any log messages will scroll above the static block. Log messages will push the static block down to the bottom of the terminal where it will stay. Normally this is updated every 500mS but this period can be overridden with the --stats flag. This can be used with the --stats-one-line flag for a simpler display. Note: On Windows until this bug (https://github.com/Azure/go-ansiterm/issues/26) is fixed all non-ASCII characters will be replaced with . when --progress is in use. -q, –quiet This flag will limit rclone’s output to error messages only. –refresh-times The --refresh-times flag can be used to update modification times of existing files when they are out of sync on backends which don’t support hashes. This is useful if you uploaded files with the incorrect timestamps and you now wish to correct them. This flag is only useful for destinations which don’t support hashes (eg crypt). This can be used any of the sync commands sync, copy or move. To use this flag you will need to be doing a modification time sync (so not using --size- only or --checksum). The flag will have no effect when using --size-only or --checksum. If this flag is used when rclone comes to upload a file it will check to see if there is an existing file on the destination. If this file matches the source with size (and checksum if available) but has a differing timestamp then instead of re-uploading it, rclone will update the timestamp on the destination file. If the checksum does not match rclone will upload the new file. If the checksum is absent (eg on a crypt backend) then rclone will update the timestamp. Note that some remotes can’t set the modification time without re-uploading the file so this flag is less useful on them. Normally if you are doing a modification time sync rclone will update modification times without --refresh-times provided that the remote supports checksums and the checksums match on the file. However if the checksums are absent then rclone will upload the file rather than setting the timestamp as this is the safe behaviour. –retries int Retry the entire sync if it fails this many times it fails (default 3). Some remotes can be unreliable and a few retries help pick up the files which didn’t get transferred because of errors. Disable retries with --retries 1. –retries-sleep=TIME This sets the interval between each retry specified by --retries The default is 0. Use 0 to disable. –size-only Normally rclone will look at modification time and size of files to see if they are equal. If you set this flag then rclone will check only the size. This can be useful transferring files from Dropbox which have been modified by the desktop sync client which doesn’t set checksums of modification times in the same way as rclone. –stats=TIME Commands which transfer data (sync, copy, copyto, move, moveto) will print data transfer stats at regular intervals to show their progress. This sets the interval. The default is 1m. Use 0 to disable. If you set the stats interval then all commands can show stats. This can be useful when running other commands, check or mount for example. Stats are logged at INFO level by default which means they won’t show at default log level NOTICE. Use --stats-log-level NOTICE or -v to make them show. See the Logging section for more info on log levels. Note that on macOS you can send a SIGINFO (which is normally ctrl-T in the terminal) to make the stats print immediately. –stats-file-name-length integer By default, the --stats output will truncate file names and paths longer than 40 characters. This is equivalent to providing --stats-file-name-length 40. Use --stats- file-name-length 0 to disable any truncation of file names printed by stats. –stats-log-level string Log level to show --stats output at. This can be DEBUG, INFO, NOTICE, or ERROR. The default is INFO. This means at the default level of logging which is NOTICE the stats won’t show - if you want them to then use --stats-log-level NOTICE. See the Logging section for more info on log levels. –stats-one-line When this is specified, rclone condenses the stats into a single line showing the most important stats only. –stats-one-line-date When this is specified, rclone enables the single-line stats and prepends the display with a date string. The default is 2006/01/02 15:04:05 - –stats-one-line-date-format When this is specified, rclone enables the single-line stats and prepends the display with a user-supplied date string. The date string MUST be enclosed in quotes. Follow golang specs (https://golang.org/pkg/time/#Time.Format) for date formatting syntax. –stats-unit=bits|bytes By default, data transfer rates will be printed in bytes/second. This option allows the data rate to be printed in bits/second. Data transfer volume will still be reported in bytes. The rate is reported as a binary unit, not SI unit. So 1 Mbit/s equals 1,048,576 bits/s and not 1,000,000 bits/s. The default is bytes. –suffix=SUFFIX When using sync, copy or move any files which would have been overwritten or deleted will have the suffix added to them. If there is a file with the same path (after the suffix has been added), then it will be overwritten. The remote in use must support server side move or copy and you must use the same remote as the destination of the sync. This is for use with files to add the suffix in the current directory or with --backup- dir. See --backup-dir for more info. For example rclone copy -i /path/to/local/file remote:current --suffix .bak will copy /path/to/local to remote:current, but for any files which would have been updated or deleted have .bak added. If using rclone sync with --suffix and without --backup-dir then it is recommended to put a filter rule in excluding the suffix otherwise the sync will delete the backup files. rclone sync -i /path/to/local/file remote:current --suffix .bak --exclude "*.bak" –suffix-keep-extension When using --suffix, setting this causes rclone put the SUFFIX before the extension of the files that it backs up rather than after. So let’s say we had --suffix -2019-01-01, without the flag file.txt would be backed up to file.txt-2019-01-01 and with the flag it would be backed up to file-2019-01-01.txt. This can be helpful to make sure the suffixed files can still be opened. –syslog On capable OSes (not Windows or Plan9) send all log output to syslog. This can be useful for running rclone in a script or rclone mount. –syslog-facility string If using --syslog this sets the syslog facility (eg KERN, USER). See man syslog for a list of possible facilities. The default facility is DAEMON. –tpslimit float Limit HTTP transactions per second to this. Default is 0 which is used to mean unlimited transactions per second. For example to limit rclone to 10 HTTP transactions per second use --tpslimit 10, or to 1 transaction every 2 seconds use --tpslimit 0.5. Use this when the number of transactions per second from rclone is causing a problem with the cloud storage provider (eg getting you banned or rate limited). This can be very useful for rclone mount to control the behaviour of applications using it. See also --tpslimit-burst. –tpslimit-burst int Max burst of transactions for --tpslimit (default 1). Normally --tpslimit will do exactly the number of transaction per second specified. However if you supply --tps-burst then rclone can save up some transactions from when it was idle giving a burst of up to the parameter supplied. For example if you provide --tpslimit-burst 10 then if rclone has been idle for more than 10*--tpslimit then it can do 10 transactions very quickly before they are limited again. This may be used to increase performance of --tpslimit without changing the long term average number of transactions per second. –track-renames By default, rclone doesn’t keep track of renamed files, so if you rename a file locally then sync it to a remote, rclone will delete the old file on the remote and upload a new copy. If you use this flag, and the remote supports server side copy or server side move, and the source and destination have a compatible hash, then this will track renames during sync operations and perform renaming server-side. Files will be matched by size and hash - if both match then a rename will be considered. If the destination does not support server-side copy or move, rclone will fall back to the default behaviour and log an error level message to the console. Encrypted destinations are not currently supported by --track-renames if --track-renames- strategy includes hash. Note that --track-renames is incompatible with --no-traverse and that it uses extra memory to keep track of all the rename candidates. Note also that --track-renames is incompatible with --delete-before and will select --delete-after instead of --delete-during. –track-renames-strategy (hash,modtime,leaf,size) This option changes the matching criteria for --track-renames. The matching is controlled by a comma separated selection of these tokens: • modtime - the modification time of the file - not supported on all backends • hash - the hash of the file contents - not supported on all backends • leaf - the name of the file not including its directory name • size - the size of the file (this is always enabled) So using --track-renames-strategy modtime,leaf would match files based on modification time, the leaf of the file name and the size only. Using --track-renames-strategy modtime or leaf can enable --track-renames support for encrypted destinations. If nothing is specified, the default option is matching by hashes. Note that the hash strategy is not supported with encrypted destinations. –delete-(before,during,after) This option allows you to specify when files on your destination are deleted when you sync folders. Specifying the value --delete-before will delete all files present on the destination, but not on the source before starting the transfer of any new or updated files. This uses two passes through the file systems, one for the deletions and one for the copies. Specifying --delete-during will delete files while checking and uploading files. This is the fastest option and uses the least memory. Specifying --delete-after (the default value) will delay deletion of files until all new/updated files have been successfully transferred. The files to be deleted are collected in the copy pass then deleted after the copy pass has completed successfully. The files to be deleted are held in memory so this mode may use more memory. This is the safest mode as it will only delete files if there have been no errors subsequent to that. If there have been errors before the deletions start then you will get the message not deleting files as there were IO errors. –fast-list When doing anything which involves a directory listing (eg sync, copy, ls - in fact nearly every command), rclone normally lists a directory and processes it before using more directory lists to process any subdirectories. This can be parallelised and works very quickly using the least amount of memory. However, some remotes have a way of listing all files beneath a directory in one (or a small number) of transactions. These tend to be the bucket based remotes (eg S3, B2, GCS, Swift, Hubic). If you use the --fast-list flag then rclone will use this method for listing directories. This will have the following consequences for the listing: • It will use fewer transactions (important if you pay for them) • It will use more memory. Rclone has to load the whole listing into memory. • It may be faster because it uses fewer transactions • It may be slower because it can’t be parallelized rclone should always give identical results with and without --fast-list. If you pay for transactions and can fit your entire sync listing into memory then --fast- list is recommended. If you have a very big sync to do then don’t use --fast-list otherwise you will run out of memory. If you use --fast-list on a remote which doesn’t support it, then rclone will just ignore it. –timeout=TIME This sets the IO idle timeout. If a transfer has started but then becomes idle for this long it is considered broken and disconnected. The default is 5m. Set to 0 to disable. –transfers=N The number of file transfers to run in parallel. It can sometimes be useful to set this to a smaller number if the remote is giving a lot of timeouts or bigger if you have lots of bandwidth and a fast remote. The default is to run 4 file transfers in parallel. -u, –update This forces rclone to skip any files which exist on the destination and have a modified time that is newer than the source file. This can be useful when transferring to a remote which doesn’t support mod times directly (or when using --use-server-modtime to avoid extra API calls) as it is more accurate than a --size-only check and faster than using --checksum. If an existing destination file has a modification time equal (within the computed modify window precision) to the source file’s, it will be updated if the sizes are different. If --checksum is set then rclone will update the destination if the checksums differ too. If an existing destination file is older than the source file then it will be updated if the size or checksum differs from the source file. On remotes which don’t support mod time directly (or when using --use-server-modtime) the time checked will be the uploaded time. This means that if uploading to one of these remotes, rclone will skip any files which exist on the destination and have an uploaded time that is newer than the modification time of the source file. –use-mmap If this flag is set then rclone will use anonymous memory allocated by mmap on Unix based platforms and VirtualAlloc on Windows for its transfer buffers (size controlled by --buffer-size). Memory allocated like this does not go on the Go heap and can be returned to the OS immediately when it is finished with. If this flag is not set then rclone will allocate and free the buffers using the Go memory allocator which may use more memory as memory pages are returned less aggressively to the OS. It is possible this does not work well on all platforms so it is disabled by default; in the future it may be enabled by default. –use-server-modtime Some object-store backends (e.g, Swift, S3) do not preserve file modification times (modtime). On these backends, rclone stores the original modtime as additional metadata on the object. By default it will make an API call to retrieve the metadata when the modtime is needed by an operation. Use this flag to disable the extra API call and rely instead on the server’s modified time. In cases such as a local to remote sync using --update, knowing the local file is newer than the time it was last uploaded to the remote is sufficient. In those cases, this flag can speed up the process and reduce the number of API calls necessary. Using this flag on a sync operation without also using --update would cause all files modified at any time other than the last upload time to be uploaded again, which is probably not what you want. -v, -vv, –verbose With -v rclone will tell you about each file that is transferred and a small number of significant events. With -vv rclone will become very verbose telling you about every file it considers and transfers. Please send bug reports with a log with this setting. -V, –version Prints the version number SSL/TLS options The outgoing SSL/TLS connections rclone makes can be controlled with these options. For example this can be very useful with the HTTP or WebDAV backends. Rclone HTTP servers have their own set of configuration for SSL/TLS which you can find in their documentation. –ca-cert string This loads the PEM encoded certificate authority certificate and uses it to verify the certificates of the servers rclone connects to. If you have generated certificates signed with a local CA then you will need this flag to connect to servers using those certificates. –client-cert string This loads the PEM encoded client side certificate. This is used for mutual TLS authentication (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutual_authentication). The --client-key flag is required too when using this. –client-key string This loads the PEM encoded client side private key used for mutual TLS authentication. Used in conjunction with --client-cert. –no-check-certificate=true/false --no-check-certificate controls whether a client verifies the server’s certificate chain and host name. If --no-check-certificate is true, TLS accepts any certificate presented by the server and any host name in that certificate. In this mode, TLS is susceptible to man-in-the-middle attacks. This option defaults to false. This should be used only for testing. Configuration Encryption Your configuration file contains information for logging in to your cloud services. This means that you should keep your .rclone.conf file in a secure location. If you are in an environment where that isn’t possible, you can add a password to your configuration. This means that you will have to supply the password every time you start rclone. To add a password to your rclone configuration, execute rclone config. >rclone config Current remotes: e) Edit existing remote n) New remote d) Delete remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config e/n/d/s/q> Go into s, Set configuration password: e/n/d/s/q> s Your configuration is not encrypted. If you add a password, you will protect your login information to cloud services. a) Add Password q) Quit to main menu a/q> a Enter NEW configuration password: password: Confirm NEW password: password: Password set Your configuration is encrypted. c) Change Password u) Unencrypt configuration q) Quit to main menu c/u/q> Your configuration is now encrypted, and every time you start rclone you will have to supply the password. See below for details. In the same menu, you can change the password or completely remove encryption from your configuration. There is no way to recover the configuration if you lose your password. rclone uses nacl secretbox (https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/crypto/nacl/secretbox) which in turn uses XSalsa20 and Poly1305 to encrypt and authenticate your configuration with secret-key cryptography. The password is SHA-256 hashed, which produces the key for secretbox. The hashed password is not stored. While this provides very good security, we do not recommend storing your encrypted rclone configuration in public if it contains sensitive information, maybe except if you use a very strong password. If it is safe in your environment, you can set the RCLONE_CONFIG_PASS environment variable to contain your password, in which case it will be used for decrypting the configuration. You can set this for a session from a script. For unix like systems save this to a file called set-rclone-password: #!/bin/echo Source this file don't run it read -s RCLONE_CONFIG_PASS export RCLONE_CONFIG_PASS Then source the file when you want to use it. From the shell you would do source set- rclone-password. It will then ask you for the password and set it in the environment variable. An alternate means of supplying the password is to provide a script which will retrieve the password and print on standard output. This script should have a fully specified path name and not rely on any environment variables. The script is supplied either via --password-command="..." command line argument or via the RCLONE_PASSWORD_COMMAND environment variable. One useful example of this is using the passwordstore application to retrieve the password: export RCLONE_PASSWORD_COMMAND="pass rclone/config" If the passwordstore password manager holds the password for the rclone configuration, using the script method means the password is primarily protected by the passwordstore system, and is never embedded in the clear in scripts, nor available for examination using the standard commands available. It is quite possible with long running rclone sessions for copies of passwords to be innocently captured in log files or terminal scroll buffers, etc. Using the script method of supplying the password enhances the security of the config password considerably. If you are running rclone inside a script, unless you are using the --password-command method, you might want to disable password prompts. To do that, pass the parameter --ask- password=false to rclone. This will make rclone fail instead of asking for a password if RCLONE_CONFIG_PASS doesn’t contain a valid password, and --password-command has not been supplied. Developer options These options are useful when developing or debugging rclone. There are also some more remote specific options which aren’t documented here which are used for testing. These start with remote name eg --drive-test-option - see the docs for the remote in question. –cpuprofile=FILE Write CPU profile to file. This can be analysed with go tool pprof. –dump flag,flag,flag The --dump flag takes a comma separated list of flags to dump info about. Note that some headers including Accept-Encoding as shown may not be correct in the request and the response may not show Content-Encoding if the go standard libraries auto gzip encoding was in effect. In this case the body of the request will be gunzipped before showing it. The available flags are: –dump headers Dump HTTP headers with Authorization: lines removed. May still contain sensitive info. Can be very verbose. Useful for debugging only. Use --dump auth if you do want the Authorization: headers. –dump bodies Dump HTTP headers and bodies - may contain sensitive info. Can be very verbose. Useful for debugging only. Note that the bodies are buffered in memory so don’t use this for enormous files. –dump requests Like --dump bodies but dumps the request bodies and the response headers. Useful for debugging download problems. –dump responses Like --dump bodies but dumps the response bodies and the request headers. Useful for debugging upload problems. –dump auth Dump HTTP headers - will contain sensitive info such as Authorization: headers - use --dump headers to dump without Authorization: headers. Can be very verbose. Useful for debugging only. –dump filters Dump the filters to the output. Useful to see exactly what include and exclude options are filtering on. –dump goroutines This dumps a list of the running go-routines at the end of the command to standard output. –dump openfiles This dumps a list of the open files at the end of the command. It uses the lsof command to do that so you’ll need that installed to use it. –memprofile=FILE Write memory profile to file. This can be analysed with go tool pprof. Filtering For the filtering options • --delete-excluded • --filter • --filter-from • --exclude • --exclude-from • --include • --include-from • --files-from • --files-from-raw • --min-size • --max-size • --min-age • --max-age • --dump filters See the filtering section (https://rclone.org/filtering/). Remote control For the remote control options and for instructions on how to remote control rclone • --rc • and anything starting with --rc- See the remote control section (https://rclone.org/rc/). Logging rclone has 4 levels of logging, ERROR, NOTICE, INFO and DEBUG. By default, rclone logs to standard error. This means you can redirect standard error and still see the normal output of rclone commands (eg rclone ls). By default, rclone will produce Error and Notice level messages. If you use the -q flag, rclone will only produce Error messages. If you use the -v flag, rclone will produce Error, Notice and Info messages. If you use the -vv flag, rclone will produce Error, Notice, Info and Debug messages. You can also control the log levels with the --log-level flag. If you use the --log-file=FILE option, rclone will redirect Error, Info and Debug messages along with standard error to FILE. If you use the --syslog flag then rclone will log to syslog and the --syslog-facility control which facility it uses. Rclone prefixes all log messages with their level in capitals, eg INFO which makes it easy to grep the log file for different kinds of information. Exit Code If any errors occur during the command execution, rclone will exit with a non-zero exit code. This allows scripts to detect when rclone operations have failed. During the startup phase, rclone will exit immediately if an error is detected in the configuration. There will always be a log message immediately before exiting. When rclone is running it will accumulate errors as it goes along, and only exit with a non-zero exit code if (after retries) there were still failed transfers. For every error counted there will be a high priority log message (visible with -q) showing the message and which file caused the problem. A high priority message is also shown when starting a retry so the user can see that any previous error messages may not be valid after the retry. If rclone has done a retry it will log a high priority message if the retry was successful. List of exit codes • 0 - success • 1 - Syntax or usage error • 2 - Error not otherwise categorised • 3 - Directory not found • 4 - File not found • 5 - Temporary error (one that more retries might fix) (Retry errors) • 6 - Less serious errors (like 461 errors from dropbox) (NoRetry errors) • 7 - Fatal error (one that more retries won’t fix, like account suspended) (Fatal errors) • 8 - Transfer exceeded - limit set by –max-transfer reached • 9 - Operation successful, but no files transferred Environment Variables Rclone can be configured entirely using environment variables. These can be used to set defaults for options or config file entries. Options Every option in rclone can have its default set by environment variable. To find the name of the environment variable, first, take the long option name, strip the leading --, change - to _, make upper case and prepend RCLONE_. For example, to always set --stats 5s, set the environment variable RCLONE_STATS=5s. If you set stats on the command line this will override the environment variable setting. Or to always use the trash in drive --drive-use-trash, set RCLONE_DRIVE_USE_TRASH=true. The same parser is used for the options and the environment variables so they take exactly the same form. Config file You can set defaults for values in the config file on an individual remote basis. If you want to use this feature, you will need to discover the name of the config items that you want. The easiest way is to run through rclone config by hand, then look in the config file to see what the values are (the config file can be found by looking at the help for --config in rclone help). To find the name of the environment variable, you need to set, take RCLONE_CONFIG_ + name of remote + _ + name of config file option and make it all uppercase. For example, to configure an S3 remote named mys3: without a config file (using unix ways of setting environment variables): $ export RCLONE_CONFIG_MYS3_TYPE=s3 $ export RCLONE_CONFIG_MYS3_ACCESS_KEY_ID=XXX $ export RCLONE_CONFIG_MYS3_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=XXX $ rclone lsd MYS3: -1 2016-09-21 12:54:21 -1 my-bucket $ rclone listremotes | grep mys3 mys3: Note that if you want to create a remote using environment variables you must create the ..._TYPE variable as above. Precedence The various different methods of backend configuration are read in this order and the first one with a value is used. • Flag values as supplied on the command line, eg --drive-use-trash. • Remote specific environment vars, eg RCLONE_CONFIG_MYREMOTE_USE_TRASH (see above). • Backend specific environment vars, eg RCLONE_DRIVE_USE_TRASH. • Config file, eg use_trash = false. • Default values, eg true - these can’t be changed. So if both --drive-use-trash is supplied on the config line and an environment variable RCLONE_DRIVE_USE_TRASH is set, the command line flag will take preference. For non backend configuration the order is as follows: • Flag values as supplied on the command line, eg --stats 5s. • Environment vars, eg RCLONE_STATS=5s. • Default values, eg 1m - these can’t be changed. Other environment variables • RCLONE_CONFIG_PASS set to contain your config file password (see Configuration Encryption section) • HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY and NO_PROXY (or the lowercase versions thereof). • HTTPS_PROXY takes precedence over HTTP_PROXY for https requests. • The environment values may be either a complete URL or a “host[:port]” for, in which case the “http” scheme is assumed. • RCLONE_CONFIG_DIR - rclone sets this variable for use in config files and sub processes to point to the directory holding the config file.
Configuring rclone on a remote / headless machine
Some of the configurations (those involving oauth2) require an Internet connected web browser. If you are trying to set rclone up on a remote or headless box with no browser available on it (eg a NAS or a server in a datacenter) then you will need to use an alternative means of configuration. There are two ways of doing it, described below. Configuring using rclone authorize On the headless box run rclone config but answer N to the Use auto config? question. ... Remote config Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine y) Yes (default) n) No y/n> n For this to work, you will need rclone available on a machine that has a web browser available. For more help and alternate methods see: https://rclone.org/remote_setup/ Execute the following on the machine with the web browser (same rclone version recommended): rclone authorize "amazon cloud drive" Then paste the result below: result> Then on your main desktop machine rclone authorize "amazon cloud drive" If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code Paste the following into your remote machine ---> SECRET_TOKEN <---End paste Then back to the headless box, paste in the code result> SECRET_TOKEN -------------------- [acd12] client_id = client_secret = token = SECRET_TOKEN -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> Configuring by copying the config file Rclone stores all of its config in a single configuration file. This can easily be copied to configure a remote rclone. So first configure rclone on your desktop machine with rclone config to set up the config file. Find the config file by running rclone config file, for example $ rclone config file Configuration file is stored at: /home/user/.rclone.conf Now transfer it to the remote box (scp, cut paste, ftp, sftp etc) and place it in the correct place (use rclone config file on the remote box to find out where).
Filtering, includes and excludes
Rclone has a sophisticated set of include and exclude rules. Some of these are based on patterns and some on other things like file size. The filters are applied for the copy, sync, move, ls, lsl, md5sum, sha1sum, size, delete and check operations. Note that purge does not obey the filters. Each path as it passes through rclone is matched against the include and exclude rules like --include, --exclude, --include-from, --exclude-from, --filter, or --filter-from. The simplest way to try them out is using the ls command, or --dry-run together with -v. --filter-from, --exclude-from, --include-from, --files-from, --files-from-raw understand - as a file name to mean read from standard input. Patterns The patterns used to match files for inclusion or exclusion are based on “file globs” as used by the unix shell. If the pattern starts with a / then it only matches at the top level of the directory tree, relative to the root of the remote (not necessarily the root of the local drive). If it doesn’t start with / then it is matched starting at the end of the path, but it will only match a complete path element: file.jpg - matches "file.jpg" - matches "directory/file.jpg" - doesn't match "afile.jpg" - doesn't match "directory/afile.jpg" /file.jpg - matches "file.jpg" in the root directory of the remote - doesn't match "afile.jpg" - doesn't match "directory/file.jpg" Important Note that you must use / in patterns and not \ even if running on Windows. A * matches anything but not a /. *.jpg - matches "file.jpg" - matches "directory/file.jpg" - doesn't match "file.jpg/something" Use ** to match anything, including slashes (/). dir/** - matches "dir/file.jpg" - matches "dir/dir1/dir2/file.jpg" - doesn't match "directory/file.jpg" - doesn't match "adir/file.jpg" A ? matches any character except a slash /. l?ss - matches "less" - matches "lass" - doesn't match "floss" A [ and ] together make a character class, such as [a-z] or [aeiou] or [[:alpha:]]. See the go regexp docs (https://golang.org/pkg/regexp/syntax/) for more info on these. h[ae]llo - matches "hello" - matches "hallo" - doesn't match "hullo" A { and } define a choice between elements. It should contain a comma separated list of patterns, any of which might match. These patterns can contain wildcards. {one,two}_potato - matches "one_potato" - matches "two_potato" - doesn't match "three_potato" - doesn't match "_potato" Special characters can be escaped with a \ before them. \*.jpg - matches "*.jpg" \\.jpg - matches "\.jpg" \[one\].jpg - matches "[one].jpg" Patterns are case sensitive unless the --ignore-case flag is used. Without --ignore-case (default) potato - matches "potato" - doesn't match "POTATO" With --ignore-case potato - matches "potato" - matches "POTATO" Note also that rclone filter globs can only be used in one of the filter command line flags, not in the specification of the remote, so rclone copy "remote:dir*.jpg" /path/to/dir won’t work - what is required is rclone --include "*.jpg" copy remote:dir /path/to/dir Directories Rclone keeps track of directories that could match any file patterns. Eg if you add the include rule /a/*.jpg Rclone will synthesize the directory include rule /a/ If you put any rules which end in / then it will only match directories. Directory matches are only used to optimise directory access patterns - you must still match the files that you want to match. Directory matches won’t optimise anything on bucket based remotes (eg s3, swift, google compute storage, b2) which don’t have a concept of directory. Differences between rsync and rclone patterns Rclone implements bash style {a,b,c} glob matching which rsync doesn’t. Rclone always does a wildcard match so \ must always escape a \. How the rules are used Rclone maintains a combined list of include rules and exclude rules. Each file is matched in order, starting from the top, against the rule in the list until it finds a match. The file is then included or excluded according to the rule type. If the matcher fails to find a match after testing against all the entries in the list then the path is included. For example given the following rules, + being include, - being exclude, - secret*.jpg + *.jpg + *.png + file2.avi - * This would include • file1.jpg • file3.png • file2.avi This would exclude • secret17.jpg • non *.jpg and *.png A similar process is done on directory entries before recursing into them. This only works on remotes which have a concept of directory (Eg local, google drive, onedrive, amazon drive) and not on bucket based remotes (eg s3, swift, google compute storage, b2). Adding filtering rules Filtering rules are added with the following command line flags. Repeating options You can repeat the following options to add more than one rule of that type. • --include • --include-from • --exclude • --exclude-from • --filter • --filter-from • --filter-from-raw Important You should not use --include* together with --exclude*. It may produce different results than you expected. In that case try to use: --filter*. Note that all the options of the same type are processed together in the order above, regardless of what order they were placed on the command line. So all --include options are processed first in the order they appeared on the command line, then all --include-from options etc. To mix up the order includes and excludes, the --filter flag can be used. --exclude - Exclude files matching pattern Add a single exclude rule with --exclude. This flag can be repeated. See above for the order the flags are processed in. Eg --exclude *.bak to exclude all bak files from the sync. --exclude-from - Read exclude patterns from file Add exclude rules from a file. This flag can be repeated. See above for the order the flags are processed in. Prepare a file like this exclude-file.txt # a sample exclude rule file *.bak file2.jpg Then use as --exclude-from exclude-file.txt. This will sync all files except those ending in bak and file2.jpg. This is useful if you have a lot of rules. --include - Include files matching pattern Add a single include rule with --include. This flag can be repeated. See above for the order the flags are processed in. Eg --include *.{png,jpg} to include all png and jpg files in the backup and no others. This adds an implicit --exclude * at the very end of the filter list. This means you can mix --include and --include-from with the other filters (eg --exclude) but you must include all the files you want in the include statement. If this doesn’t provide enough flexibility then you must use --filter-from. --include-from - Read include patterns from file Add include rules from a file. This flag can be repeated. See above for the order the flags are processed in. Prepare a file like this include-file.txt # a sample include rule file *.jpg *.png file2.avi Then use as --include-from include-file.txt. This will sync all jpg, png files and file2.avi. This is useful if you have a lot of rules. This adds an implicit --exclude * at the very end of the filter list. This means you can mix --include and --include-from with the other filters (eg --exclude) but you must include all the files you want in the include statement. If this doesn’t provide enough flexibility then you must use --filter-from. --filter - Add a file-filtering rule This can be used to add a single include or exclude rule. Include rules start with + and exclude rules start with -. A special rule called ! can be used to clear the existing rules. This flag can be repeated. See above for the order the flags are processed in. Eg --filter "- *.bak" to exclude all bak files from the sync. --filter-from - Read filtering patterns from a file Add include/exclude rules from a file. This flag can be repeated. See above for the order the flags are processed in. Prepare a file like this filter-file.txt # a sample filter rule file - secret*.jpg + *.jpg + *.png + file2.avi - /dir/Trash/** + /dir/** # exclude everything else - * Then use as --filter-from filter-file.txt. The rules are processed in the order that they are defined. This example will include all jpg and png files, exclude any files matching secret*.jpg and include file2.avi. It will also include everything in the directory dir at the root of the sync, except dir/Trash which it will exclude. Everything else will be excluded from the sync. --files-from - Read list of source-file names This reads a list of file names from the file passed in and only these files are transferred. The filtering rules are ignored completely if you use this option. --files-from expects a list of files as its input. Leading / trailing whitespace is stripped from the input lines and lines starting with # and ; are ignored. Rclone will traverse the file system if you use --files-from, effectively using the files in --files-from as a set of filters. Rclone will not error if any of the files are missing. If you use --no-traverse as well as --files-from then rclone will not traverse the destination file system, it will find each file individually using approximately 1 API call. This can be more efficient for small lists of files. This option can be repeated to read from more than one file. These are read in the order that they are placed on the command line. Paths within the --files-from file will be interpreted as starting with the root specified in the command. Leading / characters are ignored. See –files-from-raw if you need the input to be processed in a raw manner. For example, suppose you had files-from.txt with this content: # comment file1.jpg subdir/file2.jpg You could then use it like this: rclone copy --files-from files-from.txt /home/me/pics remote:pics This will transfer these files only (if they exist) /home/me/pics/file1.jpg → remote:pics/file1.jpg /home/me/pics/subdir/file2.jpg → remote:pics/subdir/file2.jpg To take a more complicated example, let’s say you had a few files you want to back up regularly with these absolute paths: /home/user1/important /home/user1/dir/file /home/user2/stuff To copy these you’d find a common subdirectory - in this case /home and put the remaining files in files-from.txt with or without leading /, eg user1/important user1/dir/file user2/stuff You could then copy these to a remote like this rclone copy --files-from files-from.txt /home remote:backup The 3 files will arrive in remote:backup with the paths as in the files-from.txt like this: /home/user1/important → remote:backup/user1/important /home/user1/dir/file → remote:backup/user1/dir/file /home/user2/stuff → remote:backup/user2/stuff You could of course choose / as the root too in which case your files-from.txt might look like this. /home/user1/important /home/user1/dir/file /home/user2/stuff And you would transfer it like this rclone copy --files-from files-from.txt / remote:backup In this case there will be an extra home directory on the remote: /home/user1/important → remote:backup/home/user1/important /home/user1/dir/file → remote:backup/home/user1/dir/file /home/user2/stuff → remote:backup/home/user2/stuff --files-from-raw - Read list of source-file names without any processing This option is same as --files-from with the only difference being that the input is read in a raw manner. This means that lines with leading/trailing whitespace and lines starting with ; or # are read without any processing. rclone lsf (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_lsf/) has a compatible format that can be used to export file lists from remotes, which can then be used as an input to --files-from-raw. --min-size - Don’t transfer any file smaller than this This option controls the minimum size file which will be transferred. This defaults to kBytes but a suffix of k, M, or G can be used. For example --min-size 50k means no files smaller than 50kByte will be transferred. --max-size - Don’t transfer any file larger than this This option controls the maximum size file which will be transferred. This defaults to kBytes but a suffix of k, M, or G can be used. For example --max-size 1G means no files larger than 1GByte will be transferred. --max-age - Don’t transfer any file older than this This option controls the maximum age of files to transfer. Give in seconds or with a suffix of: • ms - Milliseconds • s - Seconds • m - Minutes • h - Hours • d - Days • w - Weeks • M - Months • y - Years For example --max-age 2d means no files older than 2 days will be transferred. This can also be an absolute time in one of these formats • RFC3339 - eg “2006-01-02T15:04:05Z07:00” • ISO8601 Date and time, local timezone - “2006-01-02T15:04:05” • ISO8601 Date and time, local timezone - “2006-01-02 15:04:05” • ISO8601 Date - “2006-01-02” (YYYY-MM-DD) --min-age - Don’t transfer any file younger than this This option controls the minimum age of files to transfer. Give in seconds or with a suffix (see --max-age for list of suffixes) For example --min-age 2d means no files younger than 2 days will be transferred. --delete-excluded - Delete files on dest excluded from sync Important this flag is dangerous - use with --dry-run and -v first. When doing rclone sync this will delete any files which are excluded from the sync on the destination. If for example you did a sync from A to B without the --min-size 50k flag rclone sync -i A: B: Then you repeated it like this with the --delete-excluded rclone --min-size 50k --delete-excluded sync A: B: This would delete all files on B which are less than 50 kBytes as these are now excluded from the sync. Always test first with --dry-run and -v before using this flag. --dump filters - dump the filters to the output This dumps the defined filters to the output as regular expressions. Useful for debugging. --ignore-case - make searches case insensitive Normally filter patterns are case sensitive. If this flag is supplied then filter patterns become case insensitive. Normally a --include "file.txt" will not match a file called FILE.txt. However if you use the --ignore-case flag then --include "file.txt" this will match a file called FILE.txt. Quoting shell metacharacters The examples above may not work verbatim in your shell as they have shell metacharacters in them (eg *), and may require quoting. Eg linux, OSX • --include \*.jpg • --include '*.jpg' • --include='*.jpg' In Windows the expansion is done by the command not the shell so this should work fine • --include *.jpg Exclude directory based on a file It is possible to exclude a directory based on a file, which is present in this directory. Filename should be specified using the --exclude-if-present flag. This flag has a priority over the other filtering flags. Imagine, you have the following directory structure: dir1/file1 dir1/dir2/file2 dir1/dir2/dir3/file3 dir1/dir2/dir3/.ignore You can exclude dir3 from sync by running the following command: rclone sync -i --exclude-if-present .ignore dir1 remote:backup Currently only one filename is supported, i.e. --exclude-if-present should not be used multiple times.
GUI (Experimental)
Rclone can serve a web based GUI (graphical user interface). This is somewhat experimental at the moment so things may be subject to change. Run this command in a terminal and rclone will download and then display the GUI in a web browser. rclone rcd --rc-web-gui This will produce logs like this and rclone needs to continue to run to serve the GUI: 2019/08/25 11:40:14 NOTICE: A new release for gui is present at https://github.com/rclone/rclone-webui-react/releases/download/v0.0.6/currentbuild.zip 2019/08/25 11:40:14 NOTICE: Downloading webgui binary. Please wait. [Size: 3813937, Path : /home/USER/.cache/rclone/webgui/v0.0.6.zip] 2019/08/25 11:40:16 NOTICE: Unzipping 2019/08/25 11:40:16 NOTICE: Serving remote control on http://127.0.0.1:5572/ This assumes you are running rclone locally on your machine. It is possible to separate the rclone and the GUI - see below for details. If you wish to check for updates then you can add --rc-web-gui-update to the command line. If you find your GUI broken, you may force it to update by add --rc-web-gui-force-update. By default, rclone will open your browser. Add --rc-web-gui-no-open-browser to disable this feature. Using the GUI Once the GUI opens, you will be looking at the dashboard which has an overall overview. On the left hand side you will see a series of view buttons you can click on: • Dashboard - main overview • Configs - examine and create new configurations • Explorer - view, download and upload files to the cloud storage systems • Backend - view or alter the backend config • Log out (More docs and walkthrough video to come!) How it works When you run the rclone rcd --rc-web-gui this is what happens • Rclone starts but only runs the remote control API (“rc”). • The API is bound to localhost with an auto generated username and password. • If the API bundle is missing then rclone will download it. • rclone will start serving the files from the API bundle over the same port as the API • rclone will open the browser with a login_token so it can log straight in. Advanced use The rclone rcd may use any of the flags documented on the rc page (https://rclone.org/rc/#supported-parameters). The flag --rc-web-gui is shorthand for • Download the web GUI if necessary • Check we are using some authentication • --rc-user gui • --rc-pass <random password> • --rc-serve These flags can be overridden as desired. See also the rclone rcd documentation (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_rcd/). Example: Running a public GUI For example the GUI could be served on a public port over SSL using an htpasswd file using the following flags: • --rc-web-gui • --rc-addr :443 • --rc-htpasswd /path/to/htpasswd • --rc-cert /path/to/ssl.crt • --rc-key /path/to/ssl.key Example: Running a GUI behind a proxy If you want to run the GUI behind a proxy at /rclone you could use these flags: • --rc-web-gui • --rc-baseurl rclone • --rc-htpasswd /path/to/htpasswd Or instead of htpasswd if you just want a single user and password: • --rc-user me • --rc-pass mypassword Project The GUI is being developed in the: rclone/rclone-webui-react repository (https://github.com/rclone/rclone-webui-react). Bug reports and contributions are very welcome :-) If you have questions then please ask them on the rclone forum (https://forum.rclone.org/).
Remote controlling rclone with its API
If rclone is run with the --rc flag then it starts an http server which can be used to remote control rclone using its API. If you just want to run a remote control then see the rcd command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_rcd/). Supported parameters –rc Flag to start the http server listen on remote requests –rc-addr=IP IPaddress:Port or :Port to bind server to. (default “localhost:5572”) –rc-cert=KEY SSL PEM key (concatenation of certificate and CA certificate) –rc-client-ca=PATH Client certificate authority to verify clients with –rc-htpasswd=PATH htpasswd file - if not provided no authentication is done –rc-key=PATH SSL PEM Private key –rc-max-header-bytes=VALUE Maximum size of request header (default 4096) –rc-user=VALUE User name for authentication. –rc-pass=VALUE Password for authentication. –rc-realm=VALUE Realm for authentication (default “rclone”) –rc-server-read-timeout=DURATION Timeout for server reading data (default 1h0m0s) –rc-server-write-timeout=DURATION Timeout for server writing data (default 1h0m0s) –rc-serve Enable the serving of remote objects via the HTTP interface. This means objects will be accessible at http://127.0.0.1:5572/ by default, so you can browse to http://127.0.0.1:5572/ or http://127.0.0.1:5572/* to see a listing of the remotes. Objects may be requested from remotes using this syntax http://127.0.0.1:5572/[remote:path]/path/to/object Default Off. –rc-files /path/to/directory Path to local files to serve on the HTTP server. If this is set then rclone will serve the files in that directory. It will also open the root in the web browser if specified. This is for implementing browser based GUIs for rclone functions. If --rc-user or --rc-pass is set then the URL that is opened will have the authorization in the URL in the http://user:pass@localhost/ style. Default Off. –rc-enable-metrics Enable OpenMetrics/Prometheus compatible endpoint at /metrics. Default Off. –rc-web-gui Set this flag to serve the default web gui on the same port as rclone. Default Off. –rc-allow-origin Set the allowed Access-Control-Allow-Origin for rc requests. Can be used with –rc-web-gui if the rclone is running on different IP than the web-gui. Default is IP address on which rc is running. –rc-web-fetch-url Set the URL to fetch the rclone-web-gui files from. Default https://api.github.com/repos/rclone/rclone-webui-react/releases/latest. –rc-web-gui-update Set this flag to check and update rclone-webui-react from the rc-web-fetch-url. Default Off. –rc-web-gui-force-update Set this flag to force update rclone-webui-react from the rc-web-fetch-url. Default Off. –rc-web-gui-no-open-browser Set this flag to disable opening browser automatically when using web-gui. Default Off. –rc-job-expire-duration=DURATION Expire finished async jobs older than DURATION (default 60s). –rc-job-expire-interval=DURATION Interval duration to check for expired async jobs (default 10s). –rc-no-auth By default rclone will require authorisation to have been set up on the rc interface in order to use any methods which access any rclone remotes. Eg operations/list is denied as it involved creating a remote as is sync/copy. If this is set then no authorisation will be required on the server to use these methods. The alternative is to use --rc-user and --rc-pass and use these credentials in the request. Default Off. Accessing the remote control via the rclone rc command Rclone itself implements the remote control protocol in its rclone rc command. You can use it like this $ rclone rc rc/noop param1=one param2=two { "param1": "one", "param2": "two" } Run rclone rc on its own to see the help for the installed remote control commands. JSON input rclone rc also supports a --json flag which can be used to send more complicated input parameters. $ rclone rc --json '{ "p1": [1,"2",null,4], "p2": { "a":1, "b":2 } }' rc/noop { "p1": [ 1, "2", null, 4 ], "p2": { "a": 1, "b": 2 } } If the parameter being passed is an object then it can be passed as a JSON string rather than using the --json flag which simplifies the command line. rclone rc operations/list fs=/tmp remote=test opt='{"showHash": true}' Rather than rclone rc operations/list --json '{"fs": "/tmp", "remote": "test", "opt": {"showHash": true}}' Special parameters The rc interface supports some special parameters which apply to all commands. These start with _ to show they are different. Running asynchronous jobs with _async = true Each rc call is classified as a job and it is assigned its own id. By default jobs are executed immediately as they are created or synchronously. If _async has a true value when supplied to an rc call then it will return immediately with a job id and the task will be run in the background. The job/status call can be used to get information of the background job. The job can be queried for up to 1 minute after it has finished. It is recommended that potentially long running jobs, eg sync/sync, sync/copy, sync/move, operations/purge are run with the _async flag to avoid any potential problems with the HTTP request and response timing out. Starting a job with the _async flag: $ rclone rc --json '{ "p1": [1,"2",null,4], "p2": { "a":1, "b":2 }, "_async": true }' rc/noop { "jobid": 2 } Query the status to see if the job has finished. For more information on the meaning of these return parameters see the job/status call. $ rclone rc --json '{ "jobid":2 }' job/status { "duration": 0.000124163, "endTime": "2018-10-27T11:38:07.911245881+01:00", "error": "", "finished": true, "id": 2, "output": { "_async": true, "p1": [ 1, "2", null, 4 ], "p2": { "a": 1, "b": 2 } }, "startTime": "2018-10-27T11:38:07.911121728+01:00", "success": true } job/list can be used to show the running or recently completed jobs $ rclone rc job/list { "jobids": [ 2 ] } Assigning operations to groups with _group = value Each rc call has its own stats group for tracking its metrics. By default grouping is done by the composite group name from prefix job/ and id of the job like so job/1. If _group has a value then stats for that request will be grouped under that value. This allows caller to group stats under their own name. Stats for specific group can be accessed by passing group to core/stats: $ rclone rc --json '{ "group": "job/1" }' core/stats { "speed": 12345 ... } Supported commands backend/command: Runs a backend command. This takes the following parameters • command - a string with the command name • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” • arg - a list of arguments for the backend command • opt - a map of string to string of options Returns • result - result from the backend command For example rclone rc backend/command command=noop fs=. -o echo=yes -o blue -a path1 -a path2 Returns { "result": { "arg": [ "path1", "path2" ], "name": "noop", "opt": { "blue": "", "echo": "yes" } } } Note that this is the direct equivalent of using this “backend” command: rclone backend noop . -o echo=yes -o blue path1 path2 Note that arguments must be preceded by the “-a” flag See the backend (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_backend/) command for more information. Authentication is required for this call. cache/expire: Purge a remote from cache Purge a remote from the cache backend. Supports either a directory or a file. Params: - remote = path to remote (required) - withData = true/false to delete cached data (chunks) as well (optional) Eg rclone rc cache/expire remote=path/to/sub/folder/ rclone rc cache/expire remote=/ withData=true cache/fetch: Fetch file chunks Ensure the specified file chunks are cached on disk. The chunks= parameter specifies the file chunks to check. It takes a comma separated list of array slice indices. The slice indices are similar to Python slices: start[:end] start is the 0 based chunk number from the beginning of the file to fetch inclusive. end is 0 based chunk number from the beginning of the file to fetch exclusive. Both values can be negative, in which case they count from the back of the file. The value “-5:” represents the last 5 chunks of a file. Some valid examples are: “:5,-5:” -> the first and last five chunks “0,-2” -> the first and the second last chunk “0:10” -> the first ten chunks Any parameter with a key that starts with “file” can be used to specify files to fetch, eg rclone rc cache/fetch chunks=0 file=hello file2=home/goodbye File names will automatically be encrypted when the a crypt remote is used on top of the cache. cache/stats: Get cache stats Show statistics for the cache remote. config/create: create the config for a remote. This takes the following parameters • name - name of remote • parameters - a map of { “key”: “value” } pairs • type - type of the new remote • obscure - optional bool - forces obscuring of passwords • noObscure - optional bool - forces passwords not to be obscured See the config create command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_create/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. config/delete: Delete a remote in the config file. Parameters: • name - name of remote to delete See the config delete command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_delete/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. config/dump: Dumps the config file. Returns a JSON object: - key: value Where keys are remote names and values are the config parameters. See the config dump command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_dump/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. config/get: Get a remote in the config file. Parameters: • name - name of remote to get See the config dump command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_dump/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. config/listremotes: Lists the remotes in the config file. Returns - remotes - array of remote names See the listremotes command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_listremotes/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. config/password: password the config for a remote. This takes the following parameters • name - name of remote • parameters - a map of { “key”: “value” } pairs See the config password command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_password/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. config/providers: Shows how providers are configured in the config file. Returns a JSON object: - providers - array of objects See the config providers command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_providers/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. config/update: update the config for a remote. This takes the following parameters • name - name of remote • parameters - a map of { “key”: “value” } pairs • obscure - optional bool - forces obscuring of passwords • noObscure - optional bool - forces passwords not to be obscured See the config update command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config_update/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. core/bwlimit: Set the bandwidth limit. This sets the bandwidth limit to that passed in. Eg rclone rc core/bwlimit rate=off { "bytesPerSecond": -1, "rate": "off" } rclone rc core/bwlimit rate=1M { "bytesPerSecond": 1048576, "rate": "1M" } If the rate parameter is not supplied then the bandwidth is queried rclone rc core/bwlimit { "bytesPerSecond": 1048576, "rate": "1M" } The format of the parameter is exactly the same as passed to –bwlimit except only one bandwidth may be specified. In either case “rate” is returned as a human readable string, and “bytesPerSecond” is returned as a number. core/command: Run a rclone terminal command over rc. This takes the following parameters • command - a string with the command name • arg - a list of arguments for the backend command • opt - a map of string to string of options Returns • result - result from the backend command • error - set if rclone exits with an error code • returnType - one of (“COMBINED_OUTPUT”, “STREAM”, “STREAM_ONLY_STDOUT”. “STREAM_ONLY_STDERR”) For example rclone rc core/command command=ls -a mydrive:/ -o max-depth=1 rclone rc core/command -a ls -a mydrive:/ -o max-depth=1 Returns { "error": false, "result": "<Raw command line output>" } OR { "error": true, "result": "<Raw command line output>" } Authentication is required for this call. core/gc: Runs a garbage collection. This tells the go runtime to do a garbage collection run. It isn’t necessary to call this normally, but it can be useful for debugging memory problems. core/group-list: Returns list of stats. This returns list of stats groups currently in memory. Returns the following values: { "groups": an array of group names: [ "group1", "group2", ... ] } core/memstats: Returns the memory statistics This returns the memory statistics of the running program. What the values mean are explained in the go docs: https://golang.org/pkg/runtime/#MemStats The most interesting values for most people are: • HeapAlloc: This is the amount of memory rclone is actually using • HeapSys: This is the amount of memory rclone has obtained from the OS • Sys: this is the total amount of memory requested from the OS • It is virtual memory so may include unused memory core/obscure: Obscures a string passed in. Pass a clear string and rclone will obscure it for the config file: - clear - string Returns - obscured - string core/pid: Return PID of current process This returns PID of current process. Useful for stopping rclone process. core/quit: Terminates the app. (optional) Pass an exit code to be used for terminating the app: - exitCode - int core/stats: Returns stats about current transfers. This returns all available stats: rclone rc core/stats If group is not provided then summed up stats for all groups will be returned. Parameters • group - name of the stats group (string) Returns the following values: { "speed": average speed in bytes/sec since start of the process, "bytes": total transferred bytes since the start of the process, "errors": number of errors, "fatalError": whether there has been at least one FatalError, "retryError": whether there has been at least one non-NoRetryError, "checks": number of checked files, "transfers": number of transferred files, "deletes" : number of deleted files, "renames" : number of renamed files, "transferTime" : total time spent on running jobs, "elapsedTime": time in seconds since the start of the process, "lastError": last occurred error, "transferring": an array of currently active file transfers: [ { "bytes": total transferred bytes for this file, "eta": estimated time in seconds until file transfer completion "name": name of the file, "percentage": progress of the file transfer in percent, "speed": average speed over the whole transfer in bytes/sec, "speedAvg": current speed in bytes/sec as an exponentially weighted moving average, "size": size of the file in bytes } ], "checking": an array of names of currently active file checks [] } Values for “transferring”, “checking” and “lastError” are only assigned if data is available. The value for “eta” is null if an eta cannot be determined. core/stats-delete: Delete stats group. This deletes entire stats group Parameters • group - name of the stats group (string) core/stats-reset: Reset stats. This clears counters, errors and finished transfers for all stats or specific stats group if group is provided. Parameters • group - name of the stats group (string) core/transferred: Returns stats about completed transfers. This returns stats about completed transfers: rclone rc core/transferred If group is not provided then completed transfers for all groups will be returned. Note only the last 100 completed transfers are returned. Parameters • group - name of the stats group (string) Returns the following values: { "transferred": an array of completed transfers (including failed ones): [ { "name": name of the file, "size": size of the file in bytes, "bytes": total transferred bytes for this file, "checked": if the transfer is only checked (skipped, deleted), "timestamp": integer representing millisecond unix epoch, "error": string description of the error (empty if successful), "jobid": id of the job that this transfer belongs to } ] } core/version: Shows the current version of rclone and the go runtime. This shows the current version of go and the go runtime • version - rclone version, eg “v1.53.0” • decomposed - version number as [major, minor, patch] • isGit - boolean - true if this was compiled from the git version • isBeta - boolean - true if this is a beta version • os - OS in use as according to Go • arch - cpu architecture in use according to Go • goVersion - version of Go runtime in use debug/set-block-profile-rate: Set runtime.SetBlockProfileRate for blocking profiling. SetBlockProfileRate controls the fraction of goroutine blocking events that are reported in the blocking profile. The profiler aims to sample an average of one blocking event per rate nanoseconds spent blocked. To include every blocking event in the profile, pass rate = 1. To turn off profiling entirely, pass rate <= 0. After calling this you can use this to see the blocking profile: go tool pprof http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/block Parameters • rate - int debug/set-mutex-profile-fraction: Set runtime.SetMutexProfileFraction for mutex profiling. SetMutexProfileFraction controls the fraction of mutex contention events that are reported in the mutex profile. On average 1/rate events are reported. The previous rate is returned. To turn off profiling entirely, pass rate 0. To just read the current rate, pass rate < 0. (For n>1 the details of sampling may change.) Once this is set you can look use this to profile the mutex contention: go tool pprof http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/mutex Parameters • rate - int Results • previousRate - int job/list: Lists the IDs of the running jobs Parameters - None Results • jobids - array of integer job ids job/status: Reads the status of the job ID Parameters • jobid - id of the job (integer) Results • finished - boolean • duration - time in seconds that the job ran for • endTime - time the job finished (eg “2018-10-26T18:50:20.528746884+01:00”) • error - error from the job or empty string for no error • finished - boolean whether the job has finished or not • id - as passed in above • startTime - time the job started (eg “2018-10-26T18:50:20.528336039+01:00”) • success - boolean - true for success false otherwise • output - output of the job as would have been returned if called synchronously • progress - output of the progress related to the underlying job job/stop: Stop the running job Parameters • jobid - id of the job (integer) mount/listmounts: Show current mount points This shows currently mounted points, which can be used for performing an unmount This takes no parameters and returns • mountPoints: list of current mount points Eg rclone rc mount/listmounts Authentication is required for this call. mount/mount: Create a new mount point rclone allows Linux, FreeBSD, macOS and Windows to mount any of Rclone’s cloud storage systems as a file system with FUSE. If no mountType is provided, the priority is given as follows: 1. mount 2.cmount 3.mount2 This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote path to be mounted (required) • mountPoint: valid path on the local machine (required) • mountType: One of the values (mount, cmount, mount2) specifies the mount implementation to use • mountOpt: a JSON object with Mount options in. • vfsOpt: a JSON object with VFS options in. Eg rclone rc mount/mount fs=mydrive: mountPoint=/home/<user>/mountPoint rclone rc mount/mount fs=mydrive: mountPoint=/home/<user>/mountPoint mountType=mount rclone rc mount/mount fs=TestDrive: mountPoint=/mnt/tmp vfsOpt='{"CacheMode": 2}' mountOpt='{"AllowOther": true}' The vfsOpt are as described in options/get and can be seen in the the “vfs” section when running and the mountOpt can be seen in the “mount” section. rclone rc options/get Authentication is required for this call. mount/types: Show all possible mount types This shows all possible mount types and returns them as a list. This takes no parameters and returns • mountTypes: list of mount types The mount types are strings like “mount”, “mount2”, “cmount” and can be passed to mount/mount as the mountType parameter. Eg rclone rc mount/types Authentication is required for this call. mount/unmount: Unmount selected active mount rclone allows Linux, FreeBSD, macOS and Windows to mount any of Rclone’s cloud storage systems as a file system with FUSE. This takes the following parameters • mountPoint: valid path on the local machine where the mount was created (required) Eg rclone rc mount/unmount mountPoint=/home/<user>/mountPoint Authentication is required for this call. mount/unmountall: Show current mount points This shows currently mounted points, which can be used for performing an unmount This takes no parameters and returns error if unmount does not succeed. Eg rclone rc mount/unmountall Authentication is required for this call. operations/about: Return the space used on the remote This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” The result is as returned from rclone about –json See the about command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_size/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. operations/cleanup: Remove trashed files in the remote or path This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” See the cleanup command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_cleanup/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. operations/copyfile: Copy a file from source remote to destination remote This takes the following parameters • srcFs - a remote name string eg “drive:” for the source • srcRemote - a path within that remote eg “file.txt” for the source • dstFs - a remote name string eg “drive2:” for the destination • dstRemote - a path within that remote eg “file2.txt” for the destination Authentication is required for this call. operations/copyurl: Copy the URL to the object This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” • remote - a path within that remote eg “dir” • url - string, URL to read from • autoFilename - boolean, set to true to retrieve destination file name from url See the copyurl command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_copyurl/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. operations/delete: Remove files in the path This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” See the delete command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_delete/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. operations/deletefile: Remove the single file pointed to This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” • remote - a path within that remote eg “dir” See the deletefile command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_deletefile/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. operations/fsinfo: Return information about the remote This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” This returns info about the remote passed in; { // optional features and whether they are available or not "Features": { "About": true, "BucketBased": false, "CanHaveEmptyDirectories": true, "CaseInsensitive": false, "ChangeNotify": false, "CleanUp": false, "Copy": false, "DirCacheFlush": false, "DirMove": true, "DuplicateFiles": false, "GetTier": false, "ListR": false, "MergeDirs": false, "Move": true, "OpenWriterAt": true, "PublicLink": false, "Purge": true, "PutStream": true, "PutUnchecked": false, "ReadMimeType": false, "ServerSideAcrossConfigs": false, "SetTier": false, "SetWrapper": false, "UnWrap": false, "WrapFs": false, "WriteMimeType": false }, // Names of hashes available "Hashes": [ "MD5", "SHA-1", "DropboxHash", "QuickXorHash" ], "Name": "local", // Name as created "Precision": 1, // Precision of timestamps in ns "Root": "/", // Path as created "String": "Local file system at /" // how the remote will appear in logs } This command does not have a command line equivalent so use this instead: rclone rc --loopback operations/fsinfo fs=remote: operations/list: List the given remote and path in JSON format This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” • remote - a path within that remote eg “dir” • opt - a dictionary of options to control the listing (optional) • recurse - If set recurse directories • noModTime - If set return modification time • showEncrypted - If set show decrypted names • showOrigIDs - If set show the IDs for each item if known • showHash - If set return a dictionary of hashes The result is • list • This is an array of objects as described in the lsjson command See the lsjson command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_lsjson/) for more information on the above and examples. Authentication is required for this call. operations/mkdir: Make a destination directory or container This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” • remote - a path within that remote eg “dir” See the mkdir command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_mkdir/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. operations/movefile: Move a file from source remote to destination remote This takes the following parameters • srcFs - a remote name string eg “drive:” for the source • srcRemote - a path within that remote eg “file.txt” for the source • dstFs - a remote name string eg “drive2:” for the destination • dstRemote - a path within that remote eg “file2.txt” for the destination Authentication is required for this call. operations/publiclink: Create or retrieve a public link to the given file or folder. This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” • remote - a path within that remote eg “dir” • unlink - boolean - if set removes the link rather than adding it (optional) • expire - string - the expiry time of the link eg “1d” (optional) Returns • url - URL of the resource See the link command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_link/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. operations/purge: Remove a directory or container and all of its contents This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” • remote - a path within that remote eg “dir” See the purge command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_purge/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. operations/rmdir: Remove an empty directory or container This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” • remote - a path within that remote eg “dir” See the rmdir command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_rmdir/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. operations/rmdirs: Remove all the empty directories in the path This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” • remote - a path within that remote eg “dir” • leaveRoot - boolean, set to true not to delete the root See the rmdirs command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_rmdirs/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. operations/size: Count the number of bytes and files in remote This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:path/to/dir” Returns • count - number of files • bytes - number of bytes in those files See the size command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_size/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. operations/uploadfile: Upload file using multiform/form-data This takes the following parameters • fs - a remote name string eg “drive:” • remote - a path within that remote eg “dir” • each part in body represents a file to be uploaded See the uploadfile command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_uploadfile/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. options/blocks: List all the option blocks Returns - options - a list of the options block names options/get: Get all the options Returns an object where keys are option block names and values are an object with the current option values in. This shows the internal names of the option within rclone which should map to the external options very easily with a few exceptions. options/set: Set an option Parameters • option block name containing an object with • key: value Repeated as often as required. Only supply the options you wish to change. If an option is unknown it will be silently ignored. Not all options will have an effect when changed like this. For example: This sets DEBUG level logs (-vv) rclone rc options/set --json '{"main": {"LogLevel": 8}}' And this sets INFO level logs (-v) rclone rc options/set --json '{"main": {"LogLevel": 7}}' And this sets NOTICE level logs (normal without -v) rclone rc options/set --json '{"main": {"LogLevel": 6}}' pluginsctl/addPlugin: Add a plugin using url used for adding a plugin to the webgui This takes the following parameters • url: http url of the github repo where the plugin is hosted (http://github.com/rclone/rclone-webui-react) Eg rclone rc pluginsctl/addPlugin Authentication is required for this call. pluginsctl/getPluginsForType: Get plugins with type criteria This shows all possible plugins by a mime type This takes the following parameters • type: supported mime type by a loaded plugin eg (video/mp4, audio/mp3) • pluginType: filter plugins based on their type eg (DASHBOARD, FILE_HANDLER, TERMINAL) and returns • loadedPlugins: list of current production plugins • testPlugins: list of temporarily loaded development plugins, usually running on a different server. Eg rclone rc pluginsctl/getPluginsForType type=video/mp4 Authentication is required for this call. pluginsctl/listPlugins: Get the list of currently loaded plugins This allows you to get the currently enabled plugins and their details. This takes no parameters and returns • loadedPlugins: list of current production plugins • testPlugins: list of temporarily loaded development plugins, usually running on a different server. Eg rclone rc pluginsctl/listPlugins Authentication is required for this call. pluginsctl/listTestPlugins: Show currently loaded test plugins allows listing of test plugins with the rclone.test set to true in package.json of the plugin This takes no parameters and returns • loadedTestPlugins: list of currently available test plugins Eg rclone rc pluginsctl/listTestPlugins Authentication is required for this call. pluginsctl/removePlugin: Remove a loaded plugin This allows you to remove a plugin using it’s name This takes parameters • name: name of the plugin in the format author/plugin_name Eg rclone rc pluginsctl/removePlugin name=rclone/video-plugin Authentication is required for this call. pluginsctl/removeTestPlugin: Remove a test plugin This allows you to remove a plugin using it’s name This takes the following parameters • name: name of the plugin in the format author/plugin_name Eg rclone rc pluginsctl/removeTestPlugin name=rclone/rclone-webui-react Authentication is required for this call. rc/error: This returns an error This returns an error with the input as part of its error string. Useful for testing error handling. rc/list: List all the registered remote control commands This lists all the registered remote control commands as a JSON map in the commands response. rc/noop: Echo the input to the output parameters This echoes the input parameters to the output parameters for testing purposes. It can be used to check that rclone is still alive and to check that parameter passing is working properly. rc/noopauth: Echo the input to the output parameters requiring auth This echoes the input parameters to the output parameters for testing purposes. It can be used to check that rclone is still alive and to check that parameter passing is working properly. Authentication is required for this call. sync/copy: copy a directory from source remote to destination remote This takes the following parameters • srcFs - a remote name string eg “drive:src” for the source • dstFs - a remote name string eg “drive:dst” for the destination See the copy command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_copy/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. sync/move: move a directory from source remote to destination remote This takes the following parameters • srcFs - a remote name string eg “drive:src” for the source • dstFs - a remote name string eg “drive:dst” for the destination • deleteEmptySrcDirs - delete empty src directories if set See the move command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_move/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. sync/sync: sync a directory from source remote to destination remote This takes the following parameters • srcFs - a remote name string eg “drive:src” for the source • dstFs - a remote name string eg “drive:dst” for the destination See the sync command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_sync/) command for more information on the above. Authentication is required for this call. vfs/forget: Forget files or directories in the directory cache. This forgets the paths in the directory cache causing them to be re-read from the remote when needed. If no paths are passed in then it will forget all the paths in the directory cache. rclone rc vfs/forget Otherwise pass files or dirs in as file=path or dir=path. Any parameter key starting with file will forget that file and any starting with dir will forget that dir, eg rclone rc vfs/forget file=hello file2=goodbye dir=home/junk This command takes an “fs” parameter. If this parameter is not supplied and if there is only one VFS in use then that VFS will be used. If there is more than one VFS in use then the “fs” parameter must be supplied. vfs/list: List active VFSes. This lists the active VFSes. It returns a list under the key “vfses” where the values are the VFS names that could be passed to the other VFS commands in the “fs” parameter. vfs/poll-interval: Get the status or update the value of the poll-interval option. Without any parameter given this returns the current status of the poll-interval setting. When the interval=duration parameter is set, the poll-interval value is updated and the polling function is notified. Setting interval=0 disables poll-interval. rclone rc vfs/poll-interval interval=5m The timeout=duration parameter can be used to specify a time to wait for the current poll function to apply the new value. If timeout is less or equal 0, which is the default, wait indefinitely. The new poll-interval value will only be active when the timeout is not reached. If poll-interval is updated or disabled temporarily, some changes might not get picked up by the polling function, depending on the used remote. This command takes an “fs” parameter. If this parameter is not supplied and if there is only one VFS in use then that VFS will be used. If there is more than one VFS in use then the “fs” parameter must be supplied. vfs/refresh: Refresh the directory cache. This reads the directories for the specified paths and freshens the directory cache. If no paths are passed in then it will refresh the root directory. rclone rc vfs/refresh Otherwise pass directories in as dir=path. Any parameter key starting with dir will refresh that directory, eg rclone rc vfs/refresh dir=home/junk dir2=data/misc If the parameter recursive=true is given the whole directory tree will get refreshed. This refresh will use –fast-list if enabled. This command takes an “fs” parameter. If this parameter is not supplied and if there is only one VFS in use then that VFS will be used. If there is more than one VFS in use then the “fs” parameter must be supplied. Accessing the remote control via HTTP Rclone implements a simple HTTP based protocol. Each endpoint takes an JSON object and returns a JSON object or an error. The JSON objects are essentially a map of string names to values. All calls must made using POST. The input objects can be supplied using URL parameters, POST parameters or by supplying “Content-Type: application/json” and a JSON blob in the body. There are examples of these below using curl. The response will be a JSON blob in the body of the response. This is formatted to be reasonably human readable. Error returns If an error occurs then there will be an HTTP error status (eg 500) and the body of the response will contain a JSON encoded error object, eg { "error": "Expecting string value for key \"remote\" (was float64)", "input": { "fs": "/tmp", "remote": 3 }, "status": 400 "path": "operations/rmdir", } The keys in the error response are - error - error string - input - the input parameters to the call - status - the HTTP status code - path - the path of the call CORS The sever implements basic CORS support and allows all origins for that. The response to a preflight OPTIONS request will echo the requested “Access-Control-Request-Headers” back. Using POST with URL parameters only curl -X POST 'http://localhost:5572/rc/noop?potato=1&sausage=2' Response { "potato": "1", "sausage": "2" } Here is what an error response looks like: curl -X POST 'http://localhost:5572/rc/error?potato=1&sausage=2' { "error": "arbitrary error on input map[potato:1 sausage:2]", "input": { "potato": "1", "sausage": "2" } } Note that curl doesn’t return errors to the shell unless you use the -f option $ curl -f -X POST 'http://localhost:5572/rc/error?potato=1&sausage=2' curl: (22) The requested URL returned error: 400 Bad Request $ echo $? 22 Using POST with a form curl --data "potato=1" --data "sausage=2" http://localhost:5572/rc/noop Response { "potato": "1", "sausage": "2" } Note that you can combine these with URL parameters too with the POST parameters taking precedence. curl --data "potato=1" --data "sausage=2" "http://localhost:5572/rc/noop?rutabaga=3&sausage=4" Response { "potato": "1", "rutabaga": "3", "sausage": "4" } Using POST with a JSON blob curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{"potato":2,"sausage":1}' http://localhost:5572/rc/noop response { "password": "xyz", "username": "xyz" } This can be combined with URL parameters too if required. The JSON blob takes precedence. curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{"potato":2,"sausage":1}' 'http://localhost:5572/rc/noop?rutabaga=3&potato=4' { "potato": 2, "rutabaga": "3", "sausage": 1 } Debugging rclone with pprof If you use the --rc flag this will also enable the use of the go profiling tools on the same port. To use these, first install go (https://golang.org/doc/install). Debugging memory use To profile rclone’s memory use you can run: go tool pprof -web http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/heap This should open a page in your browser showing what is using what memory. You can also use the -text flag to produce a textual summary $ go tool pprof -text http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/heap Showing nodes accounting for 1537.03kB, 100% of 1537.03kB total flat flat% sum% cum cum% 1024.03kB 66.62% 66.62% 1024.03kB 66.62% github.com/rclone/rclone/vendor/golang.org/x/net/http2/hpack.addDecoderNode 513kB 33.38% 100% 513kB 33.38% net/http.newBufioWriterSize 0 0% 100% 1024.03kB 66.62% github.com/rclone/rclone/cmd/all.init 0 0% 100% 1024.03kB 66.62% github.com/rclone/rclone/cmd/serve.init 0 0% 100% 1024.03kB 66.62% github.com/rclone/rclone/cmd/serve/restic.init 0 0% 100% 1024.03kB 66.62% github.com/rclone/rclone/vendor/golang.org/x/net/http2.init 0 0% 100% 1024.03kB 66.62% github.com/rclone/rclone/vendor/golang.org/x/net/http2/hpack.init 0 0% 100% 1024.03kB 66.62% github.com/rclone/rclone/vendor/golang.org/x/net/http2/hpack.init.0 0 0% 100% 1024.03kB 66.62% main.init 0 0% 100% 513kB 33.38% net/http.(*conn).readRequest 0 0% 100% 513kB 33.38% net/http.(*conn).serve 0 0% 100% 1024.03kB 66.62% runtime.main Debugging go routine leaks Memory leaks are most often caused by go routine leaks keeping memory alive which should have been garbage collected. See all active go routines using curl http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/goroutine?debug=1 Or go to http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/goroutine?debug=1 in your browser. Other profiles to look at You can see a summary of profiles available at http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/ Here is how to use some of them: • Memory: go tool pprof http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/heap • Go routines: curl http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/goroutine?debug=1 • 30-second CPU profile: go tool pprof http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/profile • 5-second execution trace: wget http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/trace?seconds=5 • Goroutine blocking profile • Enable first with: rclone rc debug/set-block-profile-rate rate=1 (docs) • go tool pprof http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/block • Contended mutexes: • Enable first with: rclone rc debug/set-mutex-profile-fraction rate=1 (docs) • go tool pprof http://localhost:5572/debug/pprof/mutex See the net/http/pprof docs (https://golang.org/pkg/net/http/pprof/) for more info on how to use the profiling and for a general overview see the Go team’s blog post on profiling go programs (https://blog.golang.org/profiling-go-programs). The profiling hook is zero overhead unless it is used (https://stackoverflow.com/q/26545159/164234).
Overview of cloud storage systems
Each cloud storage system is slightly different. Rclone attempts to provide a unified interface to them, but some underlying differences show through. Features Here is an overview of the major features of each cloud storage system. Name Hash ModTime Case Duplicate MIME Type Insensitive Files ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── 1Fichier Whirlpool No No Yes R Amazon Drive MD5 No Yes No R Amazon S3 MD5 Yes No No R/W Backblaze B2 SHA1 Yes No No R/W Box SHA1 Yes Yes No - Citrix MD5 Yes Yes No - ShareFile Dropbox DBHASH † Yes Yes No - FTP - No No No - Google Cloud MD5 Yes No No R/W Storage Google Drive MD5 Yes No Yes R/W Google Photos - No No Yes R HTTP - No No No R Hubic MD5 Yes No No R/W Jottacloud MD5 Yes Yes No R/W Koofr MD5 No Yes No - Mail.ru Cloud Mailru ‡‡‡ Yes Yes No - Mega - No No Yes - Memory MD5 Yes No No - Microsoft MD5 Yes No No R/W Azure Blob Storage Microsoft SHA1 ‡‡ Yes Yes No R OneDrive OpenDrive MD5 Yes Yes Partial * - OpenStack MD5 Yes No No R/W Swift pCloud MD5, SHA1 Yes No No W premiumize.me - No Yes No R put.io CRC-32 Yes No Yes R QingStor MD5 No No No R/W Seafile - No No No - SFTP MD5, SHA1 ‡ Yes Depends No - SugarSync - No No No - Tardigrade - Yes No No - WebDAV MD5, SHA1 †† Yes ††† Depends No - Yandex Disk MD5 Yes No No R/W The local All Yes Depends No - filesystem Hash The cloud storage system supports various hash types of the objects. The hashes are used when transferring data as an integrity check and can be specifically used with the --checksum flag in syncs and in the check command. To use the verify checksums when transferring between cloud storage systems they must support a common hash type. † Note that Dropbox supports its own custom hash (https://www.dropbox.com/developers/reference/content-hash). This is an SHA256 sum of all the 4MB block SHA256s. ‡ SFTP supports checksums if the same login has shell access and md5sum or sha1sum as well as echo are in the remote’s PATH. †† WebDAV supports hashes when used with Owncloud and Nextcloud only. ††† WebDAV supports modtimes when used with Owncloud and Nextcloud only. ‡‡ Microsoft OneDrive Personal supports SHA1 hashes, whereas OneDrive for business and SharePoint server support Microsoft’s own QuickXorHash (https://docs.microsoft.com/en- us/onedrive/developer/code-snippets/quickxorhash). ‡‡‡ Mail.ru uses its own modified SHA1 hash ModTime The cloud storage system supports setting modification times on objects. If it does then this enables a using the modification times as part of the sync. If not then only the size will be checked by default, though the MD5SUM can be checked with the --checksum flag. All cloud storage systems support some kind of date on the object and these will be set when transferring from the cloud storage system. Case Insensitive If a cloud storage systems is case sensitive then it is possible to have two files which differ only in case, eg file.txt and FILE.txt. If a cloud storage system is case insensitive then that isn’t possible. This can cause problems when syncing between a case insensitive system and a case sensitive system. The symptom of this is that no matter how many times you run the sync it never completes fully. The local filesystem and SFTP may or may not be case sensitive depending on OS. • Windows - usually case insensitive, though case is preserved • OSX - usually case insensitive, though it is possible to format case sensitive • Linux - usually case sensitive, but there are case insensitive file systems (eg FAT formatted USB keys) Most of the time this doesn’t cause any problems as people tend to avoid files whose name differs only by case even on case sensitive systems. Duplicate files If a cloud storage system allows duplicate files then it can have two objects with the same name. This confuses rclone greatly when syncing - use the rclone dedupe command to rename or remove duplicates. * Opendrive does not support creation of duplicate files using their web client interface or other stock clients, but the underlying storage platform has been determined to allow duplicate files, and it is possible to create them with rclone. It may be that this is a mistake or an unsupported feature. Restricted filenames Some cloud storage systems might have restrictions on the characters that are usable in file or directory names. When rclone detects such a name during a file upload, it will transparently replace the restricted characters with similar looking Unicode characters. This process is designed to avoid ambiguous file names as much as possible and allow to move files between many cloud storage systems transparently. The name shown by rclone to the user or during log output will only contain a minimal set of replaced characters to ensure correct formatting and not necessarily the actual name used on the cloud storage. This transformation is reversed when downloading a file or parsing rclone arguments. For example, when uploading a file named my file?.txt to Onedrive will be displayed as my file?.txt on the console, but stored as my file?.txt (the ? gets replaced by the similar looking ? character) to Onedrive. The reverse transformation allows to read a fileunusual/name.txt from Google Drive, by passing the name unusual/name.txt (the / needs to be replaced by the similar looking / character) on the command line. Default restricted characters The table below shows the characters that are replaced by default. When a replacement character is found in a filename, this character will be escaped with the ‛ character to avoid ambiguous file names. (e.g. a file named ␀.txt would shown as ‛␀.txt) Each cloud storage backend can use a different set of characters, which will be specified in the documentation for each backend. Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── NUL 0x00 ␀ SOH 0x01 ␁ STX 0x02 ␂ ETX 0x03 ␃ EOT 0x04 ␄ ENQ 0x05 ␅ ACK 0x06 ␆ BEL 0x07 ␇ BS 0x08 ␈ HT 0x09 ␉ LF 0x0A ␊ VT 0x0B ␋ FF 0x0C ␌ CR 0x0D ␍ SO 0x0E ␎ SI 0x0F ␏ DLE 0x10 ␐ DC1 0x11 ␑ DC2 0x12 ␒ DC3 0x13 ␓ DC4 0x14 ␔ NAK 0x15 ␕ SYN 0x16 ␖ ETB 0x17 ␗ CAN 0x18 ␘ EM 0x19 ␙ SUB 0x1A ␚ ESC 0x1B ␛ FS 0x1C ␜ GS 0x1D ␝ RS 0x1E ␞ US 0x1F ␟ / 0x2F / DEL 0x7F ␡ The default encoding will also encode these file names as they are problematic with many cloud storage systems. File name Replacement ──────────────────────── . . .. .. Invalid UTF-8 bytes Some backends only support a sequence of well formed UTF-8 bytes as file or directory names. In this case all invalid UTF-8 bytes will be replaced with a quoted representation of the byte value to allow uploading a file to such a backend. For example, the invalid byte 0xFE will be encoded as ‛FE. A common source of invalid UTF-8 bytes are local filesystems, that store names in a different encoding than UTF-8 or UTF-16, like latin1. See the local filenames (https://rclone.org/local/#filenames) section for details. Encoding option Most backends have an encoding options, specified as a flag --backend-encoding where backend is the name of the backend, or as a config parameter encoding (you’ll need to select the Advanced config in rclone config to see it). This will have default value which encodes and decodes characters in such a way as to preserve the maximum number of characters (see above). However this can be incorrect in some scenarios, for example if you have a Windows file system with characters such as * and ? that you want to remain as those characters on the remote rather than being translated to * and ?. The --backend-encoding flags allow you to change that. You can disable the encoding completely with --backend-encoding None or set encoding = None in the config file. Encoding takes a comma separated list of encodings. You can see the list of all available characters by passing an invalid value to this flag, eg --local-encoding "help" and rclone help flags encoding will show you the defaults for the backends. Encoding Characters ───────────────────────────────────────────────── Asterisk * BackQuote ` BackSlash \ Colon : CrLf CR 0x0D, LF 0x0A Ctl All control characters 0x00-0x1F Del DEL 0x7F Dollar $ Dot . DoubleQuote " Hash # InvalidUtf8 An invalid UTF-8 character (eg latin1) LeftCrLfHtVt CR 0x0D, LF 0x0A,HT 0x09, VT 0x0B on the left of a string LeftPeriod . on the left of a string LeftSpace SPACE on the left of a string LeftTilde ~ on the left of a string LtGt <, > None No characters are encoded Percent % Pipe | Question ? RightCrLfHtVt CR 0x0D, LF 0x0A, HT 0x09, VT 0x0B on the right of a string RightPeriod . on the right of a string RightSpace SPACE on the right of a string SingleQuote ' Slash / To take a specific example, the FTP backend’s default encoding is --ftp-encoding "Slash,Del,Ctl,RightSpace,Dot" However, let’s say the FTP server is running on Windows and can’t have any of the invalid Windows characters in file names. You are backing up Linux servers to this FTP server which do have those characters in file names. So you would add the Windows set which are Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,BackSlash,Ctl,RightSpace,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8,Dot to the existing ones, giving: Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,BackSlash,Ctl,RightSpace,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8,Dot,Del,RightSpace This can be specified using the --ftp-encoding flag or using an encoding parameter in the config file. Or let’s say you have a Windows server but you want to preserve * and ?, you would then have this as the encoding (the Windows encoding minus Asterisk and Question). Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Pipe,BackSlash,Ctl,RightSpace,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8,Dot This can be specified using the --local-encoding flag or using an encoding parameter in the config file. MIME Type MIME types (also known as media types) classify types of documents using a simple text classification, eg text/html or application/pdf. Some cloud storage systems support reading (R) the MIME type of objects and some support writing (W) the MIME type of objects. The MIME type can be important if you are serving files directly to HTTP from the storage system. If you are copying from a remote which supports reading (R) to a remote which supports writing (W) then rclone will preserve the MIME types. Otherwise they will be guessed from the extension, or the remote itself may assign the MIME type. Optional Features All the remotes support a basic set of features, but there are some optional features supported by some remotes used to make some operations more efficient. Name Purge Copy Move DirMove CleanUp ListR StreamUpload LinkSharing About EmptyDir ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── 1Fichier No No No No No No No No No Yes Amazon Yes No Yes Yes No #575 No No No #2178 No Yes Drive (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/575) (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) Amazon No Yes No No Yes Yes Yes No #2178 No No S3 (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) Backblaze No Yes No No Yes Yes Yes Yes No No B2 Box Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes ‡‡ No Yes Yes No Yes Citrix Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes No No Yes ShareFile Dropbox Yes Yes Yes Yes No #575 No Yes Yes Yes Yes (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/575) FTP No No Yes Yes No No Yes No #2178 No Yes (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) Google Yes Yes No No No Yes Yes No #2178 No No Cloud (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) Storage Google Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Drive Google No No No No No No No No No No Photos HTTP No No No No No No No No #2178 No Yes (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) Hubic Yes † Yes No No No Yes Yes No #2178 Yes No (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) Jottacloud Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes Mail.ru Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes Yes Yes Cloud Mega Yes No Yes Yes Yes No No No #2178 Yes Yes (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) Memory No Yes No No No Yes Yes No No No Microsoft Yes Yes No No No Yes Yes No #2178 No No Azure Blob (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) Storage Microsoft Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes Yes Yes OneDrive OpenDrive Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No No Yes OpenStack Yes † Yes No No No Yes Yes No #2178 Yes No Swift (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) pCloud Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes Yes Yes premiumize.me Yes No Yes Yes No No No Yes Yes Yes put.io Yes No Yes Yes Yes No Yes No #2178 Yes Yes (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) QingStor No Yes No No Yes Yes No No #2178 No No (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) Seafile Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes SFTP No No Yes Yes No No Yes No #2178 Yes Yes (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) SugarSync Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No Yes Tardigrade Yes † No No No No Yes Yes No No No WebDAV Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes ‡ No #2178 Yes Yes (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2178) Yandex Disk Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes The local Yes No Yes Yes No No Yes No Yes Yes filesystem Purge This deletes a directory quicker than just deleting all the files in the directory. † Note Swift, Hubic, and Tardigrade implement this in order to delete directory markers but they don’t actually have a quicker way of deleting files other than deleting them individually. ‡ StreamUpload is not supported with Nextcloud Copy Used when copying an object to and from the same remote. This known as a server side copy so you can copy a file without downloading it and uploading it again. It is used if you use rclone copy or rclone move if the remote doesn’t support Move directly. If the server doesn’t support Copy directly then for copy operations the file is downloaded then re-uploaded. Move Used when moving/renaming an object on the same remote. This is known as a server side move of a file. This is used in rclone move if the server doesn’t support DirMove. If the server isn’t capable of Move then rclone simulates it with Copy then delete. If the server doesn’t support Copy then rclone will download the file and re-upload it. DirMove This is used to implement rclone move to move a directory if possible. If it isn’t then it will use Move on each file (which falls back to Copy then download and upload - see Move section). CleanUp This is used for emptying the trash for a remote by rclone cleanup. If the server can’t do CleanUp then rclone cleanup will return an error. ‡‡ Note that while Box implements this it has to delete every file idividually so it will be slower than emptying the trash via the WebUI ListR The remote supports a recursive list to list all the contents beneath a directory quickly. This enables the --fast-list flag to work. See the rclone docs (https://rclone.org/docs/#fast-list) for more details. StreamUpload Some remotes allow files to be uploaded without knowing the file size in advance. This allows certain operations to work without spooling the file to local disk first, e.g. rclone rcat. LinkSharing Sets the necessary permissions on a file or folder and prints a link that allows others to access them, even if they don’t have an account on the particular cloud provider. About This is used to fetch quota information from the remote, like bytes used/free/quota and bytes used in the trash. This is also used to return the space used, available for rclone mount. If the server can’t do About then rclone about will return an error. EmptyDir The remote supports empty directories. See Limitations (https://rclone.org/bugs/#limitations) for details. Most Object/Bucket based remotes do not support this.
Global Flags
This describes the global flags available to every rclone command split into two groups, non backend and backend flags. Non Backend Flags These flags are available for every command. --ask-password Allow prompt for password for encrypted configuration. (default true) --auto-confirm If enabled, do not request console confirmation. --backup-dir string Make backups into hierarchy based in DIR. --bind string Local address to bind to for outgoing connections, IPv4, IPv6 or name. --buffer-size SizeSuffix In memory buffer size when reading files for each --transfer. (default 16M) --bwlimit BwTimetable Bandwidth limit in kBytes/s, or use suffix b|k|M|G or a full timetable. --bwlimit-file BwTimetable Bandwidth limit per file in kBytes/s, or use suffix b|k|M|G or a full timetable. --ca-cert string CA certificate used to verify servers --cache-dir string Directory rclone will use for caching. (default "$HOME/.cache/rclone") --check-first Do all the checks before starting transfers. --checkers int Number of checkers to run in parallel. (default 8) -c, --checksum Skip based on checksum (if available) & size, not mod-time & size --client-cert string Client SSL certificate (PEM) for mutual TLS auth --client-key string Client SSL private key (PEM) for mutual TLS auth --compare-dest string Include additional server-side path during comparison. --config string Config file. (default "$HOME/.config/rclone/rclone.conf") --contimeout duration Connect timeout (default 1m0s) --copy-dest string Implies --compare-dest but also copies files from path into destination. --cpuprofile string Write cpu profile to file --cutoff-mode string Mode to stop transfers when reaching the max transfer limit HARD|SOFT|CAUTIOUS (default "HARD") --delete-after When synchronizing, delete files on destination after transferring (default) --delete-before When synchronizing, delete files on destination before transferring --delete-during When synchronizing, delete files during transfer --delete-excluded Delete files on dest excluded from sync --disable string Disable a comma separated list of features. Use help to see a list. -n, --dry-run Do a trial run with no permanent changes --dump DumpFlags List of items to dump from: headers,bodies,requests,responses,auth,filters,goroutines,openfiles --dump-bodies Dump HTTP headers and bodies - may contain sensitive info --dump-headers Dump HTTP headers - may contain sensitive info --error-on-no-transfer Sets exit code 9 if no files are transferred, useful in scripts --exclude stringArray Exclude files matching pattern --exclude-from stringArray Read exclude patterns from file (use - to read from stdin) --exclude-if-present string Exclude directories if filename is present --expect-continue-timeout duration Timeout when using expect / 100-continue in HTTP (default 1s) --fast-list Use recursive list if available. Uses more memory but fewer transactions. --files-from stringArray Read list of source-file names from file (use - to read from stdin) --files-from-raw stringArray Read list of source-file names from file without any processing of lines (use - to read from stdin) -f, --filter stringArray Add a file-filtering rule --filter-from stringArray Read filtering patterns from a file (use - to read from stdin) --header stringArray Set HTTP header for all transactions --header-download stringArray Set HTTP header for download transactions --header-upload stringArray Set HTTP header for upload transactions --ignore-case Ignore case in filters (case insensitive) --ignore-case-sync Ignore case when synchronizing --ignore-checksum Skip post copy check of checksums. --ignore-errors delete even if there are I/O errors --ignore-existing Skip all files that exist on destination --ignore-size Ignore size when skipping use mod-time or checksum. -I, --ignore-times Don't skip files that match size and time - transfer all files --immutable Do not modify files. Fail if existing files have been modified. --include stringArray Include files matching pattern --include-from stringArray Read include patterns from file (use - to read from stdin) -i, --interactive Enable interactive mode --log-file string Log everything to this file --log-format string Comma separated list of log format options (default "date,time") --log-level string Log level DEBUG|INFO|NOTICE|ERROR (default "NOTICE") --low-level-retries int Number of low level retries to do. (default 10) --max-age Duration Only transfer files younger than this in s or suffix ms|s|m|h|d|w|M|y (default off) --max-backlog int Maximum number of objects in sync or check backlog. (default 10000) --max-delete int When synchronizing, limit the number of deletes (default -1) --max-depth int If set limits the recursion depth to this. (default -1) --max-duration duration Maximum duration rclone will transfer data for. --max-size SizeSuffix Only transfer files smaller than this in k or suffix b|k|M|G (default off) --max-stats-groups int Maximum number of stats groups to keep in memory. On max oldest is discarded. (default 1000) --max-transfer SizeSuffix Maximum size of data to transfer. (default off) --memprofile string Write memory profile to file --min-age Duration Only transfer files older than this in s or suffix ms|s|m|h|d|w|M|y (default off) --min-size SizeSuffix Only transfer files bigger than this in k or suffix b|k|M|G (default off) --modify-window duration Max time diff to be considered the same (default 1ns) --multi-thread-cutoff SizeSuffix Use multi-thread downloads for files above this size. (default 250M) --multi-thread-streams int Max number of streams to use for multi-thread downloads. (default 4) --no-check-certificate Do not verify the server SSL certificate. Insecure. --no-check-dest Don't check the destination, copy regardless. --no-gzip-encoding Don't set Accept-Encoding: gzip. --no-traverse Don't traverse destination file system on copy. --no-unicode-normalization Don't normalize unicode characters in filenames. --no-update-modtime Don't update destination mod-time if files identical. --order-by string Instructions on how to order the transfers, eg 'size,descending' --password-command SpaceSepList Command for supplying password for encrypted configuration. -P, --progress Show progress during transfer. -q, --quiet Print as little stuff as possible --rc Enable the remote control server. --rc-addr string IPaddress:Port or :Port to bind server to. (default "localhost:5572") --rc-allow-origin string Set the allowed origin for CORS. --rc-baseurl string Prefix for URLs - leave blank for root. --rc-cert string SSL PEM key (concatenation of certificate and CA certificate) --rc-client-ca string Client certificate authority to verify clients with --rc-enable-metrics Enable prometheus metrics on /metrics --rc-files string Path to local files to serve on the HTTP server. --rc-htpasswd string htpasswd file - if not provided no authentication is done --rc-job-expire-duration duration expire finished async jobs older than this value (default 1m0s) --rc-job-expire-interval duration interval to check for expired async jobs (default 10s) --rc-key string SSL PEM Private key --rc-max-header-bytes int Maximum size of request header (default 4096) --rc-no-auth Don't require auth for certain methods. --rc-pass string Password for authentication. --rc-realm string realm for authentication (default "rclone") --rc-serve Enable the serving of remote objects. --rc-server-read-timeout duration Timeout for server reading data (default 1h0m0s) --rc-server-write-timeout duration Timeout for server writing data (default 1h0m0s) --rc-template string User Specified Template. --rc-user string User name for authentication. --rc-web-fetch-url string URL to fetch the releases for webgui. (default "https://api.github.com/repos/rclone/rclone-webui-react/releases/latest") --rc-web-gui Launch WebGUI on localhost --rc-web-gui-force-update Force update to latest version of web gui --rc-web-gui-no-open-browser Don't open the browser automatically --rc-web-gui-update Check and update to latest version of web gui --refresh-times Refresh the modtime of remote files. --retries int Retry operations this many times if they fail (default 3) --retries-sleep duration Interval between retrying operations if they fail, e.g 500ms, 60s, 5m. (0 to disable) --size-only Skip based on size only, not mod-time or checksum --stats duration Interval between printing stats, e.g 500ms, 60s, 5m. (0 to disable) (default 1m0s) --stats-file-name-length int Max file name length in stats. 0 for no limit (default 45) --stats-log-level string Log level to show --stats output DEBUG|INFO|NOTICE|ERROR (default "INFO") --stats-one-line Make the stats fit on one line. --stats-one-line-date Enables --stats-one-line and add current date/time prefix. --stats-one-line-date-format string Enables --stats-one-line-date and uses custom formatted date. Enclose date string in double quotes ("). See https://golang.org/pkg/time/#Time.Format --stats-unit string Show data rate in stats as either 'bits' or 'bytes'/s (default "bytes") --streaming-upload-cutoff SizeSuffix Cutoff for switching to chunked upload if file size is unknown. Upload starts after reaching cutoff or when file ends. (default 100k) --suffix string Suffix to add to changed files. --suffix-keep-extension Preserve the extension when using --suffix. --syslog Use Syslog for logging --syslog-facility string Facility for syslog, eg KERN,USER,... (default "DAEMON") --timeout duration IO idle timeout (default 5m0s) --tpslimit float Limit HTTP transactions per second to this. --tpslimit-burst int Max burst of transactions for --tpslimit. (default 1) --track-renames When synchronizing, track file renames and do a server side move if possible --track-renames-strategy string Strategies to use when synchronizing using track-renames hash|modtime|leaf (default "hash") --transfers int Number of file transfers to run in parallel. (default 4) -u, --update Skip files that are newer on the destination. --use-cookies Enable session cookiejar. --use-json-log Use json log format. --use-mmap Use mmap allocator (see docs). --use-server-modtime Use server modified time instead of object metadata --user-agent string Set the user-agent to a specified string. The default is rclone/ version (default "rclone/v1.53.3") -v, --verbose count Print lots more stuff (repeat for more) Backend Flags These flags are available for every command. They control the backends and may be set in the config file. --acd-auth-url string Auth server URL. --acd-client-id string OAuth Client Id --acd-client-secret string OAuth Client Secret --acd-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --acd-templink-threshold SizeSuffix Files >= this size will be downloaded via their tempLink. (default 9G) --acd-token string OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. --acd-token-url string Token server url. --acd-upload-wait-per-gb Duration Additional time per GB to wait after a failed complete upload to see if it appears. (default 3m0s) --alias-remote string Remote or path to alias. --azureblob-access-tier string Access tier of blob: hot, cool or archive. --azureblob-account string Storage Account Name (leave blank to use SAS URL or Emulator) --azureblob-chunk-size SizeSuffix Upload chunk size (<= 100MB). (default 4M) --azureblob-disable-checksum Don't store MD5 checksum with object metadata. --azureblob-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8) --azureblob-endpoint string Endpoint for the service --azureblob-key string Storage Account Key (leave blank to use SAS URL or Emulator) --azureblob-list-chunk int Size of blob list. (default 5000) --azureblob-memory-pool-flush-time Duration How often internal memory buffer pools will be flushed. (default 1m0s) --azureblob-memory-pool-use-mmap Whether to use mmap buffers in internal memory pool. --azureblob-sas-url string SAS URL for container level access only --azureblob-upload-cutoff SizeSuffix Cutoff for switching to chunked upload (<= 256MB). (default 256M) --azureblob-use-emulator Uses local storage emulator if provided as 'true' (leave blank if using real azure storage endpoint) --b2-account string Account ID or Application Key ID --b2-chunk-size SizeSuffix Upload chunk size. Must fit in memory. (default 96M) --b2-copy-cutoff SizeSuffix Cutoff for switching to multipart copy (default 4G) --b2-disable-checksum Disable checksums for large (> upload cutoff) files --b2-download-auth-duration Duration Time before the authorization token will expire in s or suffix ms|s|m|h|d. (default 1w) --b2-download-url string Custom endpoint for downloads. --b2-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --b2-endpoint string Endpoint for the service. --b2-hard-delete Permanently delete files on remote removal, otherwise hide files. --b2-key string Application Key --b2-memory-pool-flush-time Duration How often internal memory buffer pools will be flushed. (default 1m0s) --b2-memory-pool-use-mmap Whether to use mmap buffers in internal memory pool. --b2-test-mode string A flag string for X-Bz-Test-Mode header for debugging. --b2-upload-cutoff SizeSuffix Cutoff for switching to chunked upload. (default 200M) --b2-versions Include old versions in directory listings. --box-access-token string Box App Primary Access Token --box-auth-url string Auth server URL. --box-box-config-file string Box App config.json location --box-box-sub-type string (default "user") --box-client-id string OAuth Client Id --box-client-secret string OAuth Client Secret --box-commit-retries int Max number of times to try committing a multipart file. (default 100) --box-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,RightSpace,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --box-root-folder-id string Fill in for rclone to use a non root folder as its starting point. --box-token string OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. --box-token-url string Token server url. --box-upload-cutoff SizeSuffix Cutoff for switching to multipart upload (>= 50MB). (default 50M) --cache-chunk-clean-interval Duration How often should the cache perform cleanups of the chunk storage. (default 1m0s) --cache-chunk-no-memory Disable the in-memory cache for storing chunks during streaming. --cache-chunk-path string Directory to cache chunk files. (default "$HOME/.cache/rclone/cache-backend") --cache-chunk-size SizeSuffix The size of a chunk (partial file data). (default 5M) --cache-chunk-total-size SizeSuffix The total size that the chunks can take up on the local disk. (default 10G) --cache-db-path string Directory to store file structure metadata DB. (default "$HOME/.cache/rclone/cache-backend") --cache-db-purge Clear all the cached data for this remote on start. --cache-db-wait-time Duration How long to wait for the DB to be available - 0 is unlimited (default 1s) --cache-info-age Duration How long to cache file structure information (directory listings, file size, times etc). (default 6h0m0s) --cache-plex-insecure string Skip all certificate verification when connecting to the Plex server --cache-plex-password string The password of the Plex user (obscured) --cache-plex-url string The URL of the Plex server --cache-plex-username string The username of the Plex user --cache-read-retries int How many times to retry a read from a cache storage. (default 10) --cache-remote string Remote to cache. --cache-rps int Limits the number of requests per second to the source FS (-1 to disable) (default -1) --cache-tmp-upload-path string Directory to keep temporary files until they are uploaded. --cache-tmp-wait-time Duration How long should files be stored in local cache before being uploaded (default 15s) --cache-workers int How many workers should run in parallel to download chunks. (default 4) --cache-writes Cache file data on writes through the FS --chunker-chunk-size SizeSuffix Files larger than chunk size will be split in chunks. (default 2G) --chunker-fail-hard Choose how chunker should handle files with missing or invalid chunks. --chunker-hash-type string Choose how chunker handles hash sums. All modes but "none" require metadata. (default "md5") --chunker-meta-format string Format of the metadata object or "none". By default "simplejson". (default "simplejson") --chunker-name-format string String format of chunk file names. (default "*.rclone_chunk.###") --chunker-remote string Remote to chunk/unchunk. --chunker-start-from int Minimum valid chunk number. Usually 0 or 1. (default 1) -L, --copy-links Follow symlinks and copy the pointed to item. --crypt-directory-name-encryption Option to either encrypt directory names or leave them intact. (default true) --crypt-filename-encryption string How to encrypt the filenames. (default "standard") --crypt-password string Password or pass phrase for encryption. (obscured) --crypt-password2 string Password or pass phrase for salt. Optional but recommended. (obscured) --crypt-remote string Remote to encrypt/decrypt. --crypt-server-side-across-configs Allow server side operations (eg copy) to work across different crypt configs. --crypt-show-mapping For all files listed show how the names encrypt. --drive-acknowledge-abuse Set to allow files which return cannotDownloadAbusiveFile to be downloaded. --drive-allow-import-name-change Allow the filetype to change when uploading Google docs (e.g. file.doc to file.docx). This will confuse sync and reupload every time. --drive-auth-owner-only Only consider files owned by the authenticated user. --drive-auth-url string Auth server URL. --drive-chunk-size SizeSuffix Upload chunk size. Must a power of 2 >= 256k. (default 8M) --drive-client-id string Google Application Client Id --drive-client-secret string OAuth Client Secret --drive-disable-http2 Disable drive using http2 (default true) --drive-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default InvalidUtf8) --drive-export-formats string Comma separated list of preferred formats for downloading Google docs. (default "docx,xlsx,pptx,svg") --drive-formats string Deprecated: see export_formats --drive-impersonate string Impersonate this user when using a service account. --drive-import-formats string Comma separated list of preferred formats for uploading Google docs. --drive-keep-revision-forever Keep new head revision of each file forever. --drive-list-chunk int Size of listing chunk 100-1000. 0 to disable. (default 1000) --drive-pacer-burst int Number of API calls to allow without sleeping. (default 100) --drive-pacer-min-sleep Duration Minimum time to sleep between API calls. (default 100ms) --drive-root-folder-id string ID of the root folder --drive-scope string Scope that rclone should use when requesting access from drive. --drive-server-side-across-configs Allow server side operations (eg copy) to work across different drive configs. --drive-service-account-credentials string Service Account Credentials JSON blob --drive-service-account-file string Service Account Credentials JSON file path --drive-shared-with-me Only show files that are shared with me. --drive-size-as-quota Show sizes as storage quota usage, not actual size. --drive-skip-checksum-gphotos Skip MD5 checksum on Google photos and videos only. --drive-skip-gdocs Skip google documents in all listings. --drive-skip-shortcuts If set skip shortcut files --drive-starred-only Only show files that are starred. --drive-stop-on-upload-limit Make upload limit errors be fatal --drive-team-drive string ID of the Team Drive --drive-token string OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. --drive-token-url string Token server url. --drive-trashed-only Only show files that are in the trash. --drive-upload-cutoff SizeSuffix Cutoff for switching to chunked upload (default 8M) --drive-use-created-date Use file created date instead of modified date., --drive-use-shared-date Use date file was shared instead of modified date. --drive-use-trash Send files to the trash instead of deleting permanently. (default true) --drive-v2-download-min-size SizeSuffix If Object's are greater, use drive v2 API to download. (default off) --dropbox-auth-url string Auth server URL. --dropbox-chunk-size SizeSuffix Upload chunk size. (< 150M). (default 48M) --dropbox-client-id string OAuth Client Id --dropbox-client-secret string OAuth Client Secret --dropbox-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,BackSlash,Del,RightSpace,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --dropbox-impersonate string Impersonate this user when using a business account. --dropbox-token string OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. --dropbox-token-url string Token server url. --fichier-api-key string Your API Key, get it from https://1fichier.com/console/params.pl --fichier-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,SingleQuote,BackQuote,Dollar,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,LeftSpace,RightSpace,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --fichier-shared-folder string If you want to download a shared folder, add this parameter --ftp-concurrency int Maximum number of FTP simultaneous connections, 0 for unlimited --ftp-disable-epsv Disable using EPSV even if server advertises support --ftp-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,Del,Ctl,RightSpace,Dot) --ftp-explicit-tls Use FTP over TLS (Explicit) --ftp-host string FTP host to connect to --ftp-no-check-certificate Do not verify the TLS certificate of the server --ftp-pass string FTP password (obscured) --ftp-port string FTP port, leave blank to use default (21) --ftp-tls Use FTPS over TLS (Implicit) --ftp-user string FTP username, leave blank for current username, $USER --gcs-anonymous Access public buckets and objects without credentials --gcs-auth-url string Auth server URL. --gcs-bucket-acl string Access Control List for new buckets. --gcs-bucket-policy-only Access checks should use bucket-level IAM policies. --gcs-client-id string OAuth Client Id --gcs-client-secret string OAuth Client Secret --gcs-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,CrLf,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --gcs-location string Location for the newly created buckets. --gcs-object-acl string Access Control List for new objects. --gcs-project-number string Project number. --gcs-service-account-file string Service Account Credentials JSON file path --gcs-storage-class string The storage class to use when storing objects in Google Cloud Storage. --gcs-token string OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. --gcs-token-url string Token server url. --gphotos-auth-url string Auth server URL. --gphotos-client-id string OAuth Client Id --gphotos-client-secret string OAuth Client Secret --gphotos-read-only Set to make the Google Photos backend read only. --gphotos-read-size Set to read the size of media items. --gphotos-start-year int Year limits the photos to be downloaded to those which are uploaded after the given year (default 2000) --gphotos-token string OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. --gphotos-token-url string Token server url. --http-headers CommaSepList Set HTTP headers for all transactions --http-no-head Don't use HEAD requests to find file sizes in dir listing --http-no-slash Set this if the site doesn't end directories with / --http-url string URL of http host to connect to --hubic-auth-url string Auth server URL. --hubic-chunk-size SizeSuffix Above this size files will be chunked into a _segments container. (default 5G) --hubic-client-id string OAuth Client Id --hubic-client-secret string OAuth Client Secret --hubic-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,InvalidUtf8) --hubic-no-chunk Don't chunk files during streaming upload. --hubic-token string OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. --hubic-token-url string Token server url. --jottacloud-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --jottacloud-hard-delete Delete files permanently rather than putting them into the trash. --jottacloud-md5-memory-limit SizeSuffix Files bigger than this will be cached on disk to calculate the MD5 if required. (default 10M) --jottacloud-trashed-only Only show files that are in the trash. --jottacloud-upload-resume-limit SizeSuffix Files bigger than this can be resumed if the upload fail's. (default 10M) --koofr-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --koofr-endpoint string The Koofr API endpoint to use (default "https://app.koofr.net") --koofr-mountid string Mount ID of the mount to use. If omitted, the primary mount is used. --koofr-password string Your Koofr password for rclone (generate one at https://app.koofr.net/app/admin/preferences/password) (obscured) --koofr-setmtime Does the backend support setting modification time. Set this to false if you use a mount ID that points to a Dropbox or Amazon Drive backend. (default true) --koofr-user string Your Koofr user name -l, --links Translate symlinks to/from regular files with a '.rclonelink' extension --local-case-insensitive Force the filesystem to report itself as case insensitive --local-case-sensitive Force the filesystem to report itself as case sensitive. --local-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,Dot) --local-no-check-updated Don't check to see if the files change during upload --local-no-set-modtime Disable setting modtime --local-no-sparse Disable sparse files for multi-thread downloads --local-no-unicode-normalization Don't apply unicode normalization to paths and filenames (Deprecated) --local-nounc string Disable UNC (long path names) conversion on Windows --mailru-check-hash What should copy do if file checksum is mismatched or invalid (default true) --mailru-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --mailru-pass string Password (obscured) --mailru-speedup-enable Skip full upload if there is another file with same data hash. (default true) --mailru-speedup-file-patterns string Comma separated list of file name patterns eligible for speedup (put by hash). (default "*.mkv,*.avi,*.mp4,*.mp3,*.zip,*.gz,*.rar,*.pdf") --mailru-speedup-max-disk SizeSuffix This option allows you to disable speedup (put by hash) for large files (default 3G) --mailru-speedup-max-memory SizeSuffix Files larger than the size given below will always be hashed on disk. (default 32M) --mailru-user string User name (usually email) --mega-debug Output more debug from Mega. --mega-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --mega-hard-delete Delete files permanently rather than putting them into the trash. --mega-pass string Password. (obscured) --mega-user string User name -x, --one-file-system Don't cross filesystem boundaries (unix/macOS only). --onedrive-auth-url string Auth server URL. --onedrive-chunk-size SizeSuffix Chunk size to upload files with - must be multiple of 320k (327,680 bytes). (default 10M) --onedrive-client-id string OAuth Client Id --onedrive-client-secret string OAuth Client Secret --onedrive-drive-id string The ID of the drive to use --onedrive-drive-type string The type of the drive ( personal | business | documentLibrary ) --onedrive-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,Hash,Percent,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,LeftSpace,LeftTilde,RightSpace,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --onedrive-expose-onenote-files Set to make OneNote files show up in directory listings. --onedrive-no-versions Remove all versions on modifying operations --onedrive-server-side-across-configs Allow server side operations (eg copy) to work across different onedrive configs. --onedrive-token string OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. --onedrive-token-url string Token server url. --opendrive-chunk-size SizeSuffix Files will be uploaded in chunks this size. (default 10M) --opendrive-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,BackSlash,LeftSpace,LeftCrLfHtVt,RightSpace,RightCrLfHtVt,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --opendrive-password string Password. (obscured) --opendrive-username string Username --pcloud-auth-url string Auth server URL. --pcloud-client-id string OAuth Client Id --pcloud-client-secret string OAuth Client Secret --pcloud-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --pcloud-hostname string Hostname to connect to. (default "api.pcloud.com") --pcloud-root-folder-id string Fill in for rclone to use a non root folder as its starting point. (default "d0") --pcloud-token string OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. --pcloud-token-url string Token server url. --premiumizeme-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,DoubleQuote,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --putio-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --qingstor-access-key-id string QingStor Access Key ID --qingstor-chunk-size SizeSuffix Chunk size to use for uploading. (default 4M) --qingstor-connection-retries int Number of connection retries. (default 3) --qingstor-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,Ctl,InvalidUtf8) --qingstor-endpoint string Enter an endpoint URL to connection QingStor API. --qingstor-env-auth Get QingStor credentials from runtime. Only applies if access_key_id and secret_access_key is blank. --qingstor-secret-access-key string QingStor Secret Access Key (password) --qingstor-upload-concurrency int Concurrency for multipart uploads. (default 1) --qingstor-upload-cutoff SizeSuffix Cutoff for switching to chunked upload (default 200M) --qingstor-zone string Zone to connect to. --s3-access-key-id string AWS Access Key ID. --s3-acl string Canned ACL used when creating buckets and storing or copying objects. --s3-bucket-acl string Canned ACL used when creating buckets. --s3-chunk-size SizeSuffix Chunk size to use for uploading. (default 5M) --s3-copy-cutoff SizeSuffix Cutoff for switching to multipart copy (default 4.656G) --s3-disable-checksum Don't store MD5 checksum with object metadata --s3-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --s3-endpoint string Endpoint for S3 API. --s3-env-auth Get AWS credentials from runtime (environment variables or EC2/ECS meta data if no env vars). --s3-force-path-style If true use path style access if false use virtual hosted style. (default true) --s3-leave-parts-on-error If true avoid calling abort upload on a failure, leaving all successfully uploaded parts on S3 for manual recovery. --s3-list-chunk int Size of listing chunk (response list for each ListObject S3 request). (default 1000) --s3-location-constraint string Location constraint - must be set to match the Region. --s3-max-upload-parts int Maximum number of parts in a multipart upload. (default 10000) --s3-memory-pool-flush-time Duration How often internal memory buffer pools will be flushed. (default 1m0s) --s3-memory-pool-use-mmap Whether to use mmap buffers in internal memory pool. --s3-no-check-bucket If set don't attempt to check the bucket exists or create it --s3-profile string Profile to use in the shared credentials file --s3-provider string Choose your S3 provider. --s3-region string Region to connect to. --s3-secret-access-key string AWS Secret Access Key (password) --s3-server-side-encryption string The server-side encryption algorithm used when storing this object in S3. --s3-session-token string An AWS session token --s3-shared-credentials-file string Path to the shared credentials file --s3-sse-customer-algorithm string If using SSE-C, the server-side encryption algorithm used when storing this object in S3. --s3-sse-customer-key string If using SSE-C you must provide the secret encryption key used to encrypt/decrypt your data. --s3-sse-customer-key-md5 string If using SSE-C you must provide the secret encryption key MD5 checksum. --s3-sse-kms-key-id string If using KMS ID you must provide the ARN of Key. --s3-storage-class string The storage class to use when storing new objects in S3. --s3-upload-concurrency int Concurrency for multipart uploads. (default 4) --s3-upload-cutoff SizeSuffix Cutoff for switching to chunked upload (default 200M) --s3-use-accelerate-endpoint If true use the AWS S3 accelerated endpoint. --s3-v2-auth If true use v2 authentication. --seafile-2fa Two-factor authentication ('true' if the account has 2FA enabled) --seafile-create-library Should rclone create a library if it doesn't exist --seafile-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,DoubleQuote,BackSlash,Ctl,InvalidUtf8) --seafile-library string Name of the library. Leave blank to access all non-encrypted libraries. --seafile-library-key string Library password (for encrypted libraries only). Leave blank if you pass it through the command line. (obscured) --seafile-pass string Password (obscured) --seafile-url string URL of seafile host to connect to --seafile-user string User name (usually email address) --sftp-ask-password Allow asking for SFTP password when needed. --sftp-disable-hashcheck Disable the execution of SSH commands to determine if remote file hashing is available. --sftp-host string SSH host to connect to --sftp-key-file string Path to PEM-encoded private key file, leave blank or set key-use-agent to use ssh-agent. --sftp-key-file-pass string The passphrase to decrypt the PEM-encoded private key file. (obscured) --sftp-key-pem string Raw PEM-encoded private key, If specified, will override key_file parameter. --sftp-key-use-agent When set forces the usage of the ssh-agent. --sftp-md5sum-command string The command used to read md5 hashes. Leave blank for autodetect. --sftp-pass string SSH password, leave blank to use ssh-agent. (obscured) --sftp-path-override string Override path used by SSH connection. --sftp-port string SSH port, leave blank to use default (22) --sftp-server-command string Specifies the path or command to run a sftp server on the remote host. --sftp-set-modtime Set the modified time on the remote if set. (default true) --sftp-sha1sum-command string The command used to read sha1 hashes. Leave blank for autodetect. --sftp-skip-links Set to skip any symlinks and any other non regular files. --sftp-subsystem string Specifies the SSH2 subsystem on the remote host. (default "sftp") --sftp-use-insecure-cipher Enable the use of insecure ciphers and key exchange methods. --sftp-user string SSH username, leave blank for current username, ncw --sharefile-chunk-size SizeSuffix Upload chunk size. Must a power of 2 >= 256k. (default 64M) --sharefile-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,BackSlash,Ctl,LeftSpace,LeftPeriod,RightSpace,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --sharefile-endpoint string Endpoint for API calls. --sharefile-root-folder-id string ID of the root folder --sharefile-upload-cutoff SizeSuffix Cutoff for switching to multipart upload. (default 128M) --skip-links Don't warn about skipped symlinks. --sugarsync-access-key-id string Sugarsync Access Key ID. --sugarsync-app-id string Sugarsync App ID. --sugarsync-authorization string Sugarsync authorization --sugarsync-authorization-expiry string Sugarsync authorization expiry --sugarsync-deleted-id string Sugarsync deleted folder id --sugarsync-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --sugarsync-hard-delete Permanently delete files if true --sugarsync-private-access-key string Sugarsync Private Access Key --sugarsync-refresh-token string Sugarsync refresh token --sugarsync-root-id string Sugarsync root id --sugarsync-user string Sugarsync user --swift-application-credential-id string Application Credential ID (OS_APPLICATION_CREDENTIAL_ID) --swift-application-credential-name string Application Credential Name (OS_APPLICATION_CREDENTIAL_NAME) --swift-application-credential-secret string Application Credential Secret (OS_APPLICATION_CREDENTIAL_SECRET) --swift-auth string Authentication URL for server (OS_AUTH_URL). --swift-auth-token string Auth Token from alternate authentication - optional (OS_AUTH_TOKEN) --swift-auth-version int AuthVersion - optional - set to (1,2,3) if your auth URL has no version (ST_AUTH_VERSION) --swift-chunk-size SizeSuffix Above this size files will be chunked into a _segments container. (default 5G) --swift-domain string User domain - optional (v3 auth) (OS_USER_DOMAIN_NAME) --swift-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,InvalidUtf8) --swift-endpoint-type string Endpoint type to choose from the service catalogue (OS_ENDPOINT_TYPE) (default "public") --swift-env-auth Get swift credentials from environment variables in standard OpenStack form. --swift-key string API key or password (OS_PASSWORD). --swift-no-chunk Don't chunk files during streaming upload. --swift-region string Region name - optional (OS_REGION_NAME) --swift-storage-policy string The storage policy to use when creating a new container --swift-storage-url string Storage URL - optional (OS_STORAGE_URL) --swift-tenant string Tenant name - optional for v1 auth, this or tenant_id required otherwise (OS_TENANT_NAME or OS_PROJECT_NAME) --swift-tenant-domain string Tenant domain - optional (v3 auth) (OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_NAME) --swift-tenant-id string Tenant ID - optional for v1 auth, this or tenant required otherwise (OS_TENANT_ID) --swift-user string User name to log in (OS_USERNAME). --swift-user-id string User ID to log in - optional - most swift systems use user and leave this blank (v3 auth) (OS_USER_ID). --tardigrade-access-grant string Access Grant. --tardigrade-api-key string API Key. --tardigrade-passphrase string Encryption Passphrase. To access existing objects enter passphrase used for uploading. --tardigrade-provider string Choose an authentication method. (default "existing") --tardigrade-satellite-address <nodeid>@<address>:<port> Satellite Address. Custom satellite address should match the format: <nodeid>@<address>:<port>. (default "us-central-1.tardigrade.io") --union-action-policy string Policy to choose upstream on ACTION category. (default "epall") --union-cache-time int Cache time of usage and free space (in seconds). This option is only useful when a path preserving policy is used. (default 120) --union-create-policy string Policy to choose upstream on CREATE category. (default "epmfs") --union-search-policy string Policy to choose upstream on SEARCH category. (default "ff") --union-upstreams string List of space separated upstreams. --webdav-bearer-token string Bearer token instead of user/pass (eg a Macaroon) --webdav-bearer-token-command string Command to run to get a bearer token --webdav-pass string Password. (obscured) --webdav-url string URL of http host to connect to --webdav-user string User name --webdav-vendor string Name of the Webdav site/service/software you are using --yandex-auth-url string Auth server URL. --yandex-client-id string OAuth Client Id --yandex-client-secret string OAuth Client Secret --yandex-encoding MultiEncoder This sets the encoding for the backend. (default Slash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot) --yandex-token string OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. --yandex-token-url string Token server url. 1Fichier This is a backend for the 1fichier (https://1fichier.com) cloud storage service. Note that a Premium subscription is required to use the API. Paths are specified as remote:path Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. The initial setup for 1Fichier involves getting the API key from the website which you need to do in your browser. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / 1Fichier \ "fichier" [snip] Storage> fichier ** See help for fichier backend at: https://rclone.org/fichier/ ** Your API Key, get it from https://1fichier.com/console/params.pl Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). api_key> example_key Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No y/n> Remote config -------------------- [remote] type = fichier api_key = example_key -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level of your 1Fichier account rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your 1Fichier account rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to a 1Fichier directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Modified time and hashes 1Fichier does not support modification times. It supports the Whirlpool hash algorithm. Duplicated files 1Fichier can have two files with exactly the same name and path (unlike a normal file system). Duplicated files cause problems with the syncing and you will see messages in the log about duplicates. Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── \ 0x5C \ < 0x3C < > 0x3E > " 0x22 " $ 0x24 $ ` 0x60 ` ’ 0x27 ' File names can also not start or end with the following characters. These only get replaced if they are the first or last character in the name: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── SP 0x20 ␠ Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to fichier (1Fichier). –fichier-api-key Your API Key, get it from https://1fichier.com/console/params.pl • Config: api_key • Env Var: RCLONE_FICHIER_API_KEY • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to fichier (1Fichier). –fichier-shared-folder If you want to download a shared folder, add this parameter • Config: shared_folder • Env Var: RCLONE_FICHIER_SHARED_FOLDER • Type: string • Default: "" –fichier-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_FICHIER_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,SingleQuote,BackQuote,Dollar,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,LeftSpace,RightSpace,InvalidUtf8,Dot Alias The alias remote provides a new name for another remote. Paths may be as deep as required or a local path, eg remote:directory/subdirectory or /directory/subdirectory. During the initial setup with rclone config you will specify the target remote. The target remote can either be a local path or another remote. Subfolders can be used in target remote. Assume an alias remote named backup with the target mydrive:private/backup. Invoking rclone mkdir backup:desktop is exactly the same as invoking rclone mkdir mydrive:private/backup/desktop. There will be no special handling of paths containing .. segments. Invoking rclone mkdir backup:../desktop is exactly the same as invoking rclone mkdir mydrive:private/backup/../desktop. The empty path is not allowed as a remote. To alias the current directory use . instead. Here is an example of how to make an alias called remote for local folder. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Alias for an existing remote \ "alias" [snip] Storage> alias Remote or path to alias. Can be "myremote:path/to/dir", "myremote:bucket", "myremote:" or "/local/path". remote> /mnt/storage/backup Remote config -------------------- [remote] remote = /mnt/storage/backup -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Current remotes: Name Type ==== ==== remote alias e) Edit existing remote n) New remote d) Delete remote r) Rename remote c) Copy remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config e/n/d/r/c/s/q> q Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level in /mnt/storage/backup rclone lsd remote: List all the files in /mnt/storage/backup rclone ls remote: Copy another local directory to the alias directory called source rclone copy /home/source remote:source Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to alias (Alias for an existing remote). –alias-remote Remote or path to alias. Can be “myremote:path/to/dir”, “myremote:bucket”, “myremote:” or “/local/path”. • Config: remote • Env Var: RCLONE_ALIAS_REMOTE • Type: string • Default: "" Amazon Drive Amazon Drive, formerly known as Amazon Cloud Drive, is a cloud storage service run by Amazon for consumers. Status Important: rclone supports Amazon Drive only if you have your own set of API keys. Unfortunately the Amazon Drive developer program (https://developer.amazon.com/amazon- drive) is now closed to new entries so if you don’t already have your own set of keys you will not be able to use rclone with Amazon Drive. For the history on why rclone no longer has a set of Amazon Drive API keys see the forum (https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-has-been-banned-from-amazon-drive/2314). If you happen to know anyone who works at Amazon then please ask them to re-instate rclone into the Amazon Drive developer program - thanks! Setup The initial setup for Amazon Drive involves getting a token from Amazon which you need to do in your browser. rclone config walks you through it. The configuration process for Amazon Drive may involve using an oauth proxy (https://github.com/ncw/oauthproxy). This is used to keep the Amazon credentials out of the source code. The proxy runs in Google’s very secure App Engine environment and doesn’t store any credentials which pass through it. Since rclone doesn’t currently have its own Amazon Drive credentials so you will either need to have your own client_id and client_secret with Amazon Drive, or use a third party oauth proxy in which case you will need to enter client_id, client_secret, auth_url and token_url. Note also if you are not using Amazon’s auth_url and token_url, (ie you filled in something for those) then if setting up on a remote machine you can only use the copying the config method of configuration (https://rclone.org/remote_setup/#configuring-by- copying-the-config-file) - rclone authorize will not work. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote r) Rename remote c) Copy remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/r/c/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Amazon Drive \ "amazon cloud drive" [snip] Storage> amazon cloud drive Amazon Application Client Id - required. client_id> your client ID goes here Amazon Application Client Secret - required. client_secret> your client secret goes here Auth server URL - leave blank to use Amazon's. auth_url> Optional auth URL Token server url - leave blank to use Amazon's. token_url> Optional token URL Remote config Make sure your Redirect URL is set to "http://127.0.0.1:53682/" in your custom config. Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code -------------------- [remote] client_id = your client ID goes here client_secret = your client secret goes here auth_url = Optional auth URL token_url = Optional token URL token = {"access_token":"xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx","token_type":"bearer","refresh_token":"xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx","expiry":"2015-09-06T16:07:39.658438471+01:00"} -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y See the remote setup docs (https://rclone.org/remote_setup/) for how to set it up on a machine with no Internet browser available. Note that rclone runs a webserver on your local machine to collect the token as returned from Amazon. This only runs from the moment it opens your browser to the moment you get back the verification code. This is on http://127.0.0.1:53682/ and this it may require you to unblock it temporarily if you are running a host firewall. Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level of your Amazon Drive rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your Amazon Drive rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to an Amazon Drive directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Modified time and MD5SUMs Amazon Drive doesn’t allow modification times to be changed via the API so these won’t be accurate or used for syncing. It does store MD5SUMs so for a more accurate sync, you can use the --checksum flag. Restricted filename characters Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── NUL 0x00 ␀ / 0x2F / Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Deleting files Any files you delete with rclone will end up in the trash. Amazon don’t provide an API to permanently delete files, nor to empty the trash, so you will have to do that with one of Amazon’s apps or via the Amazon Drive website. As of November 17, 2016, files are automatically deleted by Amazon from the trash after 30 days. Using with non .com Amazon accounts Let’s say you usually use amazon.co.uk. When you authenticate with rclone it will take you to an amazon.com page to log in. Your amazon.co.uk email and password should work here just fine. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to amazon cloud drive (Amazon Drive). –acd-client-id OAuth Client Id Leave blank normally. • Config: client_id • Env Var: RCLONE_ACD_CLIENT_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –acd-client-secret OAuth Client Secret Leave blank normally. • Config: client_secret • Env Var: RCLONE_ACD_CLIENT_SECRET • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to amazon cloud drive (Amazon Drive). –acd-token OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. • Config: token • Env Var: RCLONE_ACD_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –acd-auth-url Auth server URL. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: auth_url • Env Var: RCLONE_ACD_AUTH_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –acd-token-url Token server url. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: token_url • Env Var: RCLONE_ACD_TOKEN_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –acd-checkpoint Checkpoint for internal polling (debug). • Config: checkpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_ACD_CHECKPOINT • Type: string • Default: "" –acd-upload-wait-per-gb Additional time per GB to wait after a failed complete upload to see if it appears. Sometimes Amazon Drive gives an error when a file has been fully uploaded but the file appears anyway after a little while. This happens sometimes for files over 1GB in size and nearly every time for files bigger than 10GB. This parameter controls the time rclone waits for the file to appear. The default value for this parameter is 3 minutes per GB, so by default it will wait 3 minutes for every GB uploaded to see if the file appears. You can disable this feature by setting it to 0. This may cause conflict errors as rclone retries the failed upload but the file will most likely appear correctly eventually. These values were determined empirically by observing lots of uploads of big files for a range of file sizes. Upload with the “-v” flag to see more info about what rclone is doing in this situation. • Config: upload_wait_per_gb • Env Var: RCLONE_ACD_UPLOAD_WAIT_PER_GB • Type: Duration • Default: 3m0s –acd-templink-threshold Files >= this size will be downloaded via their tempLink. Files this size or more will be downloaded via their “tempLink”. This is to work around a problem with Amazon Drive which blocks downloads of files bigger than about 10GB. The default for this is 9GB which shouldn’t need to be changed. To download files above this threshold, rclone requests a “tempLink” which downloads the file through a temporary URL directly from the underlying S3 storage. • Config: templink_threshold • Env Var: RCLONE_ACD_TEMPLINK_THRESHOLD • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 9G –acd-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_ACD_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,InvalidUtf8,Dot Limitations Note that Amazon Drive is case insensitive so you can’t have a file called “Hello.doc” and one called “hello.doc”. Amazon Drive has rate limiting so you may notice errors in the sync (429 errors). rclone will automatically retry the sync up to 3 times by default (see --retries flag) which should hopefully work around this problem. Amazon Drive has an internal limit of file sizes that can be uploaded to the service. This limit is not officially published, but all files larger than this will fail. At the time of writing (Jan 2016) is in the area of 50GB per file. This means that larger files are likely to fail. Unfortunately there is no way for rclone to see that this failure is because of file size, so it will retry the operation, as any other failure. To avoid this problem, use --max- size 50000M option to limit the maximum size of uploaded files. Note that --max-size does not split files into segments, it only ignores files over this size. Amazon S3 Storage Providers The S3 backend can be used with a number of different providers: • AWS S3 • Alibaba Cloud (Aliyun) Object Storage System (OSS) • Ceph • DigitalOcean Spaces • Dreamhost • IBM COS S3 • Minio • Scaleway • StackPath • Tencent Cloud Object Storage (COS) • Wasabi Paths are specified as remote:bucket (or remote: for the lsd command.) You may put subdirectories in too, eg remote:bucket/path/to/dir. Once you have made a remote (see the provider specific section above) you can use it like this: See all buckets rclone lsd remote: Make a new bucket rclone mkdir remote:bucket List the contents of a bucket rclone ls remote:bucket Sync /home/local/directory to the remote bucket, deleting any excess files in the bucket. rclone sync -i /home/local/directory remote:bucket AWS S3 Here is an example of making an s3 configuration. First run rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process. No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Amazon S3 Compliant Storage Providers (AWS, Ceph, Dreamhost, IBM COS, Minio) \ "s3" [snip] Storage> s3 Choose your S3 provider. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Amazon Web Services (AWS) S3 \ "AWS" 2 / Ceph Object Storage \ "Ceph" 3 / Digital Ocean Spaces \ "DigitalOcean" 4 / Dreamhost DreamObjects \ "Dreamhost" 5 / IBM COS S3 \ "IBMCOS" 6 / Minio Object Storage \ "Minio" 7 / Wasabi Object Storage \ "Wasabi" 8 / Any other S3 compatible provider \ "Other" provider> 1 Get AWS credentials from runtime (environment variables or EC2/ECS meta data if no env vars). Only applies if access_key_id and secret_access_key is blank. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Enter AWS credentials in the next step \ "false" 2 / Get AWS credentials from the environment (env vars or IAM) \ "true" env_auth> 1 AWS Access Key ID - leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. access_key_id> XXX AWS Secret Access Key (password) - leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. secret_access_key> YYY Region to connect to. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value / The default endpoint - a good choice if you are unsure. 1 | US Region, Northern Virginia or Pacific Northwest. | Leave location constraint empty. \ "us-east-1" / US East (Ohio) Region 2 | Needs location constraint us-east-2. \ "us-east-2" / US West (Oregon) Region 3 | Needs location constraint us-west-2. \ "us-west-2" / US West (Northern California) Region 4 | Needs location constraint us-west-1. \ "us-west-1" / Canada (Central) Region 5 | Needs location constraint ca-central-1. \ "ca-central-1" / EU (Ireland) Region 6 | Needs location constraint EU or eu-west-1. \ "eu-west-1" / EU (London) Region 7 | Needs location constraint eu-west-2. \ "eu-west-2" / EU (Frankfurt) Region 8 | Needs location constraint eu-central-1. \ "eu-central-1" / Asia Pacific (Singapore) Region 9 | Needs location constraint ap-southeast-1. \ "ap-southeast-1" / Asia Pacific (Sydney) Region 10 | Needs location constraint ap-southeast-2. \ "ap-southeast-2" / Asia Pacific (Tokyo) Region 11 | Needs location constraint ap-northeast-1. \ "ap-northeast-1" / Asia Pacific (Seoul) 12 | Needs location constraint ap-northeast-2. \ "ap-northeast-2" / Asia Pacific (Mumbai) 13 | Needs location constraint ap-south-1. \ "ap-south-1" / Asia Pacific (Hong Kong) Region 14 | Needs location constraint ap-east-1. \ "ap-east-1" / South America (Sao Paulo) Region 15 | Needs location constraint sa-east-1. \ "sa-east-1" region> 1 Endpoint for S3 API. Leave blank if using AWS to use the default endpoint for the region. endpoint> Location constraint - must be set to match the Region. Used when creating buckets only. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Empty for US Region, Northern Virginia or Pacific Northwest. \ "" 2 / US East (Ohio) Region. \ "us-east-2" 3 / US West (Oregon) Region. \ "us-west-2" 4 / US West (Northern California) Region. \ "us-west-1" 5 / Canada (Central) Region. \ "ca-central-1" 6 / EU (Ireland) Region. \ "eu-west-1" 7 / EU (London) Region. \ "eu-west-2" 8 / EU Region. \ "EU" 9 / Asia Pacific (Singapore) Region. \ "ap-southeast-1" 10 / Asia Pacific (Sydney) Region. \ "ap-southeast-2" 11 / Asia Pacific (Tokyo) Region. \ "ap-northeast-1" 12 / Asia Pacific (Seoul) \ "ap-northeast-2" 13 / Asia Pacific (Mumbai) \ "ap-south-1" 14 / Asia Pacific (Hong Kong) \ "ap-east-1" 15 / South America (Sao Paulo) Region. \ "sa-east-1" location_constraint> 1 Canned ACL used when creating buckets and/or storing objects in S3. For more info visit https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/acl-overview.html#canned-acl Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. No one else has access rights (default). \ "private" 2 / Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AllUsers group gets READ access. \ "public-read" / Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AllUsers group gets READ and WRITE access. 3 | Granting this on a bucket is generally not recommended. \ "public-read-write" 4 / Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AuthenticatedUsers group gets READ access. \ "authenticated-read" / Object owner gets FULL_CONTROL. Bucket owner gets READ access. 5 | If you specify this canned ACL when creating a bucket, Amazon S3 ignores it. \ "bucket-owner-read" / Both the object owner and the bucket owner get FULL_CONTROL over the object. 6 | If you specify this canned ACL when creating a bucket, Amazon S3 ignores it. \ "bucket-owner-full-control" acl> 1 The server-side encryption algorithm used when storing this object in S3. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / None \ "" 2 / AES256 \ "AES256" server_side_encryption> 1 The storage class to use when storing objects in S3. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Default \ "" 2 / Standard storage class \ "STANDARD" 3 / Reduced redundancy storage class \ "REDUCED_REDUNDANCY" 4 / Standard Infrequent Access storage class \ "STANDARD_IA" 5 / One Zone Infrequent Access storage class \ "ONEZONE_IA" 6 / Glacier storage class \ "GLACIER" 7 / Glacier Deep Archive storage class \ "DEEP_ARCHIVE" 8 / Intelligent-Tiering storage class \ "INTELLIGENT_TIERING" storage_class> 1 Remote config -------------------- [remote] type = s3 provider = AWS env_auth = false access_key_id = XXX secret_access_key = YYY region = us-east-1 endpoint = location_constraint = acl = private server_side_encryption = storage_class = -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> –fast-list This remote supports --fast-list which allows you to use fewer transactions in exchange for more memory. See the rclone docs (https://rclone.org/docs/#fast-list) for more details. –update and –use-server-modtime As noted below, the modified time is stored on metadata on the object. It is used by default for all operations that require checking the time a file was last updated. It allows rclone to treat the remote more like a true filesystem, but it is inefficient because it requires an extra API call to retrieve the metadata. For many operations, the time the object was last uploaded to the remote is sufficient to determine if it is “dirty”. By using --update along with --use-server-modtime, you can avoid the extra API call and simply upload files whose local modtime is newer than the time it was last uploaded. Modified time The modified time is stored as metadata on the object as X-Amz-Meta-Mtime as floating point since the epoch accurate to 1 ns. If the modification time needs to be updated rclone will attempt to perform a server side copy to update the modification if the object can be copied in a single part. In the case the object is larger than 5Gb or is in Glacier or Glacier Deep Archive storage the object will be uploaded rather than copied. Cleanup If you run rclone cleanup s3:bucket then it will remove all pending multipart uploads older than 24 hours. You can use the -i flag to see exactly what it will do. If you want more control over the expiry date then run rclone backend cleanup s3:bucket -o max-age=1h to expire all uploads older than one hour. You can use rclone backend list-multipart- uploads s3:bucket to see the pending multipart uploads. Restricted filename characters S3 allows any valid UTF-8 string as a key. Invalid UTF-8 bytes will be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in XML. The following characters are replaced since these are problematic when dealing with the REST API: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── NUL 0x00 ␀ / 0x2F / The encoding will also encode these file names as they don’t seem to work with the SDK properly: File name Replacement ──────────────────────── . . .. .. Multipart uploads rclone supports multipart uploads with S3 which means that it can upload files bigger than 5GB. Note that files uploaded both with multipart upload and through crypt remotes do not have MD5 sums. rclone switches from single part uploads to multipart uploads at the point specified by --s3-upload-cutoff. This can be a maximum of 5GB and a minimum of 0 (ie always upload multipart files). The chunk sizes used in the multipart upload are specified by --s3-chunk-size and the number of chunks uploaded concurrently is specified by --s3-upload-concurrency. Multipart uploads will use --transfers * --s3-upload-concurrency * --s3-chunk-size extra memory. Single part uploads to not use extra memory. Single part transfers can be faster than multipart transfers or slower depending on your latency from S3 - the more latency, the more likely single part transfers will be faster. Increasing --s3-upload-concurrency will increase throughput (8 would be a sensible value) and increasing --s3-chunk-size also increases throughput (16M would be sensible). Increasing either of these will use more memory. The default values are high enough to gain most of the possible performance without using too much memory. Buckets and Regions With Amazon S3 you can list buckets (rclone lsd) using any region, but you can only access the content of a bucket from the region it was created in. If you attempt to access a bucket from the wrong region, you will get an error, incorrect region, the bucket is not in 'XXX' region. Authentication There are a number of ways to supply rclone with a set of AWS credentials, with and without using the environment. The different authentication methods are tried in this order: • Directly in the rclone configuration file (env_auth = false in the config file): • access_key_id and secret_access_key are required. • session_token can be optionally set when using AWS STS. • Runtime configuration (env_auth = true in the config file): • Export the following environment variables before running rclone: • Access Key ID: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID or AWS_ACCESS_KEY • Secret Access Key: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY or AWS_SECRET_KEY • Session Token: AWS_SESSION_TOKEN (optional) • Or, use a named profile (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/userguide/cli- multiple-profiles.html): • Profile files are standard files used by AWS CLI tools • By default it will use the profile in your home directory (eg ~/.aws/credentials on unix based systems) file and the “default” profile, to change set these environment variables: • AWS_SHARED_CREDENTIALS_FILE to control which file. • AWS_PROFILE to control which profile to use. • Or, run rclone in an ECS task with an IAM role (AWS only). • Or, run rclone on an EC2 instance with an IAM role (AWS only). • Or, run rclone in an EKS pod with an IAM role that is associated with a service account (AWS only). If none of these option actually end up providing rclone with AWS credentials then S3 interaction will be non-authenticated (see below). S3 Permissions When using the sync subcommand of rclone the following minimum permissions are required to be available on the bucket being written to: • ListBucket • DeleteObject • GetObject • PutObject • PutObjectACL When using the lsd subcommand, the ListAllMyBuckets permission is required. Example policy: { "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Effect": "Allow", "Principal": { "AWS": "arn:aws:iam::USER_SID:user/USER_NAME" }, "Action": [ "s3:ListBucket", "s3:DeleteObject", "s3:GetObject", "s3:PutObject", "s3:PutObjectAcl" ], "Resource": [ "arn:aws:s3:::BUCKET_NAME/*", "arn:aws:s3:::BUCKET_NAME" ] }, { "Effect": "Allow", "Action": "s3:ListAllMyBuckets", "Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::*" } ] } Notes on above: 1. This is a policy that can be used when creating bucket. It assumes that USER_NAME has been created. 2. The Resource entry must include both resource ARNs, as one implies the bucket and the other implies the bucket’s objects. For reference, here’s an Ansible script (https://gist.github.com/ebridges/ebfc9042dd7c756cd101cfa807b7ae2b) that will generate one or more buckets that will work with rclone sync. Key Management System (KMS) If you are using server side encryption with KMS then you will find you can’t transfer small objects. As a work-around you can use the --ignore-checksum flag. A proper fix is being worked on in issue #1824 (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/1824). Glacier and Glacier Deep Archive You can upload objects using the glacier storage class or transition them to glacier using a lifecycle policy (http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/user-guide/create- lifecycle.html). The bucket can still be synced or copied into normally, but if rclone tries to access data from the glacier storage class you will see an error like below. 2017/09/11 19:07:43 Failed to sync: failed to open source object: Object in GLACIER, restore first: path/to/file In this case you need to restore (http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/user- guide/restore-archived-objects.html) the object(s) in question before using rclone. Note that rclone only speaks the S3 API it does not speak the Glacier Vault API, so rclone cannot directly access Glacier Vaults. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to s3 (Amazon S3 Compliant Storage Provider (AWS, Alibaba, Ceph, Digital Ocean, Dreamhost, IBM COS, Minio, Tencent COS, etc)). –s3-provider Choose your S3 provider. • Config: provider • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_PROVIDER • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “AWS” • Amazon Web Services (AWS) S3 • “Alibaba” • Alibaba Cloud Object Storage System (OSS) formerly Aliyun • “Ceph” • Ceph Object Storage • “DigitalOcean” • Digital Ocean Spaces • “Dreamhost” • Dreamhost DreamObjects • “IBMCOS” • IBM COS S3 • “Minio” • Minio Object Storage • “Netease” • Netease Object Storage (NOS) • “Scaleway” • Scaleway Object Storage • “StackPath” • StackPath Object Storage • “TencentCOS” • Tencent Cloud Object Storage (COS) • “Wasabi” • Wasabi Object Storage • “Other” • Any other S3 compatible provider –s3-env-auth Get AWS credentials from runtime (environment variables or EC2/ECS meta data if no env vars). Only applies if access_key_id and secret_access_key is blank. • Config: env_auth • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_ENV_AUTH • Type: bool • Default: false • Examples: • “false” • Enter AWS credentials in the next step • “true” • Get AWS credentials from the environment (env vars or IAM) –s3-access-key-id AWS Access Key ID. Leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. • Config: access_key_id • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_ACCESS_KEY_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –s3-secret-access-key AWS Secret Access Key (password) Leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. • Config: secret_access_key • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY • Type: string • Default: "" –s3-region Region to connect to. • Config: region • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_REGION • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “us-east-1” • The default endpoint - a good choice if you are unsure. • US Region, Northern Virginia or Pacific Northwest. • Leave location constraint empty. • “us-east-2” • US East (Ohio) Region • Needs location constraint us-east-2. • “us-west-1” • US West (Northern California) Region • Needs location constraint us-west-1. • “us-west-2” • US West (Oregon) Region • Needs location constraint us-west-2. • “ca-central-1” • Canada (Central) Region • Needs location constraint ca-central-1. • “eu-west-1” • EU (Ireland) Region • Needs location constraint EU or eu-west-1. • “eu-west-2” • EU (London) Region • Needs location constraint eu-west-2. • “eu-west-3” • EU (Paris) Region • Needs location constraint eu-west-3. • “eu-north-1” • EU (Stockholm) Region • Needs location constraint eu-north-1. • “eu-south-1” • EU (Milan) Region • Needs location constraint eu-south-1. • “eu-central-1” • EU (Frankfurt) Region • Needs location constraint eu-central-1. • “ap-southeast-1” • Asia Pacific (Singapore) Region • Needs location constraint ap-southeast-1. • “ap-southeast-2” • Asia Pacific (Sydney) Region • Needs location constraint ap-southeast-2. • “ap-northeast-1” • Asia Pacific (Tokyo) Region • Needs location constraint ap-northeast-1. • “ap-northeast-2” • Asia Pacific (Seoul) • Needs location constraint ap-northeast-2. • “ap-northeast-3” • Asia Pacific (Osaka-Local) • Needs location constraint ap-northeast-3. • “ap-south-1” • Asia Pacific (Mumbai) • Needs location constraint ap-south-1. • “ap-east-1” • Asia Pacific (Hong Kong) Region • Needs location constraint ap-east-1. • “sa-east-1” • South America (Sao Paulo) Region • Needs location constraint sa-east-1. • “me-south-1” • Middle East (Bahrain) Region • Needs location constraint me-south-1. • “af-south-1” • Africa (Cape Town) Region • Needs location constraint af-south-1. • “cn-north-1” • China (Beijing) Region • Needs location constraint cn-north-1. • “cn-northwest-1” • China (Ningxia) Region • Needs location constraint cn-northwest-1. • “us-gov-east-1” • AWS GovCloud (US-East) Region • Needs location constraint us-gov-east-1. • “us-gov-west-1” • AWS GovCloud (US) Region • Needs location constraint us-gov-west-1. –s3-region Region to connect to. • Config: region • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_REGION • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “nl-ams” • Amsterdam, The Netherlands • “fr-par” • Paris, France –s3-region Region to connect to. Leave blank if you are using an S3 clone and you don’t have a region. • Config: region • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_REGION • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • Use this if unsure. Will use v4 signatures and an empty region. • “other-v2-signature” • Use this only if v4 signatures don’t work, eg pre Jewel/v10 CEPH. –s3-endpoint Endpoint for S3 API. Leave blank if using AWS to use the default endpoint for the region. • Config: endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_ENDPOINT • Type: string • Default: "" –s3-endpoint Endpoint for IBM COS S3 API. Specify if using an IBM COS On Premise. • Config: endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_ENDPOINT • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “s3.us.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • US Cross Region Endpoint • “s3.dal.us.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • US Cross Region Dallas Endpoint • “s3.wdc.us.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • US Cross Region Washington DC Endpoint • “s3.sjc.us.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • US Cross Region San Jose Endpoint • “s3.private.us.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • US Cross Region Private Endpoint • “s3.private.dal.us.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • US Cross Region Dallas Private Endpoint • “s3.private.wdc.us.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • US Cross Region Washington DC Private Endpoint • “s3.private.sjc.us.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • US Cross Region San Jose Private Endpoint • “s3.us-east.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • US Region East Endpoint • “s3.private.us-east.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • US Region East Private Endpoint • “s3.us-south.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • US Region South Endpoint • “s3.private.us-south.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • US Region South Private Endpoint • “s3.eu.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • EU Cross Region Endpoint • “s3.fra.eu.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • EU Cross Region Frankfurt Endpoint • “s3.mil.eu.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • EU Cross Region Milan Endpoint • “s3.ams.eu.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • EU Cross Region Amsterdam Endpoint • “s3.private.eu.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • EU Cross Region Private Endpoint • “s3.private.fra.eu.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • EU Cross Region Frankfurt Private Endpoint • “s3.private.mil.eu.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • EU Cross Region Milan Private Endpoint • “s3.private.ams.eu.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • EU Cross Region Amsterdam Private Endpoint • “s3.eu-gb.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Great Britain Endpoint • “s3.private.eu-gb.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Great Britain Private Endpoint • “s3.eu-de.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • EU Region DE Endpoint • “s3.private.eu-de.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • EU Region DE Private Endpoint • “s3.ap.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • APAC Cross Regional Endpoint • “s3.tok.ap.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • APAC Cross Regional Tokyo Endpoint • “s3.hkg.ap.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • APAC Cross Regional HongKong Endpoint • “s3.seo.ap.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • APAC Cross Regional Seoul Endpoint • “s3.private.ap.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • APAC Cross Regional Private Endpoint • “s3.private.tok.ap.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • APAC Cross Regional Tokyo Private Endpoint • “s3.private.hkg.ap.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • APAC Cross Regional HongKong Private Endpoint • “s3.private.seo.ap.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • APAC Cross Regional Seoul Private Endpoint • “s3.jp-tok.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • APAC Region Japan Endpoint • “s3.private.jp-tok.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • APAC Region Japan Private Endpoint • “s3.au-syd.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • APAC Region Australia Endpoint • “s3.private.au-syd.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • APAC Region Australia Private Endpoint • “s3.ams03.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Amsterdam Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.ams03.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Amsterdam Single Site Private Endpoint • “s3.che01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Chennai Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.che01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Chennai Single Site Private Endpoint • “s3.mel01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Melbourne Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.mel01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Melbourne Single Site Private Endpoint • “s3.osl01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Oslo Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.osl01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Oslo Single Site Private Endpoint • “s3.tor01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Toronto Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.tor01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Toronto Single Site Private Endpoint • “s3.seo01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Seoul Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.seo01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Seoul Single Site Private Endpoint • “s3.mon01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Montreal Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.mon01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Montreal Single Site Private Endpoint • “s3.mex01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Mexico Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.mex01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Mexico Single Site Private Endpoint • “s3.sjc04.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • San Jose Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.sjc04.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • San Jose Single Site Private Endpoint • “s3.mil01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Milan Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.mil01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Milan Single Site Private Endpoint • “s3.hkg02.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Hong Kong Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.hkg02.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Hong Kong Single Site Private Endpoint • “s3.par01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Paris Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.par01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Paris Single Site Private Endpoint • “s3.sng01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Singapore Single Site Endpoint • “s3.private.sng01.cloud-object-storage.appdomain.cloud” • Singapore Single Site Private Endpoint –s3-endpoint Endpoint for OSS API. • Config: endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_ENDPOINT • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “oss-cn-hangzhou.aliyuncs.com” • East China 1 (Hangzhou) • “oss-cn-shanghai.aliyuncs.com” • East China 2 (Shanghai) • “oss-cn-qingdao.aliyuncs.com” • North China 1 (Qingdao) • “oss-cn-beijing.aliyuncs.com” • North China 2 (Beijing) • “oss-cn-zhangjiakou.aliyuncs.com” • North China 3 (Zhangjiakou) • “oss-cn-huhehaote.aliyuncs.com” • North China 5 (Huhehaote) • “oss-cn-shenzhen.aliyuncs.com” • South China 1 (Shenzhen) • “oss-cn-hongkong.aliyuncs.com” • Hong Kong (Hong Kong) • “oss-us-west-1.aliyuncs.com” • US West 1 (Silicon Valley) • “oss-us-east-1.aliyuncs.com” • US East 1 (Virginia) • “oss-ap-southeast-1.aliyuncs.com” • Southeast Asia Southeast 1 (Singapore) • “oss-ap-southeast-2.aliyuncs.com” • Asia Pacific Southeast 2 (Sydney) • “oss-ap-southeast-3.aliyuncs.com” • Southeast Asia Southeast 3 (Kuala Lumpur) • “oss-ap-southeast-5.aliyuncs.com” • Asia Pacific Southeast 5 (Jakarta) • “oss-ap-northeast-1.aliyuncs.com” • Asia Pacific Northeast 1 (Japan) • “oss-ap-south-1.aliyuncs.com” • Asia Pacific South 1 (Mumbai) • “oss-eu-central-1.aliyuncs.com” • Central Europe 1 (Frankfurt) • “oss-eu-west-1.aliyuncs.com” • West Europe (London) • “oss-me-east-1.aliyuncs.com” • Middle East 1 (Dubai) –s3-endpoint Endpoint for Scaleway Object Storage. • Config: endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_ENDPOINT • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “s3.nl-ams.scw.cloud” • Amsterdam Endpoint • “s3.fr-par.scw.cloud” • Paris Endpoint –s3-endpoint Endpoint for StackPath Object Storage. • Config: endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_ENDPOINT • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “s3.us-east-2.stackpathstorage.com” • US East Endpoint • “s3.us-west-1.stackpathstorage.com” • US West Endpoint • “s3.eu-central-1.stackpathstorage.com” • EU Endpoint –s3-endpoint Endpoint for Tencent COS API. • Config: endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_ENDPOINT • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “cos.ap-beijing.myqcloud.com” • Beijing Region. • “cos.ap-nanjing.myqcloud.com” • Nanjing Region. • “cos.ap-shanghai.myqcloud.com” • Shanghai Region. • “cos.ap-guangzhou.myqcloud.com” • Guangzhou Region. • “cos.ap-nanjing.myqcloud.com” • Nanjing Region. • “cos.ap-chengdu.myqcloud.com” • Chengdu Region. • “cos.ap-chongqing.myqcloud.com” • Chongqing Region. • “cos.ap-hongkong.myqcloud.com” • Hong Kong (China) Region. • “cos.ap-singapore.myqcloud.com” • Singapore Region. • “cos.ap-mumbai.myqcloud.com” • Mumbai Region. • “cos.ap-seoul.myqcloud.com” • Seoul Region. • “cos.ap-bangkok.myqcloud.com” • Bangkok Region. • “cos.ap-tokyo.myqcloud.com” • Tokyo Region. • “cos.na-siliconvalley.myqcloud.com” • Silicon Valley Region. • “cos.na-ashburn.myqcloud.com” • Virginia Region. • “cos.na-toronto.myqcloud.com” • Toronto Region. • “cos.eu-frankfurt.myqcloud.com” • Frankfurt Region. • “cos.eu-moscow.myqcloud.com” • Moscow Region. • “cos.accelerate.myqcloud.com” • Use Tencent COS Accelerate Endpoint. –s3-endpoint Endpoint for S3 API. Required when using an S3 clone. • Config: endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_ENDPOINT • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “objects-us-east-1.dream.io” • Dream Objects endpoint • “nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com” • Digital Ocean Spaces New York 3 • “ams3.digitaloceanspaces.com” • Digital Ocean Spaces Amsterdam 3 • “sgp1.digitaloceanspaces.com” • Digital Ocean Spaces Singapore 1 • “s3.wasabisys.com” • Wasabi US East endpoint • “s3.us-west-1.wasabisys.com” • Wasabi US West endpoint • “s3.eu-central-1.wasabisys.com” • Wasabi EU Central endpoint –s3-location-constraint Location constraint - must be set to match the Region. Used when creating buckets only. • Config: location_constraint • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_LOCATION_CONSTRAINT • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • Empty for US Region, Northern Virginia or Pacific Northwest. • “us-east-2” • US East (Ohio) Region. • “us-west-1” • US West (Northern California) Region. • “us-west-2” • US West (Oregon) Region. • “ca-central-1” • Canada (Central) Region. • “eu-west-1” • EU (Ireland) Region. • “eu-west-2” • EU (London) Region. • “eu-west-3” • EU (Paris) Region. • “eu-north-1” • EU (Stockholm) Region. • “eu-south-1” • EU (Milan) Region. • “EU” • EU Region. • “ap-southeast-1” • Asia Pacific (Singapore) Region. • “ap-southeast-2” • Asia Pacific (Sydney) Region. • “ap-northeast-1” • Asia Pacific (Tokyo) Region. • “ap-northeast-2” • Asia Pacific (Seoul) Region. • “ap-northeast-3” • Asia Pacific (Osaka-Local) Region. • “ap-south-1” • Asia Pacific (Mumbai) Region. • “ap-east-1” • Asia Pacific (Hong Kong) Region. • “sa-east-1” • South America (Sao Paulo) Region. • “me-south-1” • Middle East (Bahrain) Region. • “af-south-1” • Africa (Cape Town) Region. • “cn-north-1” • China (Beijing) Region • “cn-northwest-1” • China (Ningxia) Region. • “us-gov-east-1” • AWS GovCloud (US-East) Region. • “us-gov-west-1” • AWS GovCloud (US) Region. –s3-location-constraint Location constraint - must match endpoint when using IBM Cloud Public. For on-prem COS, do not make a selection from this list, hit enter • Config: location_constraint • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_LOCATION_CONSTRAINT • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “us-standard” • US Cross Region Standard • “us-vault” • US Cross Region Vault • “us-cold” • US Cross Region Cold • “us-flex” • US Cross Region Flex • “us-east-standard” • US East Region Standard • “us-east-vault” • US East Region Vault • “us-east-cold” • US East Region Cold • “us-east-flex” • US East Region Flex • “us-south-standard” • US South Region Standard • “us-south-vault” • US South Region Vault • “us-south-cold” • US South Region Cold • “us-south-flex” • US South Region Flex • “eu-standard” • EU Cross Region Standard • “eu-vault” • EU Cross Region Vault • “eu-cold” • EU Cross Region Cold • “eu-flex” • EU Cross Region Flex • “eu-gb-standard” • Great Britain Standard • “eu-gb-vault” • Great Britain Vault • “eu-gb-cold” • Great Britain Cold • “eu-gb-flex” • Great Britain Flex • “ap-standard” • APAC Standard • “ap-vault” • APAC Vault • “ap-cold” • APAC Cold • “ap-flex” • APAC Flex • “mel01-standard” • Melbourne Standard • “mel01-vault” • Melbourne Vault • “mel01-cold” • Melbourne Cold • “mel01-flex” • Melbourne Flex • “tor01-standard” • Toronto Standard • “tor01-vault” • Toronto Vault • “tor01-cold” • Toronto Cold • “tor01-flex” • Toronto Flex –s3-location-constraint Location constraint - must be set to match the Region. Leave blank if not sure. Used when creating buckets only. • Config: location_constraint • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_LOCATION_CONSTRAINT • Type: string • Default: "" –s3-acl Canned ACL used when creating buckets and storing or copying objects. This ACL is used for creating objects and if bucket_acl isn’t set, for creating buckets too. For more info visit https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/acl- overview.html#canned-acl Note that this ACL is applied when server side copying objects as S3 doesn’t copy the ACL from the source but rather writes a fresh one. • Config: acl • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_ACL • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “default” • Owner gets Full_CONTROL. No one else has access rights (default). • “private” • Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. No one else has access rights (default). • “public-read” • Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AllUsers group gets READ access. • “public-read-write” • Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AllUsers group gets READ and WRITE access. • Granting this on a bucket is generally not recommended. • “authenticated-read” • Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AuthenticatedUsers group gets READ access. • “bucket-owner-read” • Object owner gets FULL_CONTROL. Bucket owner gets READ access. • If you specify this canned ACL when creating a bucket, Amazon S3 ignores it. • “bucket-owner-full-control” • Both the object owner and the bucket owner get FULL_CONTROL over the object. • If you specify this canned ACL when creating a bucket, Amazon S3 ignores it. • “private” • Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. No one else has access rights (default). This acl is available on IBM Cloud (Infra), IBM Cloud (Storage), On-Premise COS • “public-read” • Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AllUsers group gets READ access. This acl is available on IBM Cloud (Infra), IBM Cloud (Storage), On-Premise IBM COS • “public-read-write” • Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AllUsers group gets READ and WRITE access. This acl is available on IBM Cloud (Infra), On-Premise IBM COS • “authenticated-read” • Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AuthenticatedUsers group gets READ access. Not supported on Buckets. This acl is available on IBM Cloud (Infra) and On-Premise IBM COS –s3-server-side-encryption The server-side encryption algorithm used when storing this object in S3. • Config: server_side_encryption • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_SERVER_SIDE_ENCRYPTION • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • None • “AES256” • AES256 • “aws:kms” • aws:kms –s3-sse-kms-key-id If using KMS ID you must provide the ARN of Key. • Config: sse_kms_key_id • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_SSE_KMS_KEY_ID • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • None • "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:*" • arn:aws:kms:* –s3-storage-class The storage class to use when storing new objects in S3. • Config: storage_class • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_STORAGE_CLASS • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • Default • “STANDARD” • Standard storage class • “REDUCED_REDUNDANCY” • Reduced redundancy storage class • “STANDARD_IA” • Standard Infrequent Access storage class • “ONEZONE_IA” • One Zone Infrequent Access storage class • “GLACIER” • Glacier storage class • “DEEP_ARCHIVE” • Glacier Deep Archive storage class • “INTELLIGENT_TIERING” • Intelligent-Tiering storage class –s3-storage-class The storage class to use when storing new objects in OSS. • Config: storage_class • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_STORAGE_CLASS • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • Default • “STANDARD” • Standard storage class • “GLACIER” • Archive storage mode. • “STANDARD_IA” • Infrequent access storage mode. –s3-storage-class The storage class to use when storing new objects in Tencent COS. • Config: storage_class • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_STORAGE_CLASS • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • Default • “STANDARD” • Standard storage class • “ARCHIVE” • Archive storage mode. • “STANDARD_IA” • Infrequent access storage mode. –s3-storage-class The storage class to use when storing new objects in S3. • Config: storage_class • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_STORAGE_CLASS • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • Default • “STANDARD” • The Standard class for any upload; suitable for on-demand content like streaming or CDN. • “GLACIER” • Archived storage; prices are lower, but it needs to be restored first to be accessed. Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to s3 (Amazon S3 Compliant Storage Provider (AWS, Alibaba, Ceph, Digital Ocean, Dreamhost, IBM COS, Minio, Tencent COS, etc)). –s3-bucket-acl Canned ACL used when creating buckets. For more info visit https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/acl- overview.html#canned-acl Note that this ACL is applied when only when creating buckets. If it isn’t set then “acl” is used instead. • Config: bucket_acl • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_BUCKET_ACL • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “private” • Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. No one else has access rights (default). • “public-read” • Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AllUsers group gets READ access. • “public-read-write” • Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AllUsers group gets READ and WRITE access. • Granting this on a bucket is generally not recommended. • “authenticated-read” • Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AuthenticatedUsers group gets READ access. –s3-sse-customer-algorithm If using SSE-C, the server-side encryption algorithm used when storing this object in S3. • Config: sse_customer_algorithm • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_SSE_CUSTOMER_ALGORITHM • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • None • “AES256” • AES256 –s3-sse-customer-key If using SSE-C you must provide the secret encryption key used to encrypt/decrypt your data. • Config: sse_customer_key • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_SSE_CUSTOMER_KEY • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • None –s3-sse-customer-key-md5 If using SSE-C you must provide the secret encryption key MD5 checksum. • Config: sse_customer_key_md5 • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_SSE_CUSTOMER_KEY_MD5 • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • None –s3-upload-cutoff Cutoff for switching to chunked upload Any files larger than this will be uploaded in chunks of chunk_size. The minimum is 0 and the maximum is 5GB. • Config: upload_cutoff • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_UPLOAD_CUTOFF • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 200M –s3-chunk-size Chunk size to use for uploading. When uploading files larger than upload_cutoff or files with unknown size (eg from “rclone rcat” or uploaded with “rclone mount” or google photos or google docs) they will be uploaded as multipart uploads using this chunk size. Note that “–s3-upload-concurrency” chunks of this size are buffered in memory per transfer. If you are transferring large files over high speed links and you have enough memory, then increasing this will speed up the transfers. Rclone will automatically increase the chunk size when uploading a large file of known size to stay below the 10,000 chunks limit. Files of unknown size are uploaded with the configured chunk_size. Since the default chunk size is 5MB and there can be at most 10,000 chunks, this means that by default the maximum size of file you can stream upload is 48GB. If you wish to stream upload larger files then you will need to increase chunk_size. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 5M –s3-max-upload-parts Maximum number of parts in a multipart upload. This option defines the maximum number of multipart chunks to use when doing a multipart upload. This can be useful if a service does not support the AWS S3 specification of 10,000 chunks. Rclone will automatically increase the chunk size when uploading a large file of a known size to stay below this number of chunks limit. • Config: max_upload_parts • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_MAX_UPLOAD_PARTS • Type: int • Default: 10000 –s3-copy-cutoff Cutoff for switching to multipart copy Any files larger than this that need to be server side copied will be copied in chunks of this size. The minimum is 0 and the maximum is 5GB. • Config: copy_cutoff • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_COPY_CUTOFF • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 4.656G –s3-disable-checksum Don’t store MD5 checksum with object metadata Normally rclone will calculate the MD5 checksum of the input before uploading it so it can add it to metadata on the object. This is great for data integrity checking but can cause long delays for large files to start uploading. • Config: disable_checksum • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_DISABLE_CHECKSUM • Type: bool • Default: false –s3-shared-credentials-file Path to the shared credentials file If env_auth = true then rclone can use a shared credentials file. If this variable is empty rclone will look for the “AWS_SHARED_CREDENTIALS_FILE” env variable. If the env value is empty it will default to the current user’s home directory. Linux/OSX: "$HOME/.aws/credentials" Windows: "%USERPROFILE%\.aws\credentials" • Config: shared_credentials_file • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_SHARED_CREDENTIALS_FILE • Type: string • Default: "" –s3-profile Profile to use in the shared credentials file If env_auth = true then rclone can use a shared credentials file. This variable controls which profile is used in that file. If empty it will default to the environment variable “AWS_PROFILE” or “default” if that environment variable is also not set. • Config: profile • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_PROFILE • Type: string • Default: "" –s3-session-token An AWS session token • Config: session_token • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_SESSION_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –s3-upload-concurrency Concurrency for multipart uploads. This is the number of chunks of the same file that are uploaded concurrently. If you are uploading small numbers of large file over high speed link and these uploads do not fully utilize your bandwidth, then increasing this may help to speed up the transfers. • Config: upload_concurrency • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_UPLOAD_CONCURRENCY • Type: int • Default: 4 –s3-force-path-style If true use path style access if false use virtual hosted style. If this is true (the default) then rclone will use path style access, if false then rclone will use virtual path style. See the AWS S3 docs (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/UsingBucket.html#access-bucket-intro) for more info. Some providers (eg AWS, Aliyun OSS, Netease COS or Tencent COS) require this set to false - rclone will do this automatically based on the provider setting. • Config: force_path_style • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_FORCE_PATH_STYLE • Type: bool • Default: true –s3-v2-auth If true use v2 authentication. If this is false (the default) then rclone will use v4 authentication. If it is set then rclone will use v2 authentication. Use this only if v4 signatures don’t work, eg pre Jewel/v10 CEPH. • Config: v2_auth • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_V2_AUTH • Type: bool • Default: false –s3-use-accelerate-endpoint If true use the AWS S3 accelerated endpoint. See: AWS S3 Transfer acceleration (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/transfer-acceleration-examples.html) • Config: use_accelerate_endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_USE_ACCELERATE_ENDPOINT • Type: bool • Default: false –s3-leave-parts-on-error If true avoid calling abort upload on a failure, leaving all successfully uploaded parts on S3 for manual recovery. It should be set to true for resuming uploads across different sessions. WARNING: Storing parts of an incomplete multipart upload counts towards space usage on S3 and will add additional costs if not cleaned up. • Config: leave_parts_on_error • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_LEAVE_PARTS_ON_ERROR • Type: bool • Default: false –s3-list-chunk Size of listing chunk (response list for each ListObject S3 request). This option is also known as “MaxKeys”, “max-items”, or “page-size” from the AWS S3 specification. Most services truncate the response list to 1000 objects even if requested more than that. In AWS S3 this is a global maximum and cannot be changed, see AWS S3 (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/reference/s3/ls.html). In Ceph, this can be increased with the “rgw list buckets max chunk” option. • Config: list_chunk • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_LIST_CHUNK • Type: int • Default: 1000 –s3-no-check-bucket If set don’t attempt to check the bucket exists or create it This can be useful when trying to minimise the number of transactions rclone does if you know the bucket exists already. • Config: no_check_bucket • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_NO_CHECK_BUCKET • Type: bool • Default: false –s3-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,InvalidUtf8,Dot –s3-memory-pool-flush-time How often internal memory buffer pools will be flushed. Uploads which requires additional buffers (f.e multipart) will use memory pool for allocations. This option controls how often unused buffers will be removed from the pool. • Config: memory_pool_flush_time • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_MEMORY_POOL_FLUSH_TIME • Type: Duration • Default: 1m0s –s3-memory-pool-use-mmap Whether to use mmap buffers in internal memory pool. • Config: memory_pool_use_mmap • Env Var: RCLONE_S3_MEMORY_POOL_USE_MMAP • Type: bool • Default: false Backend commands Here are the commands specific to the s3 backend. Run them with rclone backend COMMAND remote: The help below will explain what arguments each command takes. See the “rclone backend” command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_backend/) for more info on how to pass options and arguments. These can be run on a running backend using the rc command backend/command (https://rclone.org/rc/#backend/command). restore Restore objects from GLACIER to normal storage rclone backend restore remote: [options] [<arguments>+] This command can be used to restore one or more objects from GLACIER to normal storage. Usage Examples: rclone backend restore s3:bucket/path/to/object [-o priority=PRIORITY] [-o lifetime=DAYS] rclone backend restore s3:bucket/path/to/directory [-o priority=PRIORITY] [-o lifetime=DAYS] rclone backend restore s3:bucket [-o priority=PRIORITY] [-o lifetime=DAYS] This flag also obeys the filters. Test first with -i/–interactive or –dry-run flags rclone -i backend restore --include "*.txt" s3:bucket/path -o priority=Standard All the objects shown will be marked for restore, then rclone backend restore --include "*.txt" s3:bucket/path -o priority=Standard It returns a list of status dictionaries with Remote and Status keys. The Status will be OK if it was successfull or an error message if not. [ { "Status": "OK", "Path": "test.txt" }, { "Status": "OK", "Path": "test/file4.txt" } ] Options: • “description”: The optional description for the job. • “lifetime”: Lifetime of the active copy in days • “priority”: Priority of restore: Standard|Expedited|Bulk list-multipart-uploads List the unfinished multipart uploads rclone backend list-multipart-uploads remote: [options] [<arguments>+] This command lists the unfinished multipart uploads in JSON format. rclone backend list-multipart s3:bucket/path/to/object It returns a dictionary of buckets with values as lists of unfinished multipart uploads. You can call it with no bucket in which case it lists all bucket, with a bucket or with a bucket and path. { "rclone": [ { "Initiated": "2020-06-26T14:20:36Z", "Initiator": { "DisplayName": "XXX", "ID": "arn:aws:iam::XXX:user/XXX" }, "Key": "KEY", "Owner": { "DisplayName": null, "ID": "XXX" }, "StorageClass": "STANDARD", "UploadId": "XXX" } ], "rclone-1000files": [], "rclone-dst": [] } cleanup Remove unfinished multipart uploads. rclone backend cleanup remote: [options] [<arguments>+] This command removes unfinished multipart uploads of age greater than max-age which defaults to 24 hours. Note that you can use -i/–dry-run with this command to see what it would do. rclone backend cleanup s3:bucket/path/to/object rclone backend cleanup -o max-age=7w s3:bucket/path/to/object Durations are parsed as per the rest of rclone, 2h, 7d, 7w etc. Options: • “max-age”: Max age of upload to delete Anonymous access to public buckets If you want to use rclone to access a public bucket, configure with a blank access_key_id and secret_access_key. Your config should end up looking like this: [anons3] type = s3 provider = AWS env_auth = false access_key_id = secret_access_key = region = us-east-1 endpoint = location_constraint = acl = private server_side_encryption = storage_class = Then use it as normal with the name of the public bucket, eg rclone lsd anons3:1000genomes You will be able to list and copy data but not upload it. Ceph Ceph (https://ceph.com/) is an open source unified, distributed storage system designed for excellent performance, reliability and scalability. It has an S3 compatible object storage interface. To use rclone with Ceph, configure as above but leave the region blank and set the endpoint. You should end up with something like this in your config: [ceph] type = s3 provider = Ceph env_auth = false access_key_id = XXX secret_access_key = YYY region = endpoint = https://ceph.endpoint.example.com location_constraint = acl = server_side_encryption = storage_class = If you are using an older version of CEPH, eg 10.2.x Jewel, then you may need to supply the parameter --s3-upload-cutoff 0 or put this in the config file as upload_cutoff 0 to work around a bug which causes uploading of small files to fail. Note also that Ceph sometimes puts / in the passwords it gives users. If you read the secret access key using the command line tools you will get a JSON blob with the / escaped as \/. Make sure you only write / in the secret access key. Eg the dump from Ceph looks something like this (irrelevant keys removed). { "user_id": "xxx", "display_name": "xxxx", "keys": [ { "user": "xxx", "access_key": "xxxxxx", "secret_key": "xxxxxx\/xxxx" } ], } Because this is a json dump, it is encoding the / as \/, so if you use the secret key as xxxxxx/xxxx it will work fine. Dreamhost Dreamhost DreamObjects (https://www.dreamhost.com/cloud/storage/) is an object storage system based on CEPH. To use rclone with Dreamhost, configure as above but leave the region blank and set the endpoint. You should end up with something like this in your config: [dreamobjects] type = s3 provider = DreamHost env_auth = false access_key_id = your_access_key secret_access_key = your_secret_key region = endpoint = objects-us-west-1.dream.io location_constraint = acl = private server_side_encryption = storage_class = DigitalOcean Spaces Spaces (https://www.digitalocean.com/products/object-storage/) is an S3-interoperable (https://developers.digitalocean.com/documentation/spaces/) object storage service from cloud provider DigitalOcean. To connect to DigitalOcean Spaces you will need an access key and secret key. These can be retrieved on the “Applications & API (https://cloud.digitalocean.com/settings/api/tokens)” page of the DigitalOcean control panel. They will be needed when prompted by rclone config for your access_key_id and secret_access_key. When prompted for a region or location_constraint, press enter to use the default value. The region must be included in the endpoint setting (e.g. nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com). The default values can be used for other settings. Going through the whole process of creating a new remote by running rclone config, each prompt should be answered as shown below: Storage> s3 env_auth> 1 access_key_id> YOUR_ACCESS_KEY secret_access_key> YOUR_SECRET_KEY region> endpoint> nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com location_constraint> acl> storage_class> The resulting configuration file should look like: [spaces] type = s3 provider = DigitalOcean env_auth = false access_key_id = YOUR_ACCESS_KEY secret_access_key = YOUR_SECRET_KEY region = endpoint = nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com location_constraint = acl = server_side_encryption = storage_class = Once configured, you can create a new Space and begin copying files. For example: rclone mkdir spaces:my-new-space rclone copy /path/to/files spaces:my-new-space IBM COS (S3) Information stored with IBM Cloud Object Storage is encrypted and dispersed across multiple geographic locations, and accessed through an implementation of the S3 API. This service makes use of the distributed storage technologies provided by IBM’s Cloud Object Storage System (formerly Cleversafe). For more information visit: (http://www.ibm.com/cloud/object-storage) To configure access to IBM COS S3, follow the steps below: 1. Run rclone config and select n for a new remote. 2018/02/14 14:13:11 NOTICE: Config file "C:\\Users\\a\\.config\\rclone\\rclone.conf" not found - using defaults No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n 2. Enter the name for the configuration name> <YOUR NAME> 3. Select “s3” storage. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Alias for an existing remote \ "alias" 2 / Amazon Drive \ "amazon cloud drive" 3 / Amazon S3 Complaint Storage Providers (Dreamhost, Ceph, Minio, IBM COS) \ "s3" 4 / Backblaze B2 \ "b2" [snip] 23 / http Connection \ "http" Storage> 3 4. Select IBM COS as the S3 Storage Provider. Choose the S3 provider. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Choose this option to configure Storage to AWS S3 \ "AWS" 2 / Choose this option to configure Storage to Ceph Systems \ "Ceph" 3 / Choose this option to configure Storage to Dreamhost \ "Dreamhost" 4 / Choose this option to the configure Storage to IBM COS S3 \ "IBMCOS" 5 / Choose this option to the configure Storage to Minio \ "Minio" Provider>4 5. Enter the Access Key and Secret. AWS Access Key ID - leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. access_key_id> <> AWS Secret Access Key (password) - leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. secret_access_key> <> 6. Specify the endpoint for IBM COS. For Public IBM COS, choose from the option below. For On Premise IBM COS, enter an enpoint address. Endpoint for IBM COS S3 API. Specify if using an IBM COS On Premise. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / US Cross Region Endpoint \ "s3-api.us-geo.objectstorage.softlayer.net" 2 / US Cross Region Dallas Endpoint \ "s3-api.dal.us-geo.objectstorage.softlayer.net" 3 / US Cross Region Washington DC Endpoint \ "s3-api.wdc-us-geo.objectstorage.softlayer.net" 4 / US Cross Region San Jose Endpoint \ "s3-api.sjc-us-geo.objectstorage.softlayer.net" 5 / US Cross Region Private Endpoint \ "s3-api.us-geo.objectstorage.service.networklayer.com" 6 / US Cross Region Dallas Private Endpoint \ "s3-api.dal-us-geo.objectstorage.service.networklayer.com" 7 / US Cross Region Washington DC Private Endpoint \ "s3-api.wdc-us-geo.objectstorage.service.networklayer.com" 8 / US Cross Region San Jose Private Endpoint \ "s3-api.sjc-us-geo.objectstorage.service.networklayer.com" 9 / US Region East Endpoint \ "s3.us-east.objectstorage.softlayer.net" 10 / US Region East Private Endpoint \ "s3.us-east.objectstorage.service.networklayer.com" 11 / US Region South Endpoint [snip] 34 / Toronto Single Site Private Endpoint \ "s3.tor01.objectstorage.service.networklayer.com" endpoint>1 7. Specify a IBM COS Location Constraint. The location constraint must match endpoint when using IBM Cloud Public. For on-prem COS, do not make a selection from this list, hit enter 1 / US Cross Region Standard \ "us-standard" 2 / US Cross Region Vault \ "us-vault" 3 / US Cross Region Cold \ "us-cold" 4 / US Cross Region Flex \ "us-flex" 5 / US East Region Standard \ "us-east-standard" 6 / US East Region Vault \ "us-east-vault" 7 / US East Region Cold \ "us-east-cold" 8 / US East Region Flex \ "us-east-flex" 9 / US South Region Standard \ "us-south-standard" 10 / US South Region Vault \ "us-south-vault" [snip] 32 / Toronto Flex \ "tor01-flex" location_constraint>1 9. Specify a canned ACL. IBM Cloud (Strorage) supports “public-read” and “private”. IBM Cloud(Infra) supports all the canned ACLs. On-Premise COS supports all the canned ACLs. Canned ACL used when creating buckets and/or storing objects in S3. For more info visit https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/acl-overview.html#canned-acl Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. No one else has access rights (default). This acl is available on IBM Cloud (Infra), IBM Cloud (Storage), On-Premise COS \ "private" 2 / Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AllUsers group gets READ access. This acl is available on IBM Cloud (Infra), IBM Cloud (Storage), On-Premise IBM COS \ "public-read" 3 / Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AllUsers group gets READ and WRITE access. This acl is available on IBM Cloud (Infra), On-Premise IBM COS \ "public-read-write" 4 / Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AuthenticatedUsers group gets READ access. Not supported on Buckets. This acl is available on IBM Cloud (Infra) and On-Premise IBM COS \ "authenticated-read" acl> 1 12. Review the displayed configuration and accept to save the “remote” then quit. The config file should look like this [xxx] type = s3 Provider = IBMCOS access_key_id = xxx secret_access_key = yyy endpoint = s3-api.us-geo.objectstorage.softlayer.net location_constraint = us-standard acl = private 13. Execute rclone commands 1) Create a bucket. rclone mkdir IBM-COS-XREGION:newbucket 2) List available buckets. rclone lsd IBM-COS-XREGION: -1 2017-11-08 21:16:22 -1 test -1 2018-02-14 20:16:39 -1 newbucket 3) List contents of a bucket. rclone ls IBM-COS-XREGION:newbucket 18685952 test.exe 4) Copy a file from local to remote. rclone copy /Users/file.txt IBM-COS-XREGION:newbucket 5) Copy a file from remote to local. rclone copy IBM-COS-XREGION:newbucket/file.txt . 6) Delete a file on remote. rclone delete IBM-COS-XREGION:newbucket/file.txt Minio Minio (https://minio.io/) is an object storage server built for cloud application developers and devops. It is very easy to install and provides an S3 compatible server which can be used by rclone. To use it, install Minio following the instructions here (https://docs.minio.io/docs/minio-quickstart-guide). When it configures itself Minio will print something like this Endpoint: http://192.168.1.106:9000 http://172.23.0.1:9000 AccessKey: USWUXHGYZQYFYFFIT3RE SecretKey: MOJRH0mkL1IPauahWITSVvyDrQbEEIwljvmxdq03 Region: us-east-1 SQS ARNs: arn:minio:sqs:us-east-1:1:redis arn:minio:sqs:us-east-1:2:redis Browser Access: http://192.168.1.106:9000 http://172.23.0.1:9000 Command-line Access: https://docs.minio.io/docs/minio-client-quickstart-guide $ mc config host add myminio http://192.168.1.106:9000 USWUXHGYZQYFYFFIT3RE MOJRH0mkL1IPauahWITSVvyDrQbEEIwljvmxdq03 Object API (Amazon S3 compatible): Go: https://docs.minio.io/docs/golang-client-quickstart-guide Java: https://docs.minio.io/docs/java-client-quickstart-guide Python: https://docs.minio.io/docs/python-client-quickstart-guide JavaScript: https://docs.minio.io/docs/javascript-client-quickstart-guide .NET: https://docs.minio.io/docs/dotnet-client-quickstart-guide Drive Capacity: 26 GiB Free, 165 GiB Total These details need to go into rclone config like this. Note that it is important to put the region in as stated above. env_auth> 1 access_key_id> USWUXHGYZQYFYFFIT3RE secret_access_key> MOJRH0mkL1IPauahWITSVvyDrQbEEIwljvmxdq03 region> us-east-1 endpoint> http://192.168.1.106:9000 location_constraint> server_side_encryption> Which makes the config file look like this [minio] type = s3 provider = Minio env_auth = false access_key_id = USWUXHGYZQYFYFFIT3RE secret_access_key = MOJRH0mkL1IPauahWITSVvyDrQbEEIwljvmxdq03 region = us-east-1 endpoint = http://192.168.1.106:9000 location_constraint = server_side_encryption = So once set up, for example to copy files into a bucket rclone copy /path/to/files minio:bucket Scaleway Scaleway (https://www.scaleway.com/object-storage/) The Object Storage platform allows you to store anything from backups, logs and web assets to documents and photos. Files can be dropped from the Scaleway console or transferred through our API and CLI or using any S3-compatible tool. Scaleway provides an S3 interface which can be configured for use with rclone like this: [scaleway] type = s3 provider = Scaleway env_auth = false endpoint = s3.nl-ams.scw.cloud access_key_id = SCWXXXXXXXXXXXXXX secret_access_key = 1111111-2222-3333-44444-55555555555555 region = nl-ams location_constraint = acl = private server_side_encryption = storage_class = Wasabi Wasabi (https://wasabi.com) is a cloud-based object storage service for a broad range of applications and use cases. Wasabi is designed for individuals and organizations that require a high-performance, reliable, and secure data storage infrastructure at minimal cost. Wasabi provides an S3 interface which can be configured for use with rclone like this. No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password n/s> n name> wasabi Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Amazon S3 (also Dreamhost, Ceph, Minio) \ "s3" [snip] Storage> s3 Get AWS credentials from runtime (environment variables or EC2/ECS meta data if no env vars). Only applies if access_key_id and secret_access_key is blank. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Enter AWS credentials in the next step \ "false" 2 / Get AWS credentials from the environment (env vars or IAM) \ "true" env_auth> 1 AWS Access Key ID - leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. access_key_id> YOURACCESSKEY AWS Secret Access Key (password) - leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. secret_access_key> YOURSECRETACCESSKEY Region to connect to. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value / The default endpoint - a good choice if you are unsure. 1 | US Region, Northern Virginia or Pacific Northwest. | Leave location constraint empty. \ "us-east-1" [snip] region> us-east-1 Endpoint for S3 API. Leave blank if using AWS to use the default endpoint for the region. Specify if using an S3 clone such as Ceph. endpoint> s3.wasabisys.com Location constraint - must be set to match the Region. Used when creating buckets only. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Empty for US Region, Northern Virginia or Pacific Northwest. \ "" [snip] location_constraint> Canned ACL used when creating buckets and/or storing objects in S3. For more info visit https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/acl-overview.html#canned-acl Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. No one else has access rights (default). \ "private" [snip] acl> The server-side encryption algorithm used when storing this object in S3. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / None \ "" 2 / AES256 \ "AES256" server_side_encryption> The storage class to use when storing objects in S3. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Default \ "" 2 / Standard storage class \ "STANDARD" 3 / Reduced redundancy storage class \ "REDUCED_REDUNDANCY" 4 / Standard Infrequent Access storage class \ "STANDARD_IA" storage_class> Remote config -------------------- [wasabi] env_auth = false access_key_id = YOURACCESSKEY secret_access_key = YOURSECRETACCESSKEY region = us-east-1 endpoint = s3.wasabisys.com location_constraint = acl = server_side_encryption = storage_class = -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y This will leave the config file looking like this. [wasabi] type = s3 provider = Wasabi env_auth = false access_key_id = YOURACCESSKEY secret_access_key = YOURSECRETACCESSKEY region = endpoint = s3.wasabisys.com location_constraint = acl = server_side_encryption = storage_class = Alibaba OSS Here is an example of making an Alibaba Cloud (Aliyun) OSS (https://www.alibabacloud.com/product/oss/) configuration. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process. No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> oss Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] 4 / Amazon S3 Compliant Storage Provider (AWS, Alibaba, Ceph, Digital Ocean, Dreamhost, IBM COS, Minio, etc) \ "s3" [snip] Storage> s3 Choose your S3 provider. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Amazon Web Services (AWS) S3 \ "AWS" 2 / Alibaba Cloud Object Storage System (OSS) formerly Aliyun \ "Alibaba" 3 / Ceph Object Storage \ "Ceph" [snip] provider> Alibaba Get AWS credentials from runtime (environment variables or EC2/ECS meta data if no env vars). Only applies if access_key_id and secret_access_key is blank. Enter a boolean value (true or false). Press Enter for the default ("false"). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Enter AWS credentials in the next step \ "false" 2 / Get AWS credentials from the environment (env vars or IAM) \ "true" env_auth> 1 AWS Access Key ID. Leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). access_key_id> accesskeyid AWS Secret Access Key (password) Leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). secret_access_key> secretaccesskey Endpoint for OSS API. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / East China 1 (Hangzhou) \ "oss-cn-hangzhou.aliyuncs.com" 2 / East China 2 (Shanghai) \ "oss-cn-shanghai.aliyuncs.com" 3 / North China 1 (Qingdao) \ "oss-cn-qingdao.aliyuncs.com" [snip] endpoint> 1 Canned ACL used when creating buckets and storing or copying objects. Note that this ACL is applied when server side copying objects as S3 doesn't copy the ACL from the source but rather writes a fresh one. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. No one else has access rights (default). \ "private" 2 / Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AllUsers group gets READ access. \ "public-read" / Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. The AllUsers group gets READ and WRITE access. [snip] acl> 1 The storage class to use when storing new objects in OSS. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Default \ "" 2 / Standard storage class \ "STANDARD" 3 / Archive storage mode. \ "GLACIER" 4 / Infrequent access storage mode. \ "STANDARD_IA" storage_class> 1 Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No y/n> n Remote config -------------------- [oss] type = s3 provider = Alibaba env_auth = false access_key_id = accesskeyid secret_access_key = secretaccesskey endpoint = oss-cn-hangzhou.aliyuncs.com acl = private storage_class = Standard -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Tencent COS Tencent Cloud Object Storage (COS) (https://intl.cloud.tencent.com/product/cos) is a distributed storage service offered by Tencent Cloud for unstructured data. It is secure, stable, massive, convenient, low-delay and low-cost. To configure access to Tencent COS, follow the steps below: 1. Run rclone config and select n for a new remote. rclone config No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n 2. Give the name of the configuration. For example, name it `cos'. name> cos 3. Select s3 storage. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / 1Fichier \ "fichier" 2 / Alias for an existing remote \ "alias" 3 / Amazon Drive \ "amazon cloud drive" 4 / Amazon S3 Compliant Storage Provider (AWS, Alibaba, Ceph, Digital Ocean, Dreamhost, IBM COS, Minio, Tencent COS, etc) \ "s3" [snip] Storage> s3 4. Select TencentCOS provider. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Amazon Web Services (AWS) S3 \ "AWS" [snip] 11 / Tencent Cloud Object Storage (COS) \ "TencentCOS" [snip] provider> TencentCOS 5. Enter your SecretId and SecretKey of Tencent Cloud. Get AWS credentials from runtime (environment variables or EC2/ECS meta data if no env vars). Only applies if access_key_id and secret_access_key is blank. Enter a boolean value (true or false). Press Enter for the default ("false"). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Enter AWS credentials in the next step \ "false" 2 / Get AWS credentials from the environment (env vars or IAM) \ "true" env_auth> 1 AWS Access Key ID. Leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). access_key_id> AKIDxxxxxxxxxx AWS Secret Access Key (password) Leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). secret_access_key> xxxxxxxxxxx 6. Select endpoint for Tencent COS. This is the standard endpoint for different region. 1 / Beijing Region. \ "cos.ap-beijing.myqcloud.com" 2 / Nanjing Region. \ "cos.ap-nanjing.myqcloud.com" 3 / Shanghai Region. \ "cos.ap-shanghai.myqcloud.com" 4 / Guangzhou Region. \ "cos.ap-guangzhou.myqcloud.com" [snip] endpoint> 4 7. Choose acl and storage class. Note that this ACL is applied when server side copying objects as S3 doesn't copy the ACL from the source but rather writes a fresh one. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Owner gets Full_CONTROL. No one else has access rights (default). \ "default" [snip] acl> 1 The storage class to use when storing new objects in Tencent COS. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Default \ "" [snip] storage_class> 1 Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No (default) y/n> n Remote config -------------------- [cos] type = s3 provider = TencentCOS env_auth = false access_key_id = xxx secret_access_key = xxx endpoint = cos.ap-guangzhou.myqcloud.com acl = default -------------------- y) Yes this is OK (default) e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Current remotes: Name Type ==== ==== cos s3 Netease NOS For Netease NOS configure as per the configurator rclone config setting the provider Netease. This will automatically set force_path_style = false which is necessary for it to run properly. Backblaze B2 B2 is Backblaze’s cloud storage system (https://www.backblaze.com/b2/). Paths are specified as remote:bucket (or remote: for the lsd command.) You may put subdirectories in too, eg remote:bucket/path/to/dir. Here is an example of making a b2 configuration. First run rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process. To authenticate you will either need your Account ID (a short hex number) and Master Application Key (a long hex number) OR an Application Key, which is the recommended method. See below for further details on generating and using an Application Key. No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote q) Quit config n/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Backblaze B2 \ "b2" [snip] Storage> b2 Account ID or Application Key ID account> 123456789abc Application Key key> 0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789 Endpoint for the service - leave blank normally. endpoint> Remote config -------------------- [remote] account = 123456789abc key = 0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789 endpoint = -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y This remote is called remote and can now be used like this See all buckets rclone lsd remote: Create a new bucket rclone mkdir remote:bucket List the contents of a bucket rclone ls remote:bucket Sync /home/local/directory to the remote bucket, deleting any excess files in the bucket. rclone sync -i /home/local/directory remote:bucket Application Keys B2 supports multiple Application Keys for different access permission to B2 Buckets (https://www.backblaze.com/b2/docs/application_keys.html). You can use these with rclone too; you will need to use rclone version 1.43 or later. Follow Backblaze’s docs to create an Application Key with the required permission and add the applicationKeyId as the account and the Application Key itself as the key. Note that you must put the applicationKeyId as the account – you can’t use the master Account ID. If you try then B2 will return 401 errors. –fast-list This remote supports --fast-list which allows you to use fewer transactions in exchange for more memory. See the rclone docs (https://rclone.org/docs/#fast-list) for more details. Modified time The modified time is stored as metadata on the object as X-Bz-Info- src_last_modified_millis as milliseconds since 1970-01-01 in the Backblaze standard. Other tools should be able to use this as a modified time. Modified times are used in syncing and are fully supported. Note that if a modification time needs to be updated on an object then it will create a new version of the object. Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── \ 0x5C \ Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Note that in 2020-05 Backblaze started allowing characters in file names. Rclone hasn’t changed its encoding as this could cause syncs to re-transfer files. If you want rclone not to replace then see the --b2-encoding flag below and remove the BackSlash from the string. This can be set in the config. SHA1 checksums The SHA1 checksums of the files are checked on upload and download and will be used in the syncing process. Large files (bigger than the limit in --b2-upload-cutoff) which are uploaded in chunks will store their SHA1 on the object as X-Bz-Info-large_file_sha1 as recommended by Backblaze. For a large file to be uploaded with an SHA1 checksum, the source needs to support SHA1 checksums. The local disk supports SHA1 checksums so large file transfers from local disk will have an SHA1. See the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#features) for exactly which remotes support SHA1. Sources which don’t support SHA1, in particular crypt will upload large files without SHA1 checksums. This may be fixed in the future (see #1767 (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/1767)). Files sizes below --b2-upload-cutoff will always have an SHA1 regardless of the source. Transfers Backblaze recommends that you do lots of transfers simultaneously for maximum speed. In tests from my SSD equipped laptop the optimum setting is about --transfers 32 though higher numbers may be used for a slight speed improvement. The optimum number for you may vary depending on your hardware, how big the files are, how much you want to load your computer, etc. The default of --transfers 4 is definitely too low for Backblaze B2 though. Note that uploading big files (bigger than 200 MB by default) will use a 96 MB RAM buffer by default. There can be at most --transfers of these in use at any moment, so this sets the upper limit on the memory used. Versions When rclone uploads a new version of a file it creates a new version of it (https://www.backblaze.com/b2/docs/file_versions.html). Likewise when you delete a file, the old version will be marked hidden and still be available. Conversely, you may opt in to a “hard delete” of files with the --b2-hard-delete flag which would permanently remove the file instead of hiding it. Old versions of files, where available, are visible using the --b2-versions flag. NB Note that --b2-versions does not work with crypt at the moment #1627 (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/1627). Using –backup-dir (https://rclone.org/docs/#backup-dir-dir) with rclone is the recommended way of working around this. If you wish to remove all the old versions then you can use the rclone cleanup remote:bucket command which will delete all the old versions of files, leaving the current ones intact. You can also supply a path and only old versions under that path will be deleted, eg rclone cleanup remote:bucket/path/to/stuff. Note that cleanup will remove partially uploaded files from the bucket if they are more than a day old. When you purge a bucket, the current and the old versions will be deleted then the bucket will be deleted. However delete will cause the current versions of the files to become hidden old versions. Here is a session showing the listing and retrieval of an old version followed by a cleanup of the old versions. Show current version and all the versions with --b2-versions flag. $ rclone -q ls b2:cleanup-test 9 one.txt $ rclone -q --b2-versions ls b2:cleanup-test 9 one.txt 8 one-v2016-07-04-141032-000.txt 16 one-v2016-07-04-141003-000.txt 15 one-v2016-07-02-155621-000.txt Retrieve an old version $ rclone -q --b2-versions copy b2:cleanup-test/one-v2016-07-04-141003-000.txt /tmp $ ls -l /tmp/one-v2016-07-04-141003-000.txt -rw-rw-r-- 1 ncw ncw 16 Jul 2 17:46 /tmp/one-v2016-07-04-141003-000.txt Clean up all the old versions and show that they’ve gone. $ rclone -q cleanup b2:cleanup-test $ rclone -q ls b2:cleanup-test 9 one.txt $ rclone -q --b2-versions ls b2:cleanup-test 9 one.txt Data usage It is useful to know how many requests are sent to the server in different scenarios. All copy commands send the following 4 requests: /b2api/v1/b2_authorize_account /b2api/v1/b2_create_bucket /b2api/v1/b2_list_buckets /b2api/v1/b2_list_file_names The b2_list_file_names request will be sent once for every 1k files in the remote path, providing the checksum and modification time of the listed files. As of version 1.33 issue #818 (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/818) causes extra requests to be sent when using B2 with Crypt. When a copy operation does not require any files to be uploaded, no more requests will be sent. Uploading files that do not require chunking, will send 2 requests per file upload: /b2api/v1/b2_get_upload_url /b2api/v1/b2_upload_file/ Uploading files requiring chunking, will send 2 requests (one each to start and finish the upload) and another 2 requests for each chunk: /b2api/v1/b2_start_large_file /b2api/v1/b2_get_upload_part_url /b2api/v1/b2_upload_part/ /b2api/v1/b2_finish_large_file Versions Versions can be viewed with the --b2-versions flag. When it is set rclone will show and act on older versions of files. For example Listing without --b2-versions $ rclone -q ls b2:cleanup-test 9 one.txt And with $ rclone -q --b2-versions ls b2:cleanup-test 9 one.txt 8 one-v2016-07-04-141032-000.txt 16 one-v2016-07-04-141003-000.txt 15 one-v2016-07-02-155621-000.txt Showing that the current version is unchanged but older versions can be seen. These have the UTC date that they were uploaded to the server to the nearest millisecond appended to them. Note that when using --b2-versions no file write operations are permitted, so you can’t upload files or delete them. B2 and rclone link Rclone supports generating file share links for private B2 buckets. They can either be for a file for example: ./rclone link B2:bucket/path/to/file.txt https://f002.backblazeb2.com/file/bucket/path/to/file.txt?Authorization=xxxxxxxx or if run on a directory you will get: ./rclone link B2:bucket/path https://f002.backblazeb2.com/file/bucket/path?Authorization=xxxxxxxx you can then use the authorization token (the part of the url from the ?Authorization= on) on any file path under that directory. For example: https://f002.backblazeb2.com/file/bucket/path/to/file1?Authorization=xxxxxxxx https://f002.backblazeb2.com/file/bucket/path/file2?Authorization=xxxxxxxx https://f002.backblazeb2.com/file/bucket/path/folder/file3?Authorization=xxxxxxxx Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to b2 (Backblaze B2). –b2-account Account ID or Application Key ID • Config: account • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_ACCOUNT • Type: string • Default: "" –b2-key Application Key • Config: key • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_KEY • Type: string • Default: "" –b2-hard-delete Permanently delete files on remote removal, otherwise hide files. • Config: hard_delete • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_HARD_DELETE • Type: bool • Default: false Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to b2 (Backblaze B2). –b2-endpoint Endpoint for the service. Leave blank normally. • Config: endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_ENDPOINT • Type: string • Default: "" –b2-test-mode A flag string for X-Bz-Test-Mode header for debugging. This is for debugging purposes only. Setting it to one of the strings below will cause b2 to return specific errors: • “fail_some_uploads” • “expire_some_account_authorization_tokens” • “force_cap_exceeded” These will be set in the “X-Bz-Test-Mode” header which is documented in the b2 integrations checklist (https://www.backblaze.com/b2/docs/integration_checklist.html). • Config: test_mode • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_TEST_MODE • Type: string • Default: "" –b2-versions Include old versions in directory listings. Note that when using this no file write operations are permitted, so you can’t upload files or delete them. • Config: versions • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_VERSIONS • Type: bool • Default: false –b2-upload-cutoff Cutoff for switching to chunked upload. Files above this size will be uploaded in chunks of “–b2-chunk-size”. This value should be set no larger than 4.657GiB (== 5GB). • Config: upload_cutoff • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_UPLOAD_CUTOFF • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 200M –b2-copy-cutoff Cutoff for switching to multipart copy Any files larger than this that need to be server side copied will be copied in chunks of this size. The minimum is 0 and the maximum is 4.6GB. • Config: copy_cutoff • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_COPY_CUTOFF • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 4G –b2-chunk-size Upload chunk size. Must fit in memory. When uploading large files, chunk the file into this size. Note that these chunks are buffered in memory and there might a maximum of “–transfers” chunks in progress at once. 5,000,000 Bytes is the minimum size. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 96M –b2-disable-checksum Disable checksums for large (> upload cutoff) files Normally rclone will calculate the SHA1 checksum of the input before uploading it so it can add it to metadata on the object. This is great for data integrity checking but can cause long delays for large files to start uploading. • Config: disable_checksum • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_DISABLE_CHECKSUM • Type: bool • Default: false –b2-download-url Custom endpoint for downloads. This is usually set to a Cloudflare CDN URL as Backblaze offers free egress for data downloaded through the Cloudflare network. This is probably only useful for a public bucket. Leave blank if you want to use the endpoint provided by Backblaze. • Config: download_url • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_DOWNLOAD_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –b2-download-auth-duration Time before the authorization token will expire in s or suffix ms|s|m|h|d. The duration before the download authorization token will expire. The minimum value is 1 second. The maximum value is one week. • Config: download_auth_duration • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_DOWNLOAD_AUTH_DURATION • Type: Duration • Default: 1w –b2-memory-pool-flush-time How often internal memory buffer pools will be flushed. Uploads which requires additional buffers (f.e multipart) will use memory pool for allocations. This option controls how often unused buffers will be removed from the pool. • Config: memory_pool_flush_time • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_MEMORY_POOL_FLUSH_TIME • Type: Duration • Default: 1m0s –b2-memory-pool-use-mmap Whether to use mmap buffers in internal memory pool. • Config: memory_pool_use_mmap • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_MEMORY_POOL_USE_MMAP • Type: bool • Default: false –b2-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_B2_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot Box Paths are specified as remote:path Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. The initial setup for Box involves getting a token from Box which you can do either in your browser, or with a config.json downloaded from Box to use JWT authentication. rclone config walks you through it. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Box \ "box" [snip] Storage> box Box App Client Id - leave blank normally. client_id> Box App Client Secret - leave blank normally. client_secret> Box App config.json location Leave blank normally. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). box_config_file> Box App Primary Access Token Leave blank normally. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). access_token> Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default ("user"). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Rclone should act on behalf of a user \ "user" 2 / Rclone should act on behalf of a service account \ "enterprise" box_sub_type> Remote config Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code -------------------- [remote] client_id = client_secret = token = {"access_token":"XXX","token_type":"bearer","refresh_token":"XXX","expiry":"XXX"} -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y See the remote setup docs (https://rclone.org/remote_setup/) for how to set it up on a machine with no Internet browser available. Note that rclone runs a webserver on your local machine to collect the token as returned from Box. This only runs from the moment it opens your browser to the moment you get back the verification code. This is on http://127.0.0.1:53682/ and this it may require you to unblock it temporarily if you are running a host firewall. Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level of your Box rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your Box rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to an Box directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Using rclone with an Enterprise account with SSO If you have an “Enterprise” account type with Box with single sign on (SSO), you need to create a password to use Box with rclone. This can be done at your Enterprise Box account by going to Settings, “Account” Tab, and then set the password in the “Authentication” field. Once you have done this, you can setup your Enterprise Box account using the same procedure detailed above in the, using the password you have just set. Invalid refresh token According to the box docs (https://developer.box.com/v2.0/docs/oauth-20#section-6-using- the-access-and-refresh-tokens): Each refresh_token is valid for one use in 60 days. This means that if you • Don’t use the box remote for 60 days • Copy the config file with a box refresh token in and use it in two places • Get an error on a token refresh then rclone will return an error which includes the text Invalid refresh token. To fix this you will need to use oauth2 again to update the refresh token. You can use the methods in the remote setup docs (https://rclone.org/remote_setup/), bearing in mind that if you use the copy the config file method, you should not use that remote on the computer you did the authentication on. Here is how to do it. $ rclone config Current remotes: Name Type ==== ==== remote box e) Edit existing remote n) New remote d) Delete remote r) Rename remote c) Copy remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config e/n/d/r/c/s/q> e Choose a number from below, or type in an existing value 1 > remote remote> remote -------------------- [remote] type = box token = {"access_token":"XXX","token_type":"bearer","refresh_token":"XXX","expiry":"2017-07-08T23:40:08.059167677+01:00"} -------------------- Edit remote Value "client_id" = "" Edit? (y/n)> y) Yes n) No y/n> n Value "client_secret" = "" Edit? (y/n)> y) Yes n) No y/n> n Remote config Already have a token - refresh? y) Yes n) No y/n> y Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code -------------------- [remote] type = box token = {"access_token":"YYY","token_type":"bearer","refresh_token":"YYY","expiry":"2017-07-23T12:22:29.259137901+01:00"} -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Modified time and hashes Box allows modification times to be set on objects accurate to 1 second. These will be used to detect whether objects need syncing or not. Box supports SHA1 type hashes, so you can use the --checksum flag. Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── \ 0x5C \ File names can also not end with the following characters. These only get replaced if they are the last character in the name: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── SP 0x20 ␠ Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Transfers For files above 50MB rclone will use a chunked transfer. Rclone will upload up to --transfers chunks at the same time (shared among all the multipart uploads). Chunks are buffered in memory and are normally 8MB so increasing --transfers will increase memory use. Deleting files Depending on the enterprise settings for your user, the item will either be actually deleted from Box or moved to the trash. Emptying the trash is supported via the rclone however cleanup command however this deletes every trashed file and folder individually so it may take a very long time. Emptying the trash via the WebUI does not have this limitation so it is advised to empty the trash via the WebUI. Root folder ID You can set the root_folder_id for rclone. This is the directory (identified by its Folder ID) that rclone considers to be the root of your Box drive. Normally you will leave this blank and rclone will determine the correct root to use itself. However you can set this to restrict rclone to a specific folder hierarchy. In order to do this you will have to find the Folder ID of the directory you wish rclone to display. This will be the last segment of the URL when you open the relevant folder in the Box web interface. So if the folder you want rclone to use has a URL which looks like https://app.box.com/folder/11xxxxxxxxx8 in the browser, then you use 11xxxxxxxxx8 as the root_folder_id in the config. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to box (Box). –box-client-id OAuth Client Id Leave blank normally. • Config: client_id • Env Var: RCLONE_BOX_CLIENT_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –box-client-secret OAuth Client Secret Leave blank normally. • Config: client_secret • Env Var: RCLONE_BOX_CLIENT_SECRET • Type: string • Default: "" –box-box-config-file Box App config.json location Leave blank normally. Leading ~ will be expanded in the file name as will environment variables such as ${RCLONE_CONFIG_DIR}. • Config: box_config_file • Env Var: RCLONE_BOX_BOX_CONFIG_FILE • Type: string • Default: "" –box-access-token Box App Primary Access Token Leave blank normally. • Config: access_token • Env Var: RCLONE_BOX_ACCESS_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –box-box-sub-type • Config: box_sub_type • Env Var: RCLONE_BOX_BOX_SUB_TYPE • Type: string • Default: “user” • Examples: • “user” • Rclone should act on behalf of a user • “enterprise” • Rclone should act on behalf of a service account Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to box (Box). –box-token OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. • Config: token • Env Var: RCLONE_BOX_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –box-auth-url Auth server URL. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: auth_url • Env Var: RCLONE_BOX_AUTH_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –box-token-url Token server url. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: token_url • Env Var: RCLONE_BOX_TOKEN_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –box-root-folder-id Fill in for rclone to use a non root folder as its starting point. • Config: root_folder_id • Env Var: RCLONE_BOX_ROOT_FOLDER_ID • Type: string • Default: “0” –box-upload-cutoff Cutoff for switching to multipart upload (>= 50MB). • Config: upload_cutoff • Env Var: RCLONE_BOX_UPLOAD_CUTOFF • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 50M –box-commit-retries Max number of times to try committing a multipart file. • Config: commit_retries • Env Var: RCLONE_BOX_COMMIT_RETRIES • Type: int • Default: 100 –box-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_BOX_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,RightSpace,InvalidUtf8,Dot Limitations Note that Box is case insensitive so you can’t have a file called “Hello.doc” and one called “hello.doc”. Box file names can’t have the \ character in. rclone maps this to and from an identical looking unicode equivalent \ (U+FF3C Fullwidth Reverse Solidus). Box only supports filenames up to 255 characters in length. Cache (BETA) The cache remote wraps another existing remote and stores file structure and its data for long running tasks like rclone mount. Status The cache backend code is working but it currently doesn’t have a maintainer so there are outstanding bugs (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Abug+label%3A%22Remote%3A+Cache%22) which aren’t getting fixed. The cache backend is due to be phased out in favour of the VFS caching layer eventually which is more tightly integrated into rclone. Until this happens we recommend only using the cache backend if you find you can’t work without it. There are many docs online describing the use of the cache backend to minimize API hits and by-and-large these are out of date and the cache backend isn’t needed in those scenarios any more. Setup To get started you just need to have an existing remote which can be configured with cache. Here is an example of how to make a remote called test-cache. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote r) Rename remote c) Copy remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/r/c/s/q> n name> test-cache Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Cache a remote \ "cache" [snip] Storage> cache Remote to cache. Normally should contain a ':' and a path, eg "myremote:path/to/dir", "myremote:bucket" or maybe "myremote:" (not recommended). remote> local:/test Optional: The URL of the Plex server plex_url> http://127.0.0.1:32400 Optional: The username of the Plex user plex_username> dummyusername Optional: The password of the Plex user y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password n) No leave this optional password blank y/g/n> y Enter the password: password: Confirm the password: password: The size of a chunk. Lower value good for slow connections but can affect seamless reading. Default: 5M Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / 1MB \ "1m" 2 / 5 MB \ "5M" 3 / 10 MB \ "10M" chunk_size> 2 How much time should object info (file size, file hashes etc) be stored in cache. Use a very high value if you don't plan on changing the source FS from outside the cache. Accepted units are: "s", "m", "h". Default: 5m Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / 1 hour \ "1h" 2 / 24 hours \ "24h" 3 / 24 hours \ "48h" info_age> 2 The maximum size of stored chunks. When the storage grows beyond this size, the oldest chunks will be deleted. Default: 10G Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / 500 MB \ "500M" 2 / 1 GB \ "1G" 3 / 10 GB \ "10G" chunk_total_size> 3 Remote config -------------------- [test-cache] remote = local:/test plex_url = http://127.0.0.1:32400 plex_username = dummyusername plex_password = *** ENCRYPTED *** chunk_size = 5M info_age = 48h chunk_total_size = 10G You can then use it like this, List directories in top level of your drive rclone lsd test-cache: List all the files in your drive rclone ls test-cache: To start a cached mount rclone mount --allow-other test-cache: /var/tmp/test-cache Write Features Offline uploading In an effort to make writing through cache more reliable, the backend now supports this feature which can be activated by specifying a cache-tmp-upload-path. A files goes through these states when using this feature: 1. An upload is started (usually by copying a file on the cache remote) 2. When the copy to the temporary location is complete the file is part of the cached remote and looks and behaves like any other file (reading included) 3. After cache-tmp-wait-time passes and the file is next in line, rclone move is used to move the file to the cloud provider 4. Reading the file still works during the upload but most modifications on it will be prohibited 5. Once the move is complete the file is unlocked for modifications as it becomes as any other regular file 6. If the file is being read through cache when it’s actually deleted from the temporary path then cache will simply swap the source to the cloud provider without interrupting the reading (small blip can happen though) Files are uploaded in sequence and only one file is uploaded at a time. Uploads will be stored in a queue and be processed based on the order they were added. The queue and the temporary storage is persistent across restarts but can be cleared on startup with the --cache-db-purge flag. Write Support Writes are supported through cache. One caveat is that a mounted cache remote does not add any retry or fallback mechanism to the upload operation. This will depend on the implementation of the wrapped remote. Consider using Offline uploading for reliable writes. One special case is covered with cache-writes which will cache the file data at the same time as the upload when it is enabled making it available from the cache store immediately once the upload is finished. Read Features Multiple connections To counter the high latency between a local PC where rclone is running and cloud providers, the cache remote can split multiple requests to the cloud provider for smaller file chunks and combines them together locally where they can be available almost immediately before the reader usually needs them. This is similar to buffering when media files are played online. Rclone will stay around the current marker but always try its best to stay ahead and prepare the data before. Plex Integration There is a direct integration with Plex which allows cache to detect during reading if the file is in playback or not. This helps cache to adapt how it queries the cloud provider depending on what is needed for. Scans will have a minimum amount of workers (1) while in a confirmed playback cache will deploy the configured number of workers. This integration opens the doorway to additional performance improvements which will be explored in the near future. Note: If Plex options are not configured, cache will function with its configured options without adapting any of its settings. How to enable? Run rclone config and add all the Plex options (endpoint, username and password) in your remote and it will be automatically enabled. Affected settings: - cache-workers: Configured value during confirmed playback or 1 all the other times Certificate Validation When the Plex server is configured to only accept secure connections, it is possible to use .plex.direct URLs to ensure certificate validation succeeds. These URLs are used by Plex internally to connect to the Plex server securely. The format for these URLs is the following: https://ip-with-dots-replaced.server-hash.plex.direct:32400/ The ip-with-dots-replaced part can be any IPv4 address, where the dots have been replaced with dashes, e.g. 127.0.0.1 becomes 127-0-0-1. To get the server-hash part, the easiest way is to visit https://plex.tv/api/resources?includeHttps=1&X-Plex-Token=your-plex-token This page will list all the available Plex servers for your account with at least one .plex.direct link for each. Copy one URL and replace the IP address with the desired address. This can be used as the plex_url value. Known issues Mount and –dir-cache-time –dir-cache-time controls the first layer of directory caching which works at the mount layer. Being an independent caching mechanism from the cache backend, it will manage its own entries based on the configured time. To avoid getting in a scenario where dir cache has obsolete data and cache would have the correct one, try to set --dir-cache-time to a lower time than --cache-info-age. Default values are already configured in this way. Windows support - Experimental There are a couple of issues with Windows mount functionality that still require some investigations. It should be considered as experimental thus far as fixes come in for this OS. Most of the issues seem to be related to the difference between filesystems on Linux flavors and Windows as cache is heavily dependent on them. Any reports or feedback on how cache behaves on this OS is greatly appreciated. • https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/1935 • https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/1907 • https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/1834 Risk of throttling Future iterations of the cache backend will make use of the pooling functionality of the cloud provider to synchronize and at the same time make writing through it more tolerant to failures. There are a couple of enhancements in track to add these but in the meantime there is a valid concern that the expiring cache listings can lead to cloud provider throttles or bans due to repeated queries on it for very large mounts. Some recommendations: - don’t use a very small interval for entry information (--cache- info-age) - while writes aren’t yet optimised, you can still write through cache which gives you the advantage of adding the file in the cache at the same time if configured to do so. Future enhancements: • https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/1937 • https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/1936 cache and crypt One common scenario is to keep your data encrypted in the cloud provider using the crypt remote. crypt uses a similar technique to wrap around an existing remote and handles this translation in a seamless way. There is an issue with wrapping the remotes in this order: cloud remote -> crypt -> cache During testing, I experienced a lot of bans with the remotes in this order. I suspect it might be related to how crypt opens files on the cloud provider which makes it think we’re downloading the full file instead of small chunks. Organizing the remotes in this order yields better results: cloud remote -> cache -> crypt absolute remote paths cache can not differentiate between relative and absolute paths for the wrapped remote. Any path given in the remote config setting and on the command line will be passed to the wrapped remote as is, but for storing the chunks on disk the path will be made relative by removing any leading / character. This behavior is irrelevant for most backend types, but there are backends where a leading / changes the effective directory, e.g. in the sftp backend paths starting with a / are relative to the root of the SSH server and paths without are relative to the user home directory. As a result sftp:bin and sftp:/bin will share the same cache folder, even if they represent a different directory on the SSH server. Cache and Remote Control (–rc) Cache supports the new --rc mode in rclone and can be remote controlled through the following end points: By default, the listener is disabled if you do not add the flag. rc cache/expire Purge a remote from the cache backend. Supports either a directory or a file. It supports both encrypted and unencrypted file names if cache is wrapped by crypt. Params: - remote = path to remote (required) - withData = true/false to delete cached data (chunks) as well (optional, false by default) Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to cache (Cache a remote). –cache-remote Remote to cache. Normally should contain a `:' and a path, eg “myremote:path/to/dir”, “myremote:bucket” or maybe “myremote:” (not recommended). • Config: remote • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_REMOTE • Type: string • Default: "" –cache-plex-url The URL of the Plex server • Config: plex_url • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_PLEX_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –cache-plex-username The username of the Plex user • Config: plex_username • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_PLEX_USERNAME • Type: string • Default: "" –cache-plex-password The password of the Plex user NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: plex_password • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_PLEX_PASSWORD • Type: string • Default: "" –cache-chunk-size The size of a chunk (partial file data). Use lower numbers for slower connections. If the chunk size is changed, any downloaded chunks will be invalid and cache-chunk-path will need to be cleared or unexpected EOF errors will occur. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 5M • Examples: • “1m” • 1MB • “5M” • 5 MB • “10M” • 10 MB –cache-info-age How long to cache file structure information (directory listings, file size, times etc). If all write operations are done through the cache then you can safely make this value very large as the cache store will also be updated in real time. • Config: info_age • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_INFO_AGE • Type: Duration • Default: 6h0m0s • Examples: • “1h” • 1 hour • “24h” • 24 hours • “48h” • 48 hours –cache-chunk-total-size The total size that the chunks can take up on the local disk. If the cache exceeds this value then it will start to delete the oldest chunks until it goes under this value. • Config: chunk_total_size • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_CHUNK_TOTAL_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 10G • Examples: • “500M” • 500 MB • “1G” • 1 GB • “10G” • 10 GB Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to cache (Cache a remote). –cache-plex-token The plex token for authentication - auto set normally • Config: plex_token • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_PLEX_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –cache-plex-insecure Skip all certificate verification when connecting to the Plex server • Config: plex_insecure • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_PLEX_INSECURE • Type: string • Default: "" –cache-db-path Directory to store file structure metadata DB. The remote name is used as the DB file name. • Config: db_path • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_DB_PATH • Type: string • Default: “$HOME/.cache/rclone/cache-backend” –cache-chunk-path Directory to cache chunk files. Path to where partial file data (chunks) are stored locally. The remote name is appended to the final path. This config follows the “–cache-db-path”. If you specify a custom location for “–cache- db-path” and don’t specify one for “–cache-chunk-path” then “–cache-chunk-path” will use the same path as “–cache-db-path”. • Config: chunk_path • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_CHUNK_PATH • Type: string • Default: “$HOME/.cache/rclone/cache-backend” –cache-db-purge Clear all the cached data for this remote on start. • Config: db_purge • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_DB_PURGE • Type: bool • Default: false –cache-chunk-clean-interval How often should the cache perform cleanups of the chunk storage. The default value should be ok for most people. If you find that the cache goes over “cache-chunk-total- size” too often then try to lower this value to force it to perform cleanups more often. • Config: chunk_clean_interval • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_CHUNK_CLEAN_INTERVAL • Type: Duration • Default: 1m0s –cache-read-retries How many times to retry a read from a cache storage. Since reading from a cache stream is independent from downloading file data, readers can get to a point where there’s no more data in the cache. Most of the times this can indicate a connectivity issue if cache isn’t able to provide file data anymore. For really slow connections, increase this to a point where the stream is able to provide data but your experience will be very stuttering. • Config: read_retries • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_READ_RETRIES • Type: int • Default: 10 –cache-workers How many workers should run in parallel to download chunks. Higher values will mean more parallel processing (better CPU needed) and more concurrent requests on the cloud provider. This impacts several aspects like the cloud provider API limits, more stress on the hardware that rclone runs on but it also means that streams will be more fluid and data will be available much more faster to readers. Note: If the optional Plex integration is enabled then this setting will adapt to the type of reading performed and the value specified here will be used as a maximum number of workers to use. • Config: workers • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_WORKERS • Type: int • Default: 4 –cache-chunk-no-memory Disable the in-memory cache for storing chunks during streaming. By default, cache will keep file data during streaming in RAM as well to provide it to readers as fast as possible. This transient data is evicted as soon as it is read and the number of chunks stored doesn’t exceed the number of workers. However, depending on other settings like “cache- chunk-size” and “cache-workers” this footprint can increase if there are parallel streams too (multiple files being read at the same time). If the hardware permits it, use this feature to provide an overall better performance during streaming but it can also be disabled if RAM is not available on the local machine. • Config: chunk_no_memory • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_CHUNK_NO_MEMORY • Type: bool • Default: false –cache-rps Limits the number of requests per second to the source FS (-1 to disable) This setting places a hard limit on the number of requests per second that cache will be doing to the cloud provider remote and try to respect that value by setting waits between reads. If you find that you’re getting banned or limited on the cloud provider through cache and know that a smaller number of requests per second will allow you to work with it then you can use this setting for that. A good balance of all the other settings should make this setting useless but it is available to set for more special cases. NOTE: This will limit the number of requests during streams but other API calls to the cloud provider like directory listings will still pass. • Config: rps • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_RPS • Type: int • Default: -1 –cache-writes Cache file data on writes through the FS If you need to read files immediately after you upload them through cache you can enable this flag to have their data stored in the cache store at the same time during upload. • Config: writes • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_WRITES • Type: bool • Default: false –cache-tmp-upload-path Directory to keep temporary files until they are uploaded. This is the path where cache will use as a temporary storage for new files that need to be uploaded to the cloud provider. Specifying a value will enable this feature. Without it, it is completely disabled and files will be uploaded directly to the cloud provider • Config: tmp_upload_path • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_TMP_UPLOAD_PATH • Type: string • Default: "" –cache-tmp-wait-time How long should files be stored in local cache before being uploaded This is the duration that a file must wait in the temporary location cache-tmp-upload-path before it is selected for upload. Note that only one file is uploaded at a time and it can take longer to start the upload if a queue formed for this purpose. • Config: tmp_wait_time • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_TMP_WAIT_TIME • Type: Duration • Default: 15s –cache-db-wait-time How long to wait for the DB to be available - 0 is unlimited Only one process can have the DB open at any one time, so rclone waits for this duration for the DB to become available before it gives an error. If you set it to 0 then it will wait forever. • Config: db_wait_time • Env Var: RCLONE_CACHE_DB_WAIT_TIME • Type: Duration • Default: 1s Backend commands Here are the commands specific to the cache backend. Run them with rclone backend COMMAND remote: The help below will explain what arguments each command takes. See the “rclone backend” command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_backend/) for more info on how to pass options and arguments. These can be run on a running backend using the rc command backend/command (https://rclone.org/rc/#backend/command). stats Print stats on the cache backend in JSON format. rclone backend stats remote: [options] [<arguments>+] Chunker (BETA) The chunker overlay transparently splits large files into smaller chunks during upload to wrapped remote and transparently assembles them back when the file is downloaded. This allows to effectively overcome size limits imposed by storage providers. To use it, first set up the underlying remote following the configuration instructions for that remote. You can also use a local pathname instead of a remote. First check your chosen remote is working - we’ll call it remote:path here. Note that anything inside remote:path will be chunked and anything outside won’t. This means that if you are using a bucket based remote (eg S3, B2, swift) then you should probably put the bucket in the remote s3:bucket. Now configure chunker using rclone config. We will call this one overlay to separate it from the remote itself. No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> overlay Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Transparently chunk/split large files \ "chunker" [snip] Storage> chunker Remote to chunk/unchunk. Normally should contain a ':' and a path, eg "myremote:path/to/dir", "myremote:bucket" or maybe "myremote:" (not recommended). Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). remote> remote:path Files larger than chunk size will be split in chunks. Enter a size with suffix k,M,G,T. Press Enter for the default ("2G"). chunk_size> 100M Choose how chunker handles hash sums. All modes but "none" require metadata. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default ("md5"). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Pass any hash supported by wrapped remote for non-chunked files, return nothing otherwise \ "none" 2 / MD5 for composite files \ "md5" 3 / SHA1 for composite files \ "sha1" 4 / MD5 for all files \ "md5all" 5 / SHA1 for all files \ "sha1all" 6 / Copying a file to chunker will request MD5 from the source falling back to SHA1 if unsupported \ "md5quick" 7 / Similar to "md5quick" but prefers SHA1 over MD5 \ "sha1quick" hash_type> md5 Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No y/n> n Remote config -------------------- [overlay] type = chunker remote = remote:bucket chunk_size = 100M hash_type = md5 -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Specifying the remote In normal use, make sure the remote has a : in. If you specify the remote without a : then rclone will use a local directory of that name. So if you use a remote of /path/to/secret/files then rclone will chunk stuff in that directory. If you use a remote of name then rclone will put files in a directory called name in the current directory. Chunking When rclone starts a file upload, chunker checks the file size. If it doesn’t exceed the configured chunk size, chunker will just pass the file to the wrapped remote. If a file is large, chunker will transparently cut data in pieces with temporary names and stream them one by one, on the fly. Each data chunk will contain the specified number of bytes, except for the last one which may have less data. If file size is unknown in advance (this is called a streaming upload), chunker will internally create a temporary copy, record its size and repeat the above process. When upload completes, temporary chunk files are finally renamed. This scheme guarantees that operations can be run in parallel and look from outside as atomic. A similar method with hidden temporary chunks is used for other operations (copy/move/rename etc). If an operation fails, hidden chunks are normally destroyed, and the target composite file stays intact. When a composite file download is requested, chunker transparently assembles it by concatenating data chunks in order. As the split is trivial one could even manually concatenate data chunks together to obtain the original content. When the list rclone command scans a directory on wrapped remote, the potential chunk files are accounted for, grouped and assembled into composite directory entries. Any temporary chunks are hidden. List and other commands can sometimes come across composite files with missing or invalid chunks, eg. shadowed by like-named directory or another file. This usually means that wrapped file system has been directly tampered with or damaged. If chunker detects a missing chunk it will by default print warning, skip the whole incomplete group of chunks but proceed with current command. You can set the --chunker-fail-hard flag to have commands abort with error message in such cases. Chunk names The default chunk name format is *.rclone_chunk.###, hence by default chunk names are BIG_FILE_NAME.rclone_chunk.001, BIG_FILE_NAME.rclone_chunk.002 etc. You can configure another name format using the name_format configuration file option. The format uses asterisk * as a placeholder for the base file name and one or more consecutive hash characters # as a placeholder for sequential chunk number. There must be one and only one asterisk. The number of consecutive hash characters defines the minimum length of a string representing a chunk number. If decimal chunk number has less digits than the number of hashes, it is left-padded by zeros. If the decimal string is longer, it is left intact. By default numbering starts from 1 but there is another option that allows user to start from 0, eg. for compatibility with legacy software. For example, if name format is big_*-##.part and original file name is data.txt and numbering starts from 0, then the first chunk will be named big_data.txt-00.part, the 99th chunk will be big_data.txt-98.part and the 302nd chunk will become big_data.txt-301.part. Note that list assembles composite directory entries only when chunk names match the configured format and treats non-conforming file names as normal non-chunked files. Metadata Besides data chunks chunker will by default create metadata object for a composite file. The object is named after the original file. Chunker allows user to disable metadata completely (the none format). Note that metadata is normally not created for files smaller than the configured chunk size. This may change in future rclone releases. Simple JSON metadata format This is the default format. It supports hash sums and chunk validation for composite files. Meta objects carry the following fields: • ver - version of format, currently 1 • size - total size of composite file • nchunks - number of data chunks in file • md5 - MD5 hashsum of composite file (if present) • sha1 - SHA1 hashsum (if present) There is no field for composite file name as it’s simply equal to the name of meta object on the wrapped remote. Please refer to respective sections for details on hashsums and modified time handling. No metadata You can disable meta objects by setting the meta format option to none. In this mode chunker will scan directory for all files that follow configured chunk name format, group them by detecting chunks with the same base name and show group names as virtual composite files. This method is more prone to missing chunk errors (especially missing last chunk) than format with metadata enabled. Hashsums Chunker supports hashsums only when a compatible metadata is present. Hence, if you choose metadata format of none, chunker will report hashsum as UNSUPPORTED. Please note that by default metadata is stored only for composite files. If a file is smaller than configured chunk size, chunker will transparently redirect hash requests to wrapped remote, so support depends on that. You will see the empty string as a hashsum of requested type for small files if the wrapped remote doesn’t support it. Many storage backends support MD5 and SHA1 hash types, so does chunker. With chunker you can choose one or another but not both. MD5 is set by default as the most supported type. Since chunker keeps hashes for composite files and falls back to the wrapped remote hash for non-chunked ones, we advise you to choose the same hash type as supported by wrapped remote so that your file listings look coherent. If your storage backend does not support MD5 or SHA1 but you need consistent file hashing, configure chunker with md5all or sha1all. These two modes guarantee given hash for all files. If wrapped remote doesn’t support it, chunker will then add metadata to all files, even small. However, this can double the amount of small files in storage and incur additional service charges. You can even use chunker to force md5/sha1 support in any other remote at expense of sidecar meta objects by setting eg. chunk_type=sha1all to force hashsums and chunk_size=1P to effectively disable chunking. Normally, when a file is copied to chunker controlled remote, chunker will ask the file source for compatible file hash and revert to on-the-fly calculation if none is found. This involves some CPU overhead but provides a guarantee that given hashsum is available. Also, chunker will reject a server-side copy or move operation if source and destination hashsum types are different resulting in the extra network bandwidth, too. In some rare cases this may be undesired, so chunker provides two optional choices: sha1quick and md5quick. If the source does not support primary hash type and the quick mode is enabled, chunker will try to fall back to the secondary type. This will save CPU and bandwidth but can result in empty hashsums at destination. Beware of consequences: the sync command will revert (sometimes silently) to time/size comparison if compatible hashsums between source and target are not found. Modified time Chunker stores modification times using the wrapped remote so support depends on that. For a small non-chunked file the chunker overlay simply manipulates modification time of the wrapped remote file. For a composite file with metadata chunker will get and set modification time of the metadata object on the wrapped remote. If file is chunked but metadata format is none then chunker will use modification time of the first data chunk. Migrations The idiomatic way to migrate to a different chunk size, hash type or chunk naming scheme is to: • Collect all your chunked files under a directory and have your chunker remote point to it. • Create another directory (most probably on the same cloud storage) and configure a new remote with desired metadata format, hash type, chunk naming etc. • Now run rclone sync -i oldchunks: newchunks: and all your data will be transparently converted in transfer. This may take some time, yet chunker will try server-side copy if possible. • After checking data integrity you may remove configuration section of the old remote. If rclone gets killed during a long operation on a big composite file, hidden temporary chunks may stay in the directory. They will not be shown by the list command but will eat up your account quota. Please note that the deletefile command deletes only active chunks of a file. As a workaround, you can use remote of the wrapped file system to see them. An easy way to get rid of hidden garbage is to copy littered directory somewhere using the chunker remote and purge the original directory. The copy command will copy only active chunks while the purge will remove everything including garbage. Caveats and Limitations Chunker requires wrapped remote to support server side move (or copy + delete) operations, otherwise it will explicitly refuse to start. This is because it internally renames temporary chunk files to their final names when an operation completes successfully. Chunker encodes chunk number in file name, so with default name_format setting it adds 17 characters. Also chunker adds 7 characters of temporary suffix during operations. Many file systems limit base file name without path by 255 characters. Using rclone’s crypt remote as a base file system limits file name by 143 characters. Thus, maximum name length is 231 for most files and 119 for chunker-over-crypt. A user in need can change name format to eg. *.rcc## and save 10 characters (provided at most 99 chunks per file). Note that a move implemented using the copy-and-delete method may incur double charging with some cloud storage providers. Chunker will not automatically rename existing chunks when you run rclone config on a live remote and change the chunk name format. Beware that in result of this some files which have been treated as chunks before the change can pop up in directory listings as normal files and vice versa. The same warning holds for the chunk size. If you desperately need to change critical chunking settings, you should run data migration as described above. If wrapped remote is case insensitive, the chunker overlay will inherit that property (so you can’t have a file called “Hello.doc” and “hello.doc” in the same directory). Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to chunker (Transparently chunk/split large files). –chunker-remote Remote to chunk/unchunk. Normally should contain a `:' and a path, eg “myremote:path/to/dir”, “myremote:bucket” or maybe “myremote:” (not recommended). • Config: remote • Env Var: RCLONE_CHUNKER_REMOTE • Type: string • Default: "" –chunker-chunk-size Files larger than chunk size will be split in chunks. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_CHUNKER_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 2G –chunker-hash-type Choose how chunker handles hash sums. All modes but “none” require metadata. • Config: hash_type • Env Var: RCLONE_CHUNKER_HASH_TYPE • Type: string • Default: “md5” • Examples: • “none” • Pass any hash supported by wrapped remote for non-chunked files, return nothing otherwise • “md5” • MD5 for composite files • “sha1” • SHA1 for composite files • “md5all” • MD5 for all files • “sha1all” • SHA1 for all files • “md5quick” • Copying a file to chunker will request MD5 from the source falling back to SHA1 if unsupported • “sha1quick” • Similar to “md5quick” but prefers SHA1 over MD5 Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to chunker (Transparently chunk/split large files). –chunker-name-format String format of chunk file names. The two placeholders are: base file name (*) and chunk number (#...). There must be one and only one asterisk and one or more consecutive hash characters. If chunk number has less digits than the number of hashes, it is left-padded by zeros. If there are more digits in the number, they are left as is. Possible chunk files are ignored if their name does not match given format. • Config: name_format • Env Var: RCLONE_CHUNKER_NAME_FORMAT • Type: string • Default: "*.rclone_chunk.###" –chunker-start-from Minimum valid chunk number. Usually 0 or 1. By default chunk numbers start from 1. • Config: start_from • Env Var: RCLONE_CHUNKER_START_FROM • Type: int • Default: 1 –chunker-meta-format Format of the metadata object or “none”. By default “simplejson”. Metadata is a small JSON file named after the composite file. • Config: meta_format • Env Var: RCLONE_CHUNKER_META_FORMAT • Type: string • Default: “simplejson” • Examples: • “none” • Do not use metadata files at all. Requires hash type “none”. • “simplejson” • Simple JSON supports hash sums and chunk validation. • It has the following fields: ver, size, nchunks, md5, sha1. –chunker-fail-hard Choose how chunker should handle files with missing or invalid chunks. • Config: fail_hard • Env Var: RCLONE_CHUNKER_FAIL_HARD • Type: bool • Default: false • Examples: • “true” • Report errors and abort current command. • “false” • Warn user, skip incomplete file and proceed. Citrix ShareFile Citrix ShareFile (https://sharefile.com) is a secure file sharing and transfer service aimed as business. The initial setup for Citrix ShareFile involves getting a token from Citrix ShareFile which you can in your browser. rclone config walks you through it. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value XX / Citrix Sharefile \ "sharefile" Storage> sharefile ** See help for sharefile backend at: https://rclone.org/sharefile/ ** ID of the root folder Leave blank to access "Personal Folders". You can use one of the standard values here or any folder ID (long hex number ID). Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Access the Personal Folders. (Default) \ "" 2 / Access the Favorites folder. \ "favorites" 3 / Access all the shared folders. \ "allshared" 4 / Access all the individual connectors. \ "connectors" 5 / Access the home, favorites, and shared folders as well as the connectors. \ "top" root_folder_id> Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No y/n> n Remote config Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth?state=XXX Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code -------------------- [remote] type = sharefile endpoint = https://XXX.sharefile.com token = {"access_token":"XXX","token_type":"bearer","refresh_token":"XXX","expiry":"2019-09-30T19:41:45.878561877+01:00"} -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y See the remote setup docs (https://rclone.org/remote_setup/) for how to set it up on a machine with no Internet browser available. Note that rclone runs a webserver on your local machine to collect the token as returned from Citrix ShareFile. This only runs from the moment it opens your browser to the moment you get back the verification code. This is on http://127.0.0.1:53682/ and this it may require you to unblock it temporarily if you are running a host firewall. Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level of your ShareFile rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your ShareFile rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to an ShareFile directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. Modified time and hashes ShareFile allows modification times to be set on objects accurate to 1 second. These will be used to detect whether objects need syncing or not. ShareFile supports MD5 type hashes, so you can use the --checksum flag. Transfers For files above 128MB rclone will use a chunked transfer. Rclone will upload up to --transfers chunks at the same time (shared among all the multipart uploads). Chunks are buffered in memory and are normally 64MB so increasing --transfers will increase memory use. Limitations Note that ShareFile is case insensitive so you can’t have a file called “Hello.doc” and one called “hello.doc”. ShareFile only supports filenames up to 256 characters in length. Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── \ 0x5C \ * 0x2A * < 0x3C < > 0x3E > ? 0x3F ? : 0x3A : | 0x7C | " 0x22 " File names can also not start or end with the following characters. These only get replaced if they are the first or last character in the name: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── SP 0x20 ␠ . 0x2E . Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to sharefile (Citrix Sharefile). –sharefile-root-folder-id ID of the root folder Leave blank to access “Personal Folders”. You can use one of the standard values here or any folder ID (long hex number ID). • Config: root_folder_id • Env Var: RCLONE_SHAREFILE_ROOT_FOLDER_ID • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • Access the Personal Folders. (Default) • “favorites” • Access the Favorites folder. • “allshared” • Access all the shared folders. • “connectors” • Access all the individual connectors. • “top” • Access the home, favorites, and shared folders as well as the connectors. Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to sharefile (Citrix Sharefile). –sharefile-upload-cutoff Cutoff for switching to multipart upload. • Config: upload_cutoff • Env Var: RCLONE_SHAREFILE_UPLOAD_CUTOFF • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 128M –sharefile-chunk-size Upload chunk size. Must a power of 2 >= 256k. Making this larger will improve performance, but note that each chunk is buffered in memory one per transfer. Reducing this will reduce memory usage but decrease performance. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_SHAREFILE_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 64M –sharefile-endpoint Endpoint for API calls. This is usually auto discovered as part of the oauth process, but can be set manually to something like: https://XXX.sharefile.com • Config: endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_SHAREFILE_ENDPOINT • Type: string • Default: "" –sharefile-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_SHAREFILE_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,BackSlash,Ctl,LeftSpace,LeftPeriod,RightSpace,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8,Dot Crypt Rclone crypt remotes encrypt and decrypt other remotes. To use crypt, first set up the underlying remote. Follow the rclone config instructions for that remote. crypt applied to a local pathname instead of a remote will encrypt and decrypt that directory, and can be used to encrypt USB removable drives. Before configuring the crypt remote, check the underlying remote is working. In this example the underlying remote is called remote:path. Anything inside remote:path will be encrypted and anything outside will not. In the case of an S3 based underlying remote (eg Amazon S3, B2, Swift) it is generally advisable to define a crypt remote in the underlying remote s3:bucket. If s3: alone is specified alongside file name encryption, rclone will encrypt the bucket name. Configure crypt using rclone config. In this example the crypt remote is called secret, to differentiate it from the underlying remote. No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> secret Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Encrypt/Decrypt a remote \ "crypt" [snip] Storage> crypt Remote to encrypt/decrypt. Normally should contain a ':' and a path, eg "myremote:path/to/dir", "myremote:bucket" or maybe "myremote:" (not recommended). remote> remote:path How to encrypt the filenames. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Don't encrypt the file names. Adds a ".bin" extension only. \ "off" 2 / Encrypt the filenames see the docs for the details. \ "standard" 3 / Very simple filename obfuscation. \ "obfuscate" filename_encryption> 2 Option to either encrypt directory names or leave them intact. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Encrypt directory names. \ "true" 2 / Don't encrypt directory names, leave them intact. \ "false" filename_encryption> 1 Password or pass phrase for encryption. y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password y/g> y Enter the password: password: Confirm the password: password: Password or pass phrase for salt. Optional but recommended. Should be different to the previous password. y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password n) No leave this optional password blank y/g/n> g Password strength in bits. 64 is just about memorable 128 is secure 1024 is the maximum Bits> 128 Your password is: JAsJvRcgR-_veXNfy_sGmQ Use this password? y) Yes n) No y/n> y Remote config -------------------- [secret] remote = remote:path filename_encryption = standard password = *** ENCRYPTED *** password2 = *** ENCRYPTED *** -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Important The crypt password stored in rclone.conf is lightly obscured. That only protects it from cursory inspection. It is not secure unless encryption of rclone.conf is specified. A long passphrase is recommended, or rclone config can generate a random one. The obscured password is created using AES-CTR with a static key. The salt is stored verbatim at the beginning of the obscured password. This static key is shared between all versions of rclone. If you reconfigure rclone with the same passwords/passphrases elsewhere it will be compatible, but the obscured version will be different due to the different salt. Rclone does not encrypt • file length - this can be calculated within 16 bytes • modification time - used for syncing Specifying the remote In normal use, ensure the remote has a : in. If specified without, rclone uses a local directory of that name. For example if a remote /path/to/secret/files is specified, rclone encrypts content to that directory. If a remote name is specified, rclone targets a directory name in the current directory. If remote remote:path/to/dir is specified, rclone stores encrypted files in path/to/dir on the remote. With file name encryption, files saved to secret:subdir/subfile are stored in the unencrypted path path/to/dir but the subdir/subpath element is encrypted. Example Create the following file structure using “standard” file name encryption. plaintext/ ├── file0.txt ├── file1.txt └── subdir ├── file2.txt ├── file3.txt └── subsubdir └── file4.txt Copy these to the remote, and list them $ rclone -q copy plaintext secret: $ rclone -q ls secret: 7 file1.txt 6 file0.txt 8 subdir/file2.txt 10 subdir/subsubdir/file4.txt 9 subdir/file3.txt The crypt remote looks like $ rclone -q ls remote:path 55 hagjclgavj2mbiqm6u6cnjjqcg 54 v05749mltvv1tf4onltun46gls 57 86vhrsv86mpbtd3a0akjuqslj8/dlj7fkq4kdq72emafg7a7s41uo 58 86vhrsv86mpbtd3a0akjuqslj8/7uu829995du6o42n32otfhjqp4/b9pausrfansjth5ob3jkdqd4lc 56 86vhrsv86mpbtd3a0akjuqslj8/8njh1sk437gttmep3p70g81aps The directory structure is preserved $ rclone -q ls secret:subdir 8 file2.txt 9 file3.txt 10 subsubdir/file4.txt Without file name encryption .bin extensions are added to underlying names. This prevents the cloud provider attempting to interpret file content. $ rclone -q ls remote:path 54 file0.txt.bin 57 subdir/file3.txt.bin 56 subdir/file2.txt.bin 58 subdir/subsubdir/file4.txt.bin 55 file1.txt.bin File name encryption modes Off • doesn’t hide file names or directory structure • allows for longer file names (~246 characters) • can use sub paths and copy single files Standard • file names encrypted • file names can’t be as long (~143 characters) • can use sub paths and copy single files • directory structure visible • identical files names will have identical uploaded names • can use shortcuts to shorten the directory recursion Obfuscation This is a simple “rotate” of the filename, with each file having a rot distance based on the filename. Rclone stores the distance at the beginning of the filename. A file called “hello” may become “53.jgnnq”. Obfuscation is not a strong encryption of filenames, but hinders automated scanning tools picking up on filename patterns. It is an intermediate between “off” and “standard” which allows for longer path segment names. There is a possibility with some unicode based filenames that the obfuscation is weak and may map lower case characters to upper case equivalents. Obfuscation cannot be relied upon for strong protection. • file names very lightly obfuscated • file names can be longer than standard encryption • can use sub paths and copy single files • directory structure visible • identical files names will have identical uploaded names Cloud storage systems have limits on file name length and total path length which rclone is more likely to breach using “Standard” file name encryption. Where file names are less thn 156 characters in length issues should not be encountered, irrespective of cloud storage provider. An alternative, future rclone file name encryption mode may tolerate backend provider path length limits. Directory name encryption Crypt offers the option of encrypting dir names or leaving them intact. There are two options: True Encrypts the whole file path including directory names Example: 1/12/123.txt is encrypted to p0e52nreeaj0a5ea7s64m4j72s/l42g6771hnv3an9cgc8cr2n1ng/qgm4avr35m5loi1th53ato71v0 False Only encrypts file names, skips directory names Example: 1/12/123.txt is encrypted to 1/12/qgm4avr35m5loi1th53ato71v0 Modified time and hashes Crypt stores modification times using the underlying remote so support depends on that. Hashes are not stored for crypt. However the data integrity is protected by an extremely strong crypto authenticator. Use the rclone cryptcheck command to check the integrity of a crypted remote instead of rclone check which can’t check the checksums properly. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to crypt (Encrypt/Decrypt a remote). –crypt-remote Remote to encrypt/decrypt. Normally should contain a `:' and a path, eg “myremote:path/to/dir”, “myremote:bucket” or maybe “myremote:” (not recommended). • Config: remote • Env Var: RCLONE_CRYPT_REMOTE • Type: string • Default: "" –crypt-filename-encryption How to encrypt the filenames. • Config: filename_encryption • Env Var: RCLONE_CRYPT_FILENAME_ENCRYPTION • Type: string • Default: “standard” • Examples: • “standard” • Encrypt the filenames see the docs for the details. • “obfuscate” • Very simple filename obfuscation. • “off” • Don’t encrypt the file names. Adds a “.bin” extension only. –crypt-directory-name-encryption Option to either encrypt directory names or leave them intact. NB If filename_encryption is “off” then this option will do nothing. • Config: directory_name_encryption • Env Var: RCLONE_CRYPT_DIRECTORY_NAME_ENCRYPTION • Type: bool • Default: true • Examples: • “true” • Encrypt directory names. • “false” • Don’t encrypt directory names, leave them intact. –crypt-password Password or pass phrase for encryption. NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: password • Env Var: RCLONE_CRYPT_PASSWORD • Type: string • Default: "" –crypt-password2 Password or pass phrase for salt. Optional but recommended. Should be different to the previous password. NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: password2 • Env Var: RCLONE_CRYPT_PASSWORD2 • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to crypt (Encrypt/Decrypt a remote). –crypt-server-side-across-configs Allow server side operations (eg copy) to work across different crypt configs. Normally this option is not what you want, but if you have two crypts pointing to the same backend you can use it. This can be used, for example, to change file name encryption type without re-uploading all the data. Just make two crypt backends pointing to two different directories with the single changed parameter and use rclone move to move the files between the crypt remotes. • Config: server_side_across_configs • Env Var: RCLONE_CRYPT_SERVER_SIDE_ACROSS_CONFIGS • Type: bool • Default: false –crypt-show-mapping For all files listed show how the names encrypt. If this flag is set then for each file that the remote is asked to list, it will log (at level INFO) a line stating the decrypted file name and the encrypted file name. This is so you can work out which encrypted names are which decrypted names just in case you need to do something with the encrypted file names, or for debugging purposes. • Config: show_mapping • Env Var: RCLONE_CRYPT_SHOW_MAPPING • Type: bool • Default: false Backend commands Here are the commands specific to the crypt backend. Run them with rclone backend COMMAND remote: The help below will explain what arguments each command takes. See the “rclone backend” command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_backend/) for more info on how to pass options and arguments. These can be run on a running backend using the rc command backend/command (https://rclone.org/rc/#backend/command). encode Encode the given filename(s) rclone backend encode remote: [options] [<arguments>+] This encodes the filenames given as arguments returning a list of strings of the encoded results. Usage Example: rclone backend encode crypt: file1 [file2...] rclone rc backend/command command=encode fs=crypt: file1 [file2...] decode Decode the given filename(s) rclone backend decode remote: [options] [<arguments>+] This decodes the filenames given as arguments returning a list of strings of the decoded results. It will return an error if any of the inputs are invalid. Usage Example: rclone backend decode crypt: encryptedfile1 [encryptedfile2...] rclone rc backend/command command=decode fs=crypt: encryptedfile1 [encryptedfile2...] Backing up a crypted remote If you wish to backup a crypted remote, it is recommended that you use rclone sync on the encrypted files, and make sure the passwords are the same in the new encrypted remote. This will have the following advantages • rclone sync will check the checksums while copying • you can use rclone check between the encrypted remotes • you don’t decrypt and encrypt unnecessarily For example, let’s say you have your original remote at remote: with the encrypted version at eremote: with path remote:crypt. You would then set up the new remote remote2: and then the encrypted version eremote2: with path remote2:crypt using the same passwords as eremote:. To sync the two remotes you would do rclone sync -i remote:crypt remote2:crypt And to check the integrity you would do rclone check remote:crypt remote2:crypt File formats File encryption Files are encrypted 1:1 source file to destination object. The file has a header and is divided into chunks. Header • 8 bytes magic string RCLONE\x00\x00 • 24 bytes Nonce (IV) The initial nonce is generated from the operating systems crypto strong random number generator. The nonce is incremented for each chunk read making sure each nonce is unique for each block written. The chance of a nonce being re-used is minuscule. If you wrote an exabyte of data (10¹⁸ bytes) you would have a probability of approximately 2×10⁻³² of re-using a nonce. Chunk Each chunk will contain 64kB of data, except for the last one which may have less data. The data chunk is in standard NACL secretbox format. Secretbox uses XSalsa20 and Poly1305 to encrypt and authenticate messages. Each chunk contains: • 16 Bytes of Poly1305 authenticator • 1 - 65536 bytes XSalsa20 encrypted data 64k chunk size was chosen as the best performing chunk size (the authenticator takes too much time below this and the performance drops off due to cache effects above this). Note that these chunks are buffered in memory so they can’t be too big. This uses a 32 byte (256 bit key) key derived from the user password. Examples 1 byte file will encrypt to • 32 bytes header • 17 bytes data chunk 49 bytes total 1MB (1048576 bytes) file will encrypt to • 32 bytes header • 16 chunks of 65568 bytes 1049120 bytes total (a 0.05% overhead). This is the overhead for big files. Name encryption File names are encrypted segment by segment - the path is broken up into / separated strings and these are encrypted individually. File segments are padded using PKCS#7 to a multiple of 16 bytes before encryption. They are then encrypted with EME using AES with 256 bit key. EME (ECB-Mix-ECB) is a wide- block encryption mode presented in the 2003 paper “A Parallelizable Enciphering Mode” by Halevi and Rogaway. This makes for deterministic encryption which is what we want - the same filename must encrypt to the same thing otherwise we can’t find it on the cloud storage system. This means that • filenames with the same name will encrypt the same • filenames which start the same won’t have a common prefix This uses a 32 byte key (256 bits) and a 16 byte (128 bits) IV both of which are derived from the user password. After encryption they are written out using a modified version of standard base32 encoding as described in RFC4648. The standard encoding is modified in two ways: • it becomes lower case (no-one likes upper case filenames!) • we strip the padding character = base32 is used rather than the more efficient base64 so rclone can be used on case insensitive remotes (eg Windows, Amazon Drive). Key derivation Rclone uses scrypt with parameters N=16384, r=8, p=1 with an optional user supplied salt (password2) to derive the 32+32+16 = 80 bytes of key material required. If the user doesn’t supply a salt then rclone uses an internal one. scrypt makes it impractical to mount a dictionary attack on rclone encrypted data. For full protection against this you should always use a salt. Dropbox Paths are specified as remote:path Dropbox paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. The initial setup for dropbox involves getting a token from Dropbox which you need to do in your browser. rclone config walks you through it. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: n) New remote d) Delete remote q) Quit config e/n/d/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Dropbox \ "dropbox" [snip] Storage> dropbox Dropbox App Key - leave blank normally. app_key> Dropbox App Secret - leave blank normally. app_secret> Remote config Please visit: https://www.dropbox.com/1/oauth2/authorize?client_id=XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX&response_type=code Enter the code: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX_XXXXXXXXXX -------------------- [remote] app_key = app_secret = token = XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX_XXXX_XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y You can then use it like this, List directories in top level of your dropbox rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your dropbox rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to a dropbox directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Dropbox for business Rclone supports Dropbox for business and Team Folders. When using Dropbox for business remote: and remote:path/to/file will refer to your personal folder. If you wish to see Team Folders you must use a leading / in the path, so rclone lsd remote:/ will refer to the root and show you all Team Folders and your User Folder. You can then use team folders like this remote:/TeamFolder and remote:/TeamFolder/path/to/file. A leading / for a Dropbox personal account will do nothing, but it will take an extra HTTP transaction so it should be avoided. Modified time and Hashes Dropbox supports modified times, but the only way to set a modification time is to re- upload the file. This means that if you uploaded your data with an older version of rclone which didn’t support the v2 API and modified times, rclone will decide to upload all your old data to fix the modification times. If you don’t want this to happen use --size-only or --checksum flag to stop it. Dropbox supports its own hash type (https://www.dropbox.com/developers/reference/content- hash) which is checked for all transfers. Restricted filename characters Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── NUL 0x00 ␀ / 0x2F / DEL 0x7F ␡ \ 0x5C \ File names can also not end with the following characters. These only get replaced if they are the last character in the name: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── SP 0x20 ␠ Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to dropbox (Dropbox). –dropbox-client-id OAuth Client Id Leave blank normally. • Config: client_id • Env Var: RCLONE_DROPBOX_CLIENT_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –dropbox-client-secret OAuth Client Secret Leave blank normally. • Config: client_secret • Env Var: RCLONE_DROPBOX_CLIENT_SECRET • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to dropbox (Dropbox). –dropbox-token OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. • Config: token • Env Var: RCLONE_DROPBOX_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –dropbox-auth-url Auth server URL. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: auth_url • Env Var: RCLONE_DROPBOX_AUTH_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –dropbox-token-url Token server url. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: token_url • Env Var: RCLONE_DROPBOX_TOKEN_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –dropbox-chunk-size Upload chunk size. (< 150M). Any files larger than this will be uploaded in chunks of this size. Note that chunks are buffered in memory (one at a time) so rclone can deal with retries. Setting this larger will increase the speed slightly (at most 10% for 128MB in tests) at the cost of using more memory. It can be set smaller if you are tight on memory. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_DROPBOX_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 48M –dropbox-impersonate Impersonate this user when using a business account. • Config: impersonate • Env Var: RCLONE_DROPBOX_IMPERSONATE • Type: string • Default: "" –dropbox-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_DROPBOX_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,BackSlash,Del,RightSpace,InvalidUtf8,Dot Limitations Note that Dropbox is case insensitive so you can’t have a file called “Hello.doc” and one called “hello.doc”. There are some file names such as thumbs.db which Dropbox can’t store. There is a full list of them in the “Ignored Files” section of this document (https://www.dropbox.com/en/help/145). Rclone will issue an error message File name disallowed - not uploading if it attempts to upload one of those file names, but the sync won’t fail. Some errors may occur if you try to sync copyright-protected files because Dropbox has its own copyright detector (https://techcrunch.com/2014/03/30/how-dropbox-knows-when-youre- sharing-copyrighted-stuff-without-actually-looking-at-your-stuff/) that prevents this sort of file being downloaded. This will return the error ERROR : /path/to/your/file: Failed to copy: failed to open source object: path/restricted_content/. If you have more than 10,000 files in a directory then rclone purge dropbox:dir will return the error Failed to purge: There are too many files involved in this operation. As a work-around do an rclone delete dropbox:dir followed by an rclone rmdir dropbox:dir. Get your own Dropbox App ID When you use rclone with Dropbox in its default configuration you are using rclone’s App ID. This is shared between all the rclone users. Here is how to create your own Dropbox App ID for rclone: 1. Log into the Dropbox App console (https://www.dropbox.com/developers/apps/create) with your Dropbox Account (It need not to be the same account as the Dropbox you want to access) 2. Choose an API => Usually this should be Dropbox API 3. Choose the type of access you want to use => Full Dropbox or App Folder 4. Name your App. The app name is global, so you can’t use rclone for example 5. Click the button Create App 6. Fill Redirect URIs as http://localhost:53682/ 7. Find the App key and App secret Use these values in rclone config to add a new remote or edit an existing remote. FTP FTP is the File Transfer Protocol. FTP support is provided using the github.com/jlaffaye/ftp (https://godoc.org/github.com/jlaffaye/ftp) package. Paths are specified as remote:path. If the path does not begin with a / it is relative to the home directory of the user. An empty path remote: refers to the user’s home directory. Here is an example of making an FTP configuration. First run rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process. An FTP remote only needs a host together with and a username and a password. With anonymous FTP server, you will need to use anonymous as username and your email address as the password. No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote r) Rename remote c) Copy remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/r/c/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / FTP Connection \ "ftp" [snip] Storage> ftp ** See help for ftp backend at: https://rclone.org/ftp/ ** FTP host to connect to Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Connect to ftp.example.com \ "ftp.example.com" host> ftp.example.com FTP username, leave blank for current username, ncw Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). user> FTP port, leave blank to use default (21) Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). port> FTP password y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password y/g> y Enter the password: password: Confirm the password: password: Use FTP over TLS (Implicit) Enter a boolean value (true or false). Press Enter for the default ("false"). tls> Use FTP over TLS (Explicit) Enter a boolean value (true or false). Press Enter for the default ("false"). explicit_tls> Remote config -------------------- [remote] type = ftp host = ftp.example.com pass = *** ENCRYPTED *** -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y This remote is called remote and can now be used like this See all directories in the home directory rclone lsd remote: Make a new directory rclone mkdir remote:path/to/directory List the contents of a directory rclone ls remote:path/to/directory Sync /home/local/directory to the remote directory, deleting any excess files in the directory. rclone sync -i /home/local/directory remote:directory Modified time FTP does not support modified times. Any times you see on the server will be time of upload. Checksums FTP does not support any checksums. Usage without a config file An example how to use the ftp remote without a config file: rclone lsf :ftp: --ftp-host=speedtest.tele2.net --ftp-user=anonymous --ftp-pass=`rclone obscure dummy` Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: File names can also not end with the following characters. These only get replaced if they are the last character in the name: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── SP 0x20 ␠ Note that not all FTP servers can have all characters in file names, for example: FTP Server Forbidden characters ────────────────────────────────── proftpd * pureftpd \ [ ] Implicit TLS FTP supports implicit FTP over TLS servers (FTPS). This has to be enabled in the config for the remote. The default FTPS port is 990 so the port will likely have to be explicitly set in the config for the remote. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to ftp (FTP Connection). –ftp-host FTP host to connect to • Config: host • Env Var: RCLONE_FTP_HOST • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “ftp.example.com” • Connect to ftp.example.com –ftp-user FTP username, leave blank for current username, $USER • Config: user • Env Var: RCLONE_FTP_USER • Type: string • Default: "" –ftp-port FTP port, leave blank to use default (21) • Config: port • Env Var: RCLONE_FTP_PORT • Type: string • Default: "" –ftp-pass FTP password NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: pass • Env Var: RCLONE_FTP_PASS • Type: string • Default: "" –ftp-tls Use FTPS over TLS (Implicit) When using implicit FTP over TLS the client will connect using TLS right from the start, which in turn breaks the compatibility with non-TLS-aware servers. This is usually served over port 990 rather than port 21. Cannot be used in combination with explicit FTP. • Config: tls • Env Var: RCLONE_FTP_TLS • Type: bool • Default: false –ftp-explicit-tls Use FTP over TLS (Explicit) When using explicit FTP over TLS the client explicitly request security from the server in order to upgrade a plain text connection to an encrypted one. Cannot be used in combination with implicit FTP. • Config: explicit_tls • Env Var: RCLONE_FTP_EXPLICIT_TLS • Type: bool • Default: false Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to ftp (FTP Connection). –ftp-concurrency Maximum number of FTP simultaneous connections, 0 for unlimited • Config: concurrency • Env Var: RCLONE_FTP_CONCURRENCY • Type: int • Default: 0 –ftp-no-check-certificate Do not verify the TLS certificate of the server • Config: no_check_certificate • Env Var: RCLONE_FTP_NO_CHECK_CERTIFICATE • Type: bool • Default: false –ftp-disable-epsv Disable using EPSV even if server advertises support • Config: disable_epsv • Env Var: RCLONE_FTP_DISABLE_EPSV • Type: bool • Default: false –ftp-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_FTP_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,Del,Ctl,RightSpace,Dot Limitations Note that FTP does have its own implementation of : --dump headers, --dump bodies, --dump auth for debugging which isn’t the same as the HTTP based backends - it has less fine grained control. Note that --timeout isn’t supported (but --contimeout is). Note that --bind isn’t supported. FTP could support server side move but doesn’t yet. Note that the ftp backend does not support the ftp_proxy environment variable yet. Google Cloud Storage Paths are specified as remote:bucket (or remote: for the lsd command.) You may put subdirectories in too, eg remote:bucket/path/to/dir. The initial setup for google cloud storage involves getting a token from Google Cloud Storage which you need to do in your browser. rclone config walks you through it. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: n) New remote d) Delete remote q) Quit config e/n/d/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Google Cloud Storage (this is not Google Drive) \ "google cloud storage" [snip] Storage> google cloud storage Google Application Client Id - leave blank normally. client_id> Google Application Client Secret - leave blank normally. client_secret> Project number optional - needed only for list/create/delete buckets - see your developer console. project_number> 12345678 Service Account Credentials JSON file path - needed only if you want use SA instead of interactive login. service_account_file> Access Control List for new objects. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Object owner gets OWNER access, and all Authenticated Users get READER access. \ "authenticatedRead" 2 / Object owner gets OWNER access, and project team owners get OWNER access. \ "bucketOwnerFullControl" 3 / Object owner gets OWNER access, and project team owners get READER access. \ "bucketOwnerRead" 4 / Object owner gets OWNER access [default if left blank]. \ "private" 5 / Object owner gets OWNER access, and project team members get access according to their roles. \ "projectPrivate" 6 / Object owner gets OWNER access, and all Users get READER access. \ "publicRead" object_acl> 4 Access Control List for new buckets. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Project team owners get OWNER access, and all Authenticated Users get READER access. \ "authenticatedRead" 2 / Project team owners get OWNER access [default if left blank]. \ "private" 3 / Project team members get access according to their roles. \ "projectPrivate" 4 / Project team owners get OWNER access, and all Users get READER access. \ "publicRead" 5 / Project team owners get OWNER access, and all Users get WRITER access. \ "publicReadWrite" bucket_acl> 2 Location for the newly created buckets. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Empty for default location (US). \ "" 2 / Multi-regional location for Asia. \ "asia" 3 / Multi-regional location for Europe. \ "eu" 4 / Multi-regional location for United States. \ "us" 5 / Taiwan. \ "asia-east1" 6 / Tokyo. \ "asia-northeast1" 7 / Singapore. \ "asia-southeast1" 8 / Sydney. \ "australia-southeast1" 9 / Belgium. \ "europe-west1" 10 / London. \ "europe-west2" 11 / Iowa. \ "us-central1" 12 / South Carolina. \ "us-east1" 13 / Northern Virginia. \ "us-east4" 14 / Oregon. \ "us-west1" location> 12 The storage class to use when storing objects in Google Cloud Storage. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Default \ "" 2 / Multi-regional storage class \ "MULTI_REGIONAL" 3 / Regional storage class \ "REGIONAL" 4 / Nearline storage class \ "NEARLINE" 5 / Coldline storage class \ "COLDLINE" 6 / Durable reduced availability storage class \ "DURABLE_REDUCED_AVAILABILITY" storage_class> 5 Remote config Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine or Y didn't work y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code -------------------- [remote] type = google cloud storage client_id = client_secret = token = {"AccessToken":"xxxx.xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx","RefreshToken":"x/xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx_xxxxxxxxx","Expiry":"2014-07-17T20:49:14.929208288+01:00","Extra":null} project_number = 12345678 object_acl = private bucket_acl = private -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Note that rclone runs a webserver on your local machine to collect the token as returned from Google if you use auto config mode. This only runs from the moment it opens your browser to the moment you get back the verification code. This is on http://127.0.0.1:53682/ and this it may require you to unblock it temporarily if you are running a host firewall, or use manual mode. This remote is called remote and can now be used like this See all the buckets in your project rclone lsd remote: Make a new bucket rclone mkdir remote:bucket List the contents of a bucket rclone ls remote:bucket Sync /home/local/directory to the remote bucket, deleting any excess files in the bucket. rclone sync -i /home/local/directory remote:bucket Service Account support You can set up rclone with Google Cloud Storage in an unattended mode, i.e. not tied to a specific end-user Google account. This is useful when you want to synchronise files onto machines that don’t have actively logged-in users, for example build machines. To get credentials for Google Cloud Platform IAM Service Accounts (https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/service-accounts), please head to the Service Account (https://console.cloud.google.com/permissions/serviceaccounts) section of the Google Developer Console. Service Accounts behave just like normal User permissions in Google Cloud Storage ACLs (https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/access-control), so you can limit their access (e.g. make them read only). After creating an account, a JSON file containing the Service Account’s credentials will be downloaded onto your machines. These credentials are what rclone will use for authentication. To use a Service Account instead of OAuth2 token flow, enter the path to your Service Account credentials at the service_account_file prompt and rclone won’t use the browser based authentication flow. If you’d rather stuff the contents of the credentials file into the rclone config file, you can set service_account_credentials with the actual contents of the file instead, or set the equivalent environment variable. Anonymous Access For downloads of objects that permit public access you can configure rclone to use anonymous access by setting anonymous to true. With unauthorized access you can’t write or create files but only read or list those buckets and objects that have public read access. Application Default Credentials If no other source of credentials is provided, rclone will fall back to Application Default Credentials (https://cloud.google.com/video- intelligence/docs/common/auth#authenticating_with_application_default_credentials) this is useful both when you already have configured authentication for your developer account, or in production when running on a google compute host. Note that if running in docker, you may need to run additional commands on your google compute machine - see this page (https://cloud.google.com/container-registry/docs/advanced- authentication#gcloud_as_a_docker_credential_helper). Note that in the case application default credentials are used, there is no need to explicitly configure a project number. –fast-list This remote supports --fast-list which allows you to use fewer transactions in exchange for more memory. See the rclone docs (https://rclone.org/docs/#fast-list) for more details. Custom upload headers You can set custom upload headers with the --header-upload flag. Google Cloud Storage supports the headers as described in the working with metadata documentation (https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/gsutil/addlhelp/WorkingWithObjectMetadata) • Cache-Control • Content-Disposition • Content-Encoding • Content-Language • Content-Type • X-Goog-Meta- Eg --header-upload "Content-Type text/potato" Note that the last of these is for setting custom metadata in the form --header-upload "x- goog-meta-key: value" Modified time Google google cloud storage stores md5sums natively and rclone stores modification times as metadata on the object, under the “mtime” key in RFC3339 format accurate to 1ns. Restricted filename characters Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── NUL 0x00 ␀ LF 0x0A ␊ CR 0x0D ␍ / 0x2F / Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to google cloud storage (Google Cloud Storage (this is not Google Drive)). –gcs-client-id OAuth Client Id Leave blank normally. • Config: client_id • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_CLIENT_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –gcs-client-secret OAuth Client Secret Leave blank normally. • Config: client_secret • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_CLIENT_SECRET • Type: string • Default: "" –gcs-project-number Project number. Optional - needed only for list/create/delete buckets - see your developer console. • Config: project_number • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_PROJECT_NUMBER • Type: string • Default: "" –gcs-service-account-file Service Account Credentials JSON file path Leave blank normally. Needed only if you want use SA instead of interactive login. Leading ~ will be expanded in the file name as will environment variables such as ${RCLONE_CONFIG_DIR}. • Config: service_account_file • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_FILE • Type: string • Default: "" –gcs-service-account-credentials Service Account Credentials JSON blob Leave blank normally. Needed only if you want use SA instead of interactive login. • Config: service_account_credentials • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_CREDENTIALS • Type: string • Default: "" –gcs-anonymous Access public buckets and objects without credentials Set to `true' if you just want to download files and don’t configure credentials. • Config: anonymous • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_ANONYMOUS • Type: bool • Default: false –gcs-object-acl Access Control List for new objects. • Config: object_acl • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_OBJECT_ACL • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “authenticatedRead” • Object owner gets OWNER access, and all Authenticated Users get READER access. • “bucketOwnerFullControl” • Object owner gets OWNER access, and project team owners get OWNER access. • “bucketOwnerRead” • Object owner gets OWNER access, and project team owners get READER access. • “private” • Object owner gets OWNER access [default if left blank]. • “projectPrivate” • Object owner gets OWNER access, and project team members get access according to their roles. • “publicRead” • Object owner gets OWNER access, and all Users get READER access. –gcs-bucket-acl Access Control List for new buckets. • Config: bucket_acl • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_BUCKET_ACL • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “authenticatedRead” • Project team owners get OWNER access, and all Authenticated Users get READER access. • “private” • Project team owners get OWNER access [default if left blank]. • “projectPrivate” • Project team members get access according to their roles. • “publicRead” • Project team owners get OWNER access, and all Users get READER access. • “publicReadWrite” • Project team owners get OWNER access, and all Users get WRITER access. –gcs-bucket-policy-only Access checks should use bucket-level IAM policies. If you want to upload objects to a bucket with Bucket Policy Only set then you will need to set this. When it is set, rclone: • ignores ACLs set on buckets • ignores ACLs set on objects • creates buckets with Bucket Policy Only set Docs: https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/bucket-policy-only • Config: bucket_policy_only • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_BUCKET_POLICY_ONLY • Type: bool • Default: false –gcs-location Location for the newly created buckets. • Config: location • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_LOCATION • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • Empty for default location (US). • “asia” • Multi-regional location for Asia. • “eu” • Multi-regional location for Europe. • “us” • Multi-regional location for United States. • “asia-east1” • Taiwan. • “asia-east2” • Hong Kong. • “asia-northeast1” • Tokyo. • “asia-south1” • Mumbai. • “asia-southeast1” • Singapore. • “australia-southeast1” • Sydney. • “europe-north1” • Finland. • “europe-west1” • Belgium. • “europe-west2” • London. • “europe-west3” • Frankfurt. • “europe-west4” • Netherlands. • “us-central1” • Iowa. • “us-east1” • South Carolina. • “us-east4” • Northern Virginia. • “us-west1” • Oregon. • “us-west2” • California. –gcs-storage-class The storage class to use when storing objects in Google Cloud Storage. • Config: storage_class • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_STORAGE_CLASS • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • Default • “MULTI_REGIONAL” • Multi-regional storage class • “REGIONAL” • Regional storage class • “NEARLINE” • Nearline storage class • “COLDLINE” • Coldline storage class • “ARCHIVE” • Archive storage class • “DURABLE_REDUCED_AVAILABILITY” • Durable reduced availability storage class Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to google cloud storage (Google Cloud Storage (this is not Google Drive)). –gcs-token OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. • Config: token • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –gcs-auth-url Auth server URL. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: auth_url • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_AUTH_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –gcs-token-url Token server url. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: token_url • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_TOKEN_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –gcs-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_GCS_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,CrLf,InvalidUtf8,Dot Google Drive Paths are specified as drive:path Drive paths may be as deep as required, eg drive:directory/subdirectory. The initial setup for drive involves getting a token from Google drive which you need to do in your browser. rclone config walks you through it. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote r) Rename remote c) Copy remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/r/c/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Google Drive \ "drive" [snip] Storage> drive Google Application Client Id - leave blank normally. client_id> Google Application Client Secret - leave blank normally. client_secret> Scope that rclone should use when requesting access from drive. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Full access all files, excluding Application Data Folder. \ "drive" 2 / Read-only access to file metadata and file contents. \ "drive.readonly" / Access to files created by rclone only. 3 | These are visible in the drive website. | File authorization is revoked when the user deauthorizes the app. \ "drive.file" / Allows read and write access to the Application Data folder. 4 | This is not visible in the drive website. \ "drive.appfolder" / Allows read-only access to file metadata but 5 | does not allow any access to read or download file content. \ "drive.metadata.readonly" scope> 1 ID of the root folder - leave blank normally. Fill in to access "Computers" folders. (see docs). root_folder_id> Service Account Credentials JSON file path - needed only if you want use SA instead of interactive login. service_account_file> Remote config Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine or Y didn't work y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code Configure this as a team drive? y) Yes n) No y/n> n -------------------- [remote] client_id = client_secret = scope = drive root_folder_id = service_account_file = token = {"access_token":"XXX","token_type":"Bearer","refresh_token":"XXX","expiry":"2014-03-16T13:57:58.955387075Z"} -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Note that rclone runs a webserver on your local machine to collect the token as returned from Google if you use auto config mode. This only runs from the moment it opens your browser to the moment you get back the verification code. This is on http://127.0.0.1:53682/ and this it may require you to unblock it temporarily if you are running a host firewall, or use manual mode. You can then use it like this, List directories in top level of your drive rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your drive rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to a drive directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Scopes Rclone allows you to select which scope you would like for rclone to use. This changes what type of token is granted to rclone. The scopes are defined here (https://developers.google.com/drive/v3/web/about-auth). The scope are drive This is the default scope and allows full access to all files, except for the Application Data Folder (see below). Choose this one if you aren’t sure. drive.readonly This allows read only access to all files. Files may be listed and downloaded but not uploaded, renamed or deleted. drive.file With this scope rclone can read/view/modify only those files and folders it creates. So if you uploaded files to drive via the web interface (or any other means) they will not be visible to rclone. This can be useful if you are using rclone to backup data and you want to be sure confidential data on your drive is not visible to rclone. Files created with this scope are visible in the web interface. drive.appfolder This gives rclone its own private area to store files. Rclone will not be able to see any other files on your drive and you won’t be able to see rclone’s files from the web interface either. drive.metadata.readonly This allows read only access to file names only. It does not allow rclone to download or upload data, or rename or delete files or directories. Root folder ID You can set the root_folder_id for rclone. This is the directory (identified by its Folder ID) that rclone considers to be the root of your drive. Normally you will leave this blank and rclone will determine the correct root to use itself. However you can set this to restrict rclone to a specific folder hierarchy or to access data within the “Computers” tab on the drive web interface (where files from Google’s Backup and Sync desktop program go). In order to do this you will have to find the Folder ID of the directory you wish rclone to display. This will be the last segment of the URL when you open the relevant folder in the drive web interface. So if the folder you want rclone to use has a URL which looks like https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1XyfxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxKHCh in the browser, then you use 1XyfxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxKHCh as the root_folder_id in the config. NB folders under the “Computers” tab seem to be read only (drive gives a 500 error) when using rclone. There doesn’t appear to be an API to discover the folder IDs of the “Computers” tab - please contact us if you know otherwise! Note also that rclone can’t access any data under the “Backups” tab on the google drive web interface yet. Service Account support You can set up rclone with Google Drive in an unattended mode, i.e. not tied to a specific end-user Google account. This is useful when you want to synchronise files onto machines that don’t have actively logged-in users, for example build machines. To use a Service Account instead of OAuth2 token flow, enter the path to your Service Account credentials at the service_account_file prompt during rclone config and rclone won’t use the browser based authentication flow. If you’d rather stuff the contents of the credentials file into the rclone config file, you can set service_account_credentials with the actual contents of the file instead, or set the equivalent environment variable. Use case - Google Apps/G-suite account and individual Drive Let’s say that you are the administrator of a Google Apps (old) or G-suite account. The goal is to store data on an individual’s Drive account, who IS a member of the domain. We’ll call the domain example.com, and the user foo@example.com. There’s a few steps we need to go through to accomplish this: 1. Create a service account for example.com • To create a service account and obtain its credentials, go to the Google Developer Console (https://console.developers.google.com). • You must have a project - create one if you don’t. • Then go to “IAM & admin” -> “Service Accounts”. • Use the “Create Credentials” button. Fill in “Service account name” with something that identifies your client. “Role” can be empty. • Tick “Furnish a new private key” - select “Key type JSON”. • Tick “Enable G Suite Domain-wide Delegation”. This option makes “impersonation” possible, as documented here: Delegating domain-wide authority to the service account (https://developers.google.com/identity/protocols/OAuth2ServiceAccount#delegatingauthority) • These credentials are what rclone will use for authentication. If you ever need to remove access, press the “Delete service account key” button. 2. Allowing API access to example.com Google Drive • Go to example.com’s admin console • Go into “Security” (or use the search bar) • Select “Show more” and then “Advanced settings” • Select “Manage API client access” in the “Authentication” section • In the “Client Name” field enter the service account’s “Client ID” - this can be found in the Developer Console under “IAM & Admin” -> “Service Accounts”, then “View Client ID” for the newly created service account. It is a ~21 character numerical string. • In the next field, “One or More API Scopes”, enter https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive to grant access to Google Drive specifically. 3. Configure rclone, assuming a new install rclone config n/s/q> n # New name>gdrive # Gdrive is an example name Storage> # Select the number shown for Google Drive client_id> # Can be left blank client_secret> # Can be left blank scope> # Select your scope, 1 for example root_folder_id> # Can be left blank service_account_file> /home/foo/myJSONfile.json # This is where the JSON file goes! y/n> # Auto config, y 4. Verify that it’s working • rclone -v --drive-impersonate foo@example.com lsf gdrive:backup • The arguments do: • -v - verbose logging • --drive-impersonate foo@example.com - this is what does the magic, pretending to be user foo. • lsf - list files in a parsing friendly way • gdrive:backup - use the remote called gdrive, work in the folder named backup. Note: in case you configured a specific root folder on gdrive and rclone is unable to access the contents of that folder when using --drive-impersonate, do this instead: - in the gdrive web interface, share your root folder with the user/email of the new Service Account you created/selected at step #1 - use rclone without specifying the --drive- impersonate option, like this: rclone -v foo@example.com lsf gdrive:backup Team drives If you want to configure the remote to point to a Google Team Drive then answer y to the question Configure this as a team drive?. This will fetch the list of Team Drives from google and allow you to configure which one you want to use. You can also type in a team drive ID if you prefer. For example: Configure this as a team drive? y) Yes n) No y/n> y Fetching team drive list... Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Rclone Test \ "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" 2 / Rclone Test 2 \ "yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy" 3 / Rclone Test 3 \ "zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz" Enter a Team Drive ID> 1 -------------------- [remote] client_id = client_secret = token = {"AccessToken":"xxxx.x.xxxxx_xxxxxxxxxxx_xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx","RefreshToken":"1/xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx_xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx","Expiry":"2014-03-16T13:57:58.955387075Z","Extra":null} team_drive = xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y –fast-list This remote supports --fast-list which allows you to use fewer transactions in exchange for more memory. See the rclone docs (https://rclone.org/docs/#fast-list) for more details. It does this by combining multiple list calls into a single API request. This works by combining many '%s' in parents filters into one expression. To list the contents of directories a, b and c, the following requests will be send by the regular List function: trashed=false and 'a' in parents trashed=false and 'b' in parents trashed=false and 'c' in parents These can now be combined into a single request: trashed=false and ('a' in parents or 'b' in parents or 'c' in parents) The implementation of ListR will put up to 50 parents filters into one request. It will use the --checkers value to specify the number of requests to run in parallel. In tests, these batch requests were up to 20x faster than the regular method. Running the following command against different sized folders gives: rclone lsjson -vv -R --checkers=6 gdrive:folder small folder (220 directories, 700 files): • without --fast-list: 38s • with --fast-list: 10s large folder (10600 directories, 39000 files): • without --fast-list: 22:05 min • with --fast-list: 58s Modified time Google drive stores modification times accurate to 1 ms. Restricted filename characters Only Invalid UTF-8 bytes will be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. In contrast to other backends, / can also be used in names and . or .. are valid names. Revisions Google drive stores revisions of files. When you upload a change to an existing file to google drive using rclone it will create a new revision of that file. Revisions follow the standard google policy which at time of writing was • They are deleted after 30 days or 100 revisions (whatever comes first). • They do not count towards a user storage quota. Deleting files By default rclone will send all files to the trash when deleting files. If deleting them permanently is required then use the --drive-use-trash=false flag, or set the equivalent environment variable. Shortcuts In March 2020 Google introduced a new feature in Google Drive called drive shortcuts (https://support.google.com/drive/answer/9700156) (API (https://developers.google.com/drive/api/v3/shortcuts)). These will (by September 2020) replace the ability for files or folders to be in multiple folders at once (https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/g-suite/simplifying-google-drives-folder- structure-and-sharing-models). Shortcuts are files that link to other files on Google Drive somewhat like a symlink in unix, except they point to the underlying file data (eg the inode in unix terms) so they don’t break if the source is renamed or moved about. Be default rclone treats these as follows. For shortcuts pointing to files: • When listing a file shortcut appears as the destination file. • When downloading the contents of the destination file is downloaded. • When updating shortcut file with a non shortcut file, the shortcut is removed then a new file is uploaded in place of the shortcut. • When server side moving (renaming) the shortcut is renamed, not the destination file. • When server side copying the shortcut is copied, not the contents of the shortcut. • When deleting the shortcut is deleted not the linked file. • When setting the modification time, the modification time of the linked file will be set. For shortcuts pointing to folders: • When listing the shortcut appears as a folder and that folder will contain the contents of the linked folder appear (including any sub folders) • When downloading the contents of the linked folder and sub contents are downloaded • When uploading to a shortcut folder the file will be placed in the linked folder • When server side moving (renaming) the shortcut is renamed, not the destination folder • When server side copying the contents of the linked folder is copied, not the shortcut. • When deleting with rclone rmdir or rclone purge the shortcut is deleted not the linked folder. • NB When deleting with rclone remove or rclone mount the contents of the linked folder will be deleted. The rclone backend (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_backend/) command can be used to create shortcuts. Shortcuts can be completely ignored with the --drive-skip-shortcuts flag or the corresponding skip_shortcuts configuration setting. Emptying trash If you wish to empty your trash you can use the rclone cleanup remote: command which will permanently delete all your trashed files. This command does not take any path arguments. Note that Google Drive takes some time (minutes to days) to empty the trash even though the command returns within a few seconds. No output is echoed, so there will be no confirmation even using -v or -vv. Quota information To view your current quota you can use the rclone about remote: command which will display your usage limit (quota), the usage in Google Drive, the size of all files in the Trash and the space used by other Google services such as Gmail. This command does not take any path arguments. Import/Export of google documents Google documents can be exported from and uploaded to Google Drive. When rclone downloads a Google doc it chooses a format to download depending upon the --drive-export-formats setting. By default the export formats are docx,xlsx,pptx,svg which are a sensible default for an editable document. When choosing a format, rclone runs down the list provided in order and chooses the first file format the doc can be exported as from the list. If the file can’t be exported to a format on the formats list, then rclone will choose a format from the default list. If you prefer an archive copy then you might use --drive-export-formats pdf, or if you prefer openoffice/libreoffice formats you might use --drive-export-formats ods,odt,odp. Note that rclone adds the extension to the google doc, so if it is called My Spreadsheet on google docs, it will be exported as My Spreadsheet.xlsx or My Spreadsheet.pdf etc. When importing files into Google Drive, rclone will convert all files with an extension in --drive-import-formats to their associated document type. rclone will not convert any files by default, since the conversion is lossy process. The conversion must result in a file with the same extension when the --drive-export- formats rules are applied to the uploaded document. Here are some examples for allowed and prohibited conversions. export-formats import-formats Upload Ext Document Ext Allowed ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── odt odt odt odt Yes odt docx,odt odt odt Yes docx docx docx Yes odt odt docx No odt,docx docx,odt docx odt No docx,odt docx,odt docx docx Yes docx,odt docx,odt odt docx No This limitation can be disabled by specifying --drive-allow-import-name-change. When using this flag, rclone can convert multiple files types resulting in the same document type at once, eg with --drive-import-formats docx,odt,txt, all files having these extension would result in a document represented as a docx file. This brings the additional risk of overwriting a document, if multiple files have the same stem. Many rclone operations will not handle this name change in any way. They assume an equal name when copying files and might copy the file again or delete them when the name changes. Here are the possible export extensions with their corresponding mime types. Most of these can also be used for importing, but there more that are not listed here. Some of these additional ones might only be available when the operating system provides the correct MIME type entries. This list can be changed by Google Drive at any time and might not represent the currently available conversions. Extension Mime Type Description ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── csv text/csv Standard CSV format for Spreadsheets docx application/vnd.openxmlformats- Microsoft Office Document officedocument.wordprocessingml.document epub application/epub+zip E-book format html text/html An HTML Document jpg image/jpeg A JPEG Image File json application/vnd.google-apps.script+json JSON Text Format odp application/vnd.oasis.opendocument.presentation Openoffice Presentation ods application/vnd.oasis.opendocument.spreadsheet Openoffice Spreadsheet ods application/x- Openoffice Spreadsheet vnd.oasis.opendocument.spreadsheet odt application/vnd.oasis.opendocument.text Openoffice Document pdf application/pdf Adobe PDF Format png image/png PNG Image Format pptx application/vnd.openxmlformats- Microsoft Office officedocument.presentationml.presentation Powerpoint rtf application/rtf Rich Text Format svg image/svg+xml Scalable Vector Graphics Format tsv text/tab-separated-values Standard TSV format for spreadsheets txt text/plain Plain Text xlsx application/vnd.openxmlformats- Microsoft Office officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet Spreadsheet zip application/zip A ZIP file of HTML, Images CSS Google documents can also be exported as link files. These files will open a browser window for the Google Docs website of that document when opened. The link file extension has to be specified as a --drive-export-formats parameter. They will match all available Google Documents. Extension Description OS Support ────────────────────────────────────────────────────── desktop freedesktop.org Linux specified desktop entry link.html An HTML Document with a All redirect url INI style link file macOS, Windows webloc macOS specific XML macOS format Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to drive (Google Drive). –drive-client-id Google Application Client Id Setting your own is recommended. See https://rclone.org/drive/#making-your-own-client-id for how to create your own. If you leave this blank, it will use an internal key which is low performance. • Config: client_id • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_CLIENT_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –drive-client-secret OAuth Client Secret Leave blank normally. • Config: client_secret • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_CLIENT_SECRET • Type: string • Default: "" –drive-scope Scope that rclone should use when requesting access from drive. • Config: scope • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_SCOPE • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “drive” • Full access all files, excluding Application Data Folder. • “drive.readonly” • Read-only access to file metadata and file contents. • “drive.file” • Access to files created by rclone only. • These are visible in the drive website. • File authorization is revoked when the user deauthorizes the app. • “drive.appfolder” • Allows read and write access to the Application Data folder. • This is not visible in the drive website. • “drive.metadata.readonly” • Allows read-only access to file metadata but • does not allow any access to read or download file content. –drive-root-folder-id ID of the root folder Leave blank normally. Fill in to access “Computers” folders (see docs), or for rclone to use a non root folder as its starting point. • Config: root_folder_id • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_ROOT_FOLDER_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –drive-service-account-file Service Account Credentials JSON file path Leave blank normally. Needed only if you want use SA instead of interactive login. Leading ~ will be expanded in the file name as will environment variables such as ${RCLONE_CONFIG_DIR}. • Config: service_account_file • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_FILE • Type: string • Default: "" –drive-alternate-export Deprecated: no longer needed • Config: alternate_export • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_ALTERNATE_EXPORT • Type: bool • Default: false Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to drive (Google Drive). –drive-token OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. • Config: token • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –drive-auth-url Auth server URL. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: auth_url • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_AUTH_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –drive-token-url Token server url. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: token_url • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_TOKEN_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –drive-service-account-credentials Service Account Credentials JSON blob Leave blank normally. Needed only if you want use SA instead of interactive login. • Config: service_account_credentials • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_CREDENTIALS • Type: string • Default: "" –drive-team-drive ID of the Team Drive • Config: team_drive • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_TEAM_DRIVE • Type: string • Default: "" –drive-auth-owner-only Only consider files owned by the authenticated user. • Config: auth_owner_only • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_AUTH_OWNER_ONLY • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-use-trash Send files to the trash instead of deleting permanently. Defaults to true, namely sending files to the trash. Use --drive-use-trash=false to delete files permanently instead. • Config: use_trash • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_USE_TRASH • Type: bool • Default: true –drive-skip-gdocs Skip google documents in all listings. If given, gdocs practically become invisible to rclone. • Config: skip_gdocs • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_SKIP_GDOCS • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-skip-checksum-gphotos Skip MD5 checksum on Google photos and videos only. Use this if you get checksum errors when transferring Google photos or videos. Setting this flag will cause Google photos and videos to return a blank MD5 checksum. Google photos are identified by being in the “photos” space. Corrupted checksums are caused by Google modifying the image/video but not updating the checksum. • Config: skip_checksum_gphotos • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_SKIP_CHECKSUM_GPHOTOS • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-shared-with-me Only show files that are shared with me. Instructs rclone to operate on your “Shared with me” folder (where Google Drive lets you access the files and folders others have shared with you). This works both with the “list” (lsd, lsl, etc) and the “copy” commands (copy, sync, etc), and with all other commands too. • Config: shared_with_me • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_SHARED_WITH_ME • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-trashed-only Only show files that are in the trash. This will show trashed files in their original directory structure. • Config: trashed_only • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_TRASHED_ONLY • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-starred-only Only show files that are starred. • Config: starred_only • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_STARRED_ONLY • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-formats Deprecated: see export_formats • Config: formats • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_FORMATS • Type: string • Default: "" –drive-export-formats Comma separated list of preferred formats for downloading Google docs. • Config: export_formats • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_EXPORT_FORMATS • Type: string • Default: “docx,xlsx,pptx,svg” –drive-import-formats Comma separated list of preferred formats for uploading Google docs. • Config: import_formats • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_IMPORT_FORMATS • Type: string • Default: "" –drive-allow-import-name-change Allow the filetype to change when uploading Google docs (e.g. file.doc to file.docx). This will confuse sync and reupload every time. • Config: allow_import_name_change • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_ALLOW_IMPORT_NAME_CHANGE • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-use-created-date Use file created date instead of modified date., Useful when downloading data and you want the creation date used in place of the last modified date. WARNING: This flag may have some unexpected consequences. When uploading to your drive all files will be overwritten unless they haven’t been modified since their creation. And the inverse will occur while downloading. This side effect can be avoided by using the “–checksum” flag. This feature was implemented to retain photos capture date as recorded by google photos. You will first need to check the “Create a Google Photos folder” option in your google drive settings. You can then copy or move the photos locally and use the date the image was taken (created) set as the modification date. • Config: use_created_date • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_USE_CREATED_DATE • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-use-shared-date Use date file was shared instead of modified date. Note that, as with “–drive-use-created-date”, this flag may have unexpected consequences when uploading/downloading files. If both this flag and “–drive-use-created-date” are set, the created date is used. • Config: use_shared_date • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_USE_SHARED_DATE • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-list-chunk Size of listing chunk 100-1000. 0 to disable. • Config: list_chunk • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_LIST_CHUNK • Type: int • Default: 1000 –drive-impersonate Impersonate this user when using a service account. • Config: impersonate • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_IMPERSONATE • Type: string • Default: "" –drive-upload-cutoff Cutoff for switching to chunked upload • Config: upload_cutoff • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_UPLOAD_CUTOFF • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 8M –drive-chunk-size Upload chunk size. Must a power of 2 >= 256k. Making this larger will improve performance, but note that each chunk is buffered in memory one per transfer. Reducing this will reduce memory usage but decrease performance. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 8M –drive-acknowledge-abuse Set to allow files which return cannotDownloadAbusiveFile to be downloaded. If downloading a file returns the error “This file has been identified as malware or spam and cannot be downloaded” with the error code “cannotDownloadAbusiveFile” then supply this flag to rclone to indicate you acknowledge the risks of downloading the file and rclone will download it anyway. • Config: acknowledge_abuse • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_ACKNOWLEDGE_ABUSE • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-keep-revision-forever Keep new head revision of each file forever. • Config: keep_revision_forever • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_KEEP_REVISION_FOREVER • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-size-as-quota Show sizes as storage quota usage, not actual size. Show the size of a file as the storage quota used. This is the current version plus any older versions that have been set to keep forever. WARNING: This flag may have some unexpected consequences. It is not recommended to set this flag in your config - the recommended usage is using the flag form –drive-size-as-quota when doing rclone ls/lsl/lsf/lsjson/etc only. If you do use this flag for syncing (not recommended) then you will need to use –ignore size also. • Config: size_as_quota • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_SIZE_AS_QUOTA • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-v2-download-min-size If Object’s are greater, use drive v2 API to download. • Config: v2_download_min_size • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_V2_DOWNLOAD_MIN_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: off –drive-pacer-min-sleep Minimum time to sleep between API calls. • Config: pacer_min_sleep • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_PACER_MIN_SLEEP • Type: Duration • Default: 100ms –drive-pacer-burst Number of API calls to allow without sleeping. • Config: pacer_burst • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_PACER_BURST • Type: int • Default: 100 –drive-server-side-across-configs Allow server side operations (eg copy) to work across different drive configs. This can be useful if you wish to do a server side copy between two different Google drives. Note that this isn’t enabled by default because it isn’t easy to tell if it will work between any two configurations. • Config: server_side_across_configs • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_SERVER_SIDE_ACROSS_CONFIGS • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-disable-http2 Disable drive using http2 There is currently an unsolved issue with the google drive backend and HTTP/2. HTTP/2 is therefore disabled by default for the drive backend but can be re-enabled here. When the issue is solved this flag will be removed. See: https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/3631 • Config: disable_http2 • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_DISABLE_HTTP2 • Type: bool • Default: true –drive-stop-on-upload-limit Make upload limit errors be fatal At the time of writing it is only possible to upload 750GB of data to Google Drive a day (this is an undocumented limit). When this limit is reached Google Drive produces a slightly different error message. When this flag is set it causes these errors to be fatal. These will stop the in-progress sync. Note that this detection is relying on error message strings which Google don’t document so it may break in the future. See: https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/3857 • Config: stop_on_upload_limit • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_STOP_ON_UPLOAD_LIMIT • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-skip-shortcuts If set skip shortcut files Normally rclone dereferences shortcut files making them appear as if they are the original file (see the shortcuts section). If this flag is set then rclone will ignore shortcut files completely. • Config: skip_shortcuts • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_SKIP_SHORTCUTS • Type: bool • Default: false –drive-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_DRIVE_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: InvalidUtf8 Backend commands Here are the commands specific to the drive backend. Run them with rclone backend COMMAND remote: The help below will explain what arguments each command takes. See the “rclone backend” command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_backend/) for more info on how to pass options and arguments. These can be run on a running backend using the rc command backend/command (https://rclone.org/rc/#backend/command). get Get command for fetching the drive config parameters rclone backend get remote: [options] [<arguments>+] This is a get command which will be used to fetch the various drive config parameters Usage Examples: rclone backend get drive: [-o service_account_file] [-o chunk_size] rclone rc backend/command command=get fs=drive: [-o service_account_file] [-o chunk_size] Options: • “chunk_size”: show the current upload chunk size • “service_account_file”: show the current service account file set Set command for updating the drive config parameters rclone backend set remote: [options] [<arguments>+] This is a set command which will be used to update the various drive config parameters Usage Examples: rclone backend set drive: [-o service_account_file=sa.json] [-o chunk_size=67108864] rclone rc backend/command command=set fs=drive: [-o service_account_file=sa.json] [-o chunk_size=67108864] Options: • “chunk_size”: update the current upload chunk size • “service_account_file”: update the current service account file shortcut Create shortcuts from files or directories rclone backend shortcut remote: [options] [<arguments>+] This command creates shortcuts from files or directories. Usage: rclone backend shortcut drive: source_item destination_shortcut rclone backend shortcut drive: source_item -o target=drive2: destination_shortcut In the first example this creates a shortcut from the “source_item” which can be a file or a directory to the “destination_shortcut”. The “source_item” and the “destination_shortcut” should be relative paths from “drive:” In the second example this creates a shortcut from the “source_item” relative to “drive:” to the “destination_shortcut” relative to “drive2:”. This may fail with a permission error if the user authenticated with “drive2:” can’t read files from “drive:”. Options: • “target”: optional target remote for the shortcut destination drives List the shared drives available to this account rclone backend drives remote: [options] [<arguments>+] This command lists the shared drives (teamdrives) available to this account. Usage: rclone backend drives drive: This will return a JSON list of objects like this [ { "id": "0ABCDEF-01234567890", "kind": "drive#teamDrive", "name": "My Drive" }, { "id": "0ABCDEFabcdefghijkl", "kind": "drive#teamDrive", "name": "Test Drive" } ] untrash Untrash files and directories rclone backend untrash remote: [options] [<arguments>+] This command untrashes all the files and directories in the directory passed in recursively. Usage: This takes an optional directory to trash which make this easier to use via the API. rclone backend untrash drive:directory rclone backend -i untrash drive:directory subdir Use the -i flag to see what would be restored before restoring it. Result: { "Untrashed": 17, "Errors": 0 } Limitations Drive has quite a lot of rate limiting. This causes rclone to be limited to transferring about 2 files per second only. Individual files may be transferred much faster at 100s of MBytes/s but lots of small files can take a long time. Server side copies are also subject to a separate rate limit. If you see User rate limit exceeded errors, wait at least 24 hours and retry. You can disable server side copies with --disable copy to download and upload the files if you prefer. Limitations of Google Docs Google docs will appear as size -1 in rclone ls and as size 0 in anything which uses the VFS layer, eg rclone mount, rclone serve. This is because rclone can’t find out the size of the Google docs without downloading them. Google docs will transfer correctly with rclone sync, rclone copy etc as rclone knows to ignore the size when doing the transfer. However an unfortunate consequence of this is that you may not be able to download Google docs using rclone mount. If it doesn’t work you will get a 0 sized file. If you try again the doc may gain its correct size and be downloadable. Whether it will work on not depends on the application accessing the mount and the OS you are running - experiment to find out if it does work for you! Duplicated files Sometimes, for no reason I’ve been able to track down, drive will duplicate a file that rclone uploads. Drive unlike all the other remotes can have duplicated files. Duplicated files cause problems with the syncing and you will see messages in the log about duplicates. Use rclone dedupe to fix duplicated files. Note that this isn’t just a problem with rclone, even Google Photos on Android duplicates files on drive sometimes. Rclone appears to be re-copying files it shouldn’t The most likely cause of this is the duplicated file issue above - run rclone dedupe and check your logs for duplicate object or directory messages. This can also be caused by a delay/caching on google drive’s end when comparing directory listings. Specifically with team drives used in combination with –fast-list. Files that were uploaded recently may not appear on the directory list sent to rclone when using –fast-list. Waiting a moderate period of time between attempts (estimated to be approximately 1 hour) and/or not using –fast-list both seem to be effective in preventing the problem. Making your own client_id When you use rclone with Google drive in its default configuration you are using rclone’s client_id. This is shared between all the rclone users. There is a global rate limit on the number of queries per second that each client_id can do set by Google. rclone already has a high quota and I will continue to make sure it is high enough by contacting Google. It is strongly recommended to use your own client ID as the default rclone ID is heavily used. If you have multiple services running, it is recommended to use an API key for each service. The default Google quota is 10 transactions per second so it is recommended to stay under that number as if you use more than that, it will cause rclone to rate limit and make things slower. Here is how to create your own Google Drive client ID for rclone: 1. Log into the Google API Console (https://console.developers.google.com/) with your Google account. It doesn’t matter what Google account you use. (It need not be the same account as the Google Drive you want to access) 2. Select a project or create a new project. 3. Under “ENABLE APIS AND SERVICES” search for “Drive”, and enable the “Google Drive API”. 4. Click “Credentials” in the left-side panel (not “Create credentials”, which opens the wizard), then “Create credentials” 5. If you already configured an “Oauth Consent Screen”, then skip to the next step; if not, click on “CONFIGURE CONSENT SCREEN” button (near the top right corner of the right panel), then select “External” and click on “CREATE”; on the next screen, enter an “Application name” (“rclone” is OK) then click on “Save” (all other data is optional). Click again on “Credentials” on the left panel to go back to the “Credentials” screen. (PS: if you are a GSuite user, you could also select “Internal” instead of “External” above, but this has not been tested/documented so far). 6. Click on the “+ CREATE CREDENTIALS” button at the top of the screen, then select “OAuth client ID”. 7. Choose an application type of “Desktop app” if you using a Google account or “Other” if you using a GSuite account and click “Create”. (the default name is fine) 8. It will show you a client ID and client secret. Use these values in rclone config to add a new remote or edit an existing remote. Be aware that, due to the “enhanced security” recently introduced by Google, you are theoretically expected to “submit your app for verification” and then wait a few weeks(!) for their response; in practice, you can go right ahead and use the client ID and client secret with rclone, the only issue will be a very scary confirmation screen shown when you connect via your browser for rclone to be able to get its token-id (but as this only happens during the remote configuration, it’s not such a big deal). (Thanks to @balazer on github for these instructions.) Sometimes, creation of an OAuth consent in Google API Console fails due to an error message “The request failed because changes to one of the field of the resource is not supported”. As a convenient workaround, the necessary Google Drive API key can be created on the Python Quickstart (https://developers.google.com/drive/api/v3/quickstart/python) page. Just push the Enable the Drive API button to receive the Client ID and Secret. Note that it will automatically create a new project in the API Console. Google Photos The rclone backend for Google Photos (https://www.google.com/photos/about/) is a specialized backend for transferring photos and videos to and from Google Photos. NB The Google Photos API which rclone uses has quite a few limitations, so please read the limitations section carefully to make sure it is suitable for your use. Configuring Google Photos The initial setup for google cloud storage involves getting a token from Google Photos which you need to do in your browser. rclone config walks you through it. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Google Photos \ "google photos" [snip] Storage> google photos ** See help for google photos backend at: https://rclone.org/googlephotos/ ** Google Application Client Id Leave blank normally. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). client_id> Google Application Client Secret Leave blank normally. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). client_secret> Set to make the Google Photos backend read only. If you choose read only then rclone will only request read only access to your photos, otherwise rclone will request full access. Enter a boolean value (true or false). Press Enter for the default ("false"). read_only> Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No y/n> n Remote config Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code *** IMPORTANT: All media items uploaded to Google Photos with rclone *** are stored in full resolution at original quality. These uploads *** will count towards storage in your Google Account. -------------------- [remote] type = google photos token = {"access_token":"XXX","token_type":"Bearer","refresh_token":"XXX","expiry":"2019-06-28T17:38:04.644930156+01:00"} -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Note that rclone runs a webserver on your local machine to collect the token as returned from Google if you use auto config mode. This only runs from the moment it opens your browser to the moment you get back the verification code. This is on http://127.0.0.1:53682/ and this may require you to unblock it temporarily if you are running a host firewall, or use manual mode. This remote is called remote and can now be used like this See all the albums in your photos rclone lsd remote:album Make a new album rclone mkdir remote:album/newAlbum List the contents of an album rclone ls remote:album/newAlbum Sync /home/local/images to the Google Photos, removing any excess files in the album. rclone sync -i /home/local/image remote:album/newAlbum Layout As Google Photos is not a general purpose cloud storage system the backend is laid out to help you navigate it. The directories under media show different ways of categorizing the media. Each file will appear multiple times. So if you want to make a backup of your google photos you might choose to backup remote:media/by-month. (NB remote:media/by-day is rather slow at the moment so avoid for syncing.) Note that all your photos and videos will appear somewhere under media, but they may not appear under album unless you’ve put them into albums. / - upload - file1.jpg - file2.jpg - ... - media - all - file1.jpg - file2.jpg - ... - by-year - 2000 - file1.jpg - ... - 2001 - file2.jpg - ... - ... - by-month - 2000 - 2000-01 - file1.jpg - ... - 2000-02 - file2.jpg - ... - ... - by-day - 2000 - 2000-01-01 - file1.jpg - ... - 2000-01-02 - file2.jpg - ... - ... - album - album name - album name/sub - shared-album - album name - album name/sub - feature - favorites - file1.jpg - file2.jpg There are two writable parts of the tree, the upload directory and sub directories of the album directory. The upload directory is for uploading files you don’t want to put into albums. This will be empty to start with and will contain the files you’ve uploaded for one rclone session only, becoming empty again when you restart rclone. The use case for this would be if you have a load of files you just want to once off dump into Google Photos. For repeated syncing, uploading to album will work better. Directories within the album directory are also writeable and you may create new directories (albums) under album. If you copy files with a directory hierarchy in there then rclone will create albums with the / character in them. For example if you do rclone copy /path/to/images remote:album/images and the images directory contains images - file1.jpg dir file2.jpg dir2 dir3 file3.jpg Then rclone will create the following albums with the following files in • images • file1.jpg • images/dir • file2.jpg • images/dir2/dir3 • file3.jpg This means that you can use the album path pretty much like a normal filesystem and it is a good target for repeated syncing. The shared-album directory shows albums shared with you or by you. This is similar to the Sharing tab in the Google Photos web interface. Limitations Only images and videos can be uploaded. If you attempt to upload non videos or images or formats that Google Photos doesn’t understand, rclone will upload the file, then Google Photos will give an error when it is put turned into a media item. Note that all media items uploaded to Google Photos through the API are stored in full resolution at “original quality” and will count towards your storage quota in your Google Account. The API does not offer a way to upload in “high quality” mode.. Downloading Images When Images are downloaded this strips EXIF location (according to the docs and my tests). This is a limitation of the Google Photos API and is covered by bug #112096115 (https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/112096115). The current google API does not allow photos to be downloaded at original resolution. This is very important if you are, for example, relying on “Google Photos” as a backup of your photos. You will not be able to use rclone to redownload original images. You could use `google takeout' to recover the original photos as a last resort Downloading Videos When videos are downloaded they are downloaded in a really compressed version of the video compared to downloading it via the Google Photos web interface. This is covered by bug #113672044 (https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/113672044). Duplicates If a file name is duplicated in a directory then rclone will add the file ID into its name. So two files called file.jpg would then appear as file {123456}.jpg and file {ABCDEF}.jpg (the actual IDs are a lot longer alas!). If you upload the same image (with the same binary data) twice then Google Photos will deduplicate it. However it will retain the filename from the first upload which may confuse rclone. For example if you uploaded an image to upload then uploaded the same image to album/my_album the filename of the image in album/my_album will be what it was uploaded with initially, not what you uploaded it with to album. In practise this shouldn’t cause too many problems. Modified time The date shown of media in Google Photos is the creation date as determined by the EXIF information, or the upload date if that is not known. This is not changeable by rclone and is not the modification date of the media on local disk. This means that rclone cannot use the dates from Google Photos for syncing purposes. Size The Google Photos API does not return the size of media. This means that when syncing to Google Photos, rclone can only do a file existence check. It is possible to read the size of the media, but this needs an extra HTTP HEAD request per media item so is very slow and uses up a lot of transactions. This can be enabled with the --gphotos-read-size option or the read_size = true config parameter. If you want to use the backend with rclone mount you may need to enable this flag (depending on your OS and application using the photos) otherwise you may not be able to read media off the mount. You’ll need to experiment to see if it works for you without the flag. Albums Rclone can only upload files to albums it created. This is a limitation of the Google Photos API (https://developers.google.com/photos/library/guides/manage-albums). Rclone can remove files it uploaded from albums it created only. Deleting files Rclone can remove files from albums it created, but note that the Google Photos API does not allow media to be deleted permanently so this media will still remain. See bug #109759781 (https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/109759781). Rclone cannot delete files anywhere except under album. Deleting albums The Google Photos API does not support deleting albums - see bug #135714733 (https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/135714733). Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to google photos (Google Photos). –gphotos-client-id OAuth Client Id Leave blank normally. • Config: client_id • Env Var: RCLONE_GPHOTOS_CLIENT_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –gphotos-client-secret OAuth Client Secret Leave blank normally. • Config: client_secret • Env Var: RCLONE_GPHOTOS_CLIENT_SECRET • Type: string • Default: "" –gphotos-read-only Set to make the Google Photos backend read only. If you choose read only then rclone will only request read only access to your photos, otherwise rclone will request full access. • Config: read_only • Env Var: RCLONE_GPHOTOS_READ_ONLY • Type: bool • Default: false Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to google photos (Google Photos). –gphotos-token OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. • Config: token • Env Var: RCLONE_GPHOTOS_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –gphotos-auth-url Auth server URL. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: auth_url • Env Var: RCLONE_GPHOTOS_AUTH_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –gphotos-token-url Token server url. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: token_url • Env Var: RCLONE_GPHOTOS_TOKEN_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –gphotos-read-size Set to read the size of media items. Normally rclone does not read the size of media items since this takes another transaction. This isn’t necessary for syncing. However rclone mount needs to know the size of files in advance of reading them, so setting this flag when using rclone mount is recommended if you want to read the media. • Config: read_size • Env Var: RCLONE_GPHOTOS_READ_SIZE • Type: bool • Default: false –gphotos-start-year Year limits the photos to be downloaded to those which are uploaded after the given year • Config: start_year • Env Var: RCLONE_GPHOTOS_START_YEAR • Type: int • Default: 2000 HTTP The HTTP remote is a read only remote for reading files of a webserver. The webserver should provide file listings which rclone will read and turn into a remote. This has been tested with common webservers such as Apache/Nginx/Caddy and will likely work with file listings from most web servers. (If it doesn’t then please file an issue, or send a pull request!) Paths are specified as remote: or remote:path/to/dir. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / http Connection \ "http" [snip] Storage> http URL of http host to connect to Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Connect to example.com \ "https://example.com" url> https://beta.rclone.org Remote config -------------------- [remote] url = https://beta.rclone.org -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Current remotes: Name Type ==== ==== remote http e) Edit existing remote n) New remote d) Delete remote r) Rename remote c) Copy remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config e/n/d/r/c/s/q> q This remote is called remote and can now be used like this See all the top level directories rclone lsd remote: List the contents of a directory rclone ls remote:directory Sync the remote directory to /home/local/directory, deleting any excess files. rclone sync -i remote:directory /home/local/directory Read only This remote is read only - you can’t upload files to an HTTP server. Modified time Most HTTP servers store time accurate to 1 second. Checksum No checksums are stored. Usage without a config file Since the http remote only has one config parameter it is easy to use without a config file: rclone lsd --http-url https://beta.rclone.org :http: Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to http (http Connection). –http-url URL of http host to connect to • Config: url • Env Var: RCLONE_HTTP_URL • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “https://example.com” • Connect to example.com • “https://user:pass@example.com” • Connect to example.com using a username and password Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to http (http Connection). –http-headers Set HTTP headers for all transactions Use this to set additional HTTP headers for all transactions The input format is comma separated list of key,value pairs. Standard CSV encoding (https://godoc.org/encoding/csv) may be used. For example to set a Cookie use `Cookie,name=value', or `“Cookie”,“name=value”'. You can set multiple headers, eg `“Cookie”,“name=value”,“Authorization”,“xxx”'. • Config: headers • Env Var: RCLONE_HTTP_HEADERS • Type: CommaSepList • Default: –http-no-slash Set this if the site doesn’t end directories with / Use this if your target website does not use / on the end of directories. A / on the end of a path is how rclone normally tells the difference between files and directories. If this flag is set, then rclone will treat all files with Content-Type: text/html as directories and read URLs from them rather than downloading them. Note that this may cause rclone to confuse genuine HTML files with directories. • Config: no_slash • Env Var: RCLONE_HTTP_NO_SLASH • Type: bool • Default: false –http-no-head Don’t use HEAD requests to find file sizes in dir listing If your site is being very slow to load then you can try this option. Normally rclone does a HEAD request for each potential file in a directory listing to: • find its size • check it really exists • check to see if it is a directory If you set this option, rclone will not do the HEAD request. This will mean • directory listings are much quicker • rclone won’t have the times or sizes of any files • some files that don’t exist may be in the listing • Config: no_head • Env Var: RCLONE_HTTP_NO_HEAD • Type: bool • Default: false Hubic Paths are specified as remote:path Paths are specified as remote:container (or remote: for the lsd command.) You may put subdirectories in too, eg remote:container/path/to/dir. The initial setup for Hubic involves getting a token from Hubic which you need to do in your browser. rclone config walks you through it. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: n) New remote s) Set configuration password n/s> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Hubic \ "hubic" [snip] Storage> hubic Hubic Client Id - leave blank normally. client_id> Hubic Client Secret - leave blank normally. client_secret> Remote config Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code -------------------- [remote] client_id = client_secret = token = {"access_token":"XXXXXX"} -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y See the remote setup docs (https://rclone.org/remote_setup/) for how to set it up on a machine with no Internet browser available. Note that rclone runs a webserver on your local machine to collect the token as returned from Hubic. This only runs from the moment it opens your browser to the moment you get back the verification code. This is on http://127.0.0.1:53682/ and this it may require you to unblock it temporarily if you are running a host firewall. Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List containers in the top level of your Hubic rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your Hubic rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to an Hubic directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup If you want the directory to be visible in the official Hubic browser, you need to copy your files to the default directory rclone copy /home/source remote:default/backup –fast-list This remote supports --fast-list which allows you to use fewer transactions in exchange for more memory. See the rclone docs (https://rclone.org/docs/#fast-list) for more details. Modified time The modified time is stored as metadata on the object as X-Object-Meta-Mtime as floating point since the epoch accurate to 1 ns. This is a de facto standard (used in the official python-swiftclient amongst others) for storing the modification time for an object. Note that Hubic wraps the Swift backend, so most of the properties of are the same. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to hubic (Hubic). –hubic-client-id OAuth Client Id Leave blank normally. • Config: client_id • Env Var: RCLONE_HUBIC_CLIENT_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –hubic-client-secret OAuth Client Secret Leave blank normally. • Config: client_secret • Env Var: RCLONE_HUBIC_CLIENT_SECRET • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to hubic (Hubic). –hubic-token OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. • Config: token • Env Var: RCLONE_HUBIC_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –hubic-auth-url Auth server URL. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: auth_url • Env Var: RCLONE_HUBIC_AUTH_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –hubic-token-url Token server url. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: token_url • Env Var: RCLONE_HUBIC_TOKEN_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –hubic-chunk-size Above this size files will be chunked into a _segments container. Above this size files will be chunked into a _segments container. The default for this is 5GB which is its maximum value. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_HUBIC_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 5G –hubic-no-chunk Don’t chunk files during streaming upload. When doing streaming uploads (eg using rcat or mount) setting this flag will cause the swift backend to not upload chunked files. This will limit the maximum upload size to 5GB. However non chunked files are easier to deal with and have an MD5SUM. Rclone will still chunk files bigger than chunk_size when doing normal copy operations. • Config: no_chunk • Env Var: RCLONE_HUBIC_NO_CHUNK • Type: bool • Default: false –hubic-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_HUBIC_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,InvalidUtf8 Limitations This uses the normal OpenStack Swift mechanism to refresh the Swift API credentials and ignores the expires field returned by the Hubic API. The Swift API doesn’t return a correct MD5SUM for segmented files (Dynamic or Static Large Objects) so rclone won’t check or use the MD5SUM for these. Jottacloud Jottacloud is a cloud storage service provider from a Norwegian company, using its own datacenters in Norway. In addition to the official service at jottacloud.com (https://www.jottacloud.com/), there are also several whitelabel versions which should work with this backend. Paths are specified as remote:path Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. Setup Default Setup To configure Jottacloud you will need to generate a personal security token in the Jottacloud web interface. You will the option to do in your account security settings (https://www.jottacloud.com/web/secure) (for whitelabel version you need to find this page in its web interface). Note that the web interface may refer to this token as a JottaCli token. Legacy Setup If you are using one of the whitelabel versions (Elgiganten, Com Hem Cloud) you may not have the option to generate a CLI token. In this case you’ll have to use the legacy authentification. To to this select yes when the setup asks for legacy authentification and enter your username and password. The rest of the setup is identical to the default setup. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote with the default setup. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Jottacloud \ "jottacloud" [snip] Storage> jottacloud ** See help for jottacloud backend at: https://rclone.org/jottacloud/ ** Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No y/n> n Remote config Use legacy authentification?. This is only required for certain whitelabel versions of Jottacloud and not recommended for normal users. y) Yes n) No (default) y/n> n Generate a personal login token here: https://www.jottacloud.com/web/secure Login Token> <your token here> Do you want to use a non standard device/mountpoint e.g. for accessing files uploaded using the official Jottacloud client? y) Yes n) No y/n> y Please select the device to use. Normally this will be Jotta Choose a number from below, or type in an existing value 1 > DESKTOP-3H31129 2 > Jotta Devices> 2 Please select the mountpoint to user. Normally this will be Archive Choose a number from below, or type in an existing value 1 > Archive 2 > Links 3 > Sync Mountpoints> 1 -------------------- [jotta] type = jottacloud token = {........} device = Jotta mountpoint = Archive configVersion = 1 -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level of your Jottacloud rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your Jottacloud rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to an Jottacloud directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Devices and Mountpoints The official Jottacloud client registers a device for each computer you install it on, and then creates a mountpoint for each folder you select for Backup. The web interface uses a special device called Jotta for the Archive and Sync mountpoints. In most cases you’ll want to use the Jotta/Archive device/mountpoint, however if you want to access files uploaded by any of the official clients rclone provides the option to select other devices and mountpoints during config. The built-in Jotta device may also contain several other mountpoints, such as: Latest, Links, Shared and Trash. These are special mountpoints with a different internal representation than the “regular” mountpoints. Rclone will only to a very limited degree support them. Generally you should avoid these, unless you know what you are doing. –fast-list This remote supports --fast-list which allows you to use fewer transactions in exchange for more memory. See the rclone docs (https://rclone.org/docs/#fast-list) for more details. Note that the implementation in Jottacloud always uses only a single API request to get the entire list, so for large folders this could lead to long wait time before the first results are shown. Modified time and hashes Jottacloud allows modification times to be set on objects accurate to 1 second. These will be used to detect whether objects need syncing or not. Jottacloud supports MD5 type hashes, so you can use the --checksum flag. Note that Jottacloud requires the MD5 hash before upload so if the source does not have an MD5 checksum then the file will be cached temporarily on disk (wherever the TMPDIR environment variable points to) before it is uploaded. Small files will be cached in memory - see the –jottacloud-md5-memory-limit flag. When uploading from local disk the source checksum is always available, so this does not apply. Starting with rclone version 1.52 the same is true for crypted remotes (in older versions the crypt backend would not calculate hashes for uploads from local disk, so the Jottacloud backend had to do it as described above). Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── " 0x22 " * 0x2A * : 0x3A : < 0x3C < > 0x3E > ? 0x3F ? | 0x7C | Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in XML strings. Deleting files By default rclone will send all files to the trash when deleting files. They will be permanently deleted automatically after 30 days. You may bypass the trash and permanently delete files immediately by using the –jottacloud-hard-delete flag, or set the equivalent environment variable. Emptying the trash is supported by the cleanup (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_cleanup/) command. Versions Jottacloud supports file versioning. When rclone uploads a new version of a file it creates a new version of it. Currently rclone only supports retrieving the current version but older versions can be accessed via the Jottacloud Website. Quota information To view your current quota you can use the rclone about remote: command which will display your usage limit (unless it is unlimited) and the current usage. Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to jottacloud (Jottacloud). –jottacloud-md5-memory-limit Files bigger than this will be cached on disk to calculate the MD5 if required. • Config: md5_memory_limit • Env Var: RCLONE_JOTTACLOUD_MD5_MEMORY_LIMIT • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 10M –jottacloud-trashed-only Only show files that are in the trash. This will show trashed files in their original directory structure. • Config: trashed_only • Env Var: RCLONE_JOTTACLOUD_TRASHED_ONLY • Type: bool • Default: false –jottacloud-hard-delete Delete files permanently rather than putting them into the trash. • Config: hard_delete • Env Var: RCLONE_JOTTACLOUD_HARD_DELETE • Type: bool • Default: false –jottacloud-upload-resume-limit Files bigger than this can be resumed if the upload fail’s. • Config: upload_resume_limit • Env Var: RCLONE_JOTTACLOUD_UPLOAD_RESUME_LIMIT • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 10M –jottacloud-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_JOTTACLOUD_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot Limitations Note that Jottacloud is case insensitive so you can’t have a file called “Hello.doc” and one called “hello.doc”. There are quite a few characters that can’t be in Jottacloud file names. Rclone will map these names to and from an identical looking unicode equivalent. For example if a file has a ? in it will be mapped to ? instead. Jottacloud only supports filenames up to 255 characters in length. Troubleshooting Jottacloud exhibits some inconsistent behaviours regarding deleted files and folders which may cause Copy, Move and DirMove operations to previously deleted paths to fail. Emptying the trash should help in such cases. Koofr Paths are specified as remote:path Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. The initial setup for Koofr involves creating an application password for rclone. You can do that by opening the Koofr web application (https://app.koofr.net/app/admin/preferences/password), giving the password a nice name like rclone and clicking on generate. Here is an example of how to make a remote called koofr. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> koofr Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Koofr \ "koofr" [snip] Storage> koofr ** See help for koofr backend at: https://rclone.org/koofr/ ** Your Koofr user name Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). user> USER@NAME Your Koofr password for rclone (generate one at https://app.koofr.net/app/admin/preferences/password) y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password y/g> y Enter the password: password: Confirm the password: password: Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No y/n> n Remote config -------------------- [koofr] type = koofr baseurl = https://app.koofr.net user = USER@NAME password = *** ENCRYPTED *** -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y You can choose to edit advanced config in order to enter your own service URL if you use an on-premise or white label Koofr instance, or choose an alternative mount instead of your primary storage. Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level of your Koofr rclone lsd koofr: List all the files in your Koofr rclone ls koofr: To copy a local directory to an Koofr directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── \ 0x5C \ Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in XML strings. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to koofr (Koofr). –koofr-user Your Koofr user name • Config: user • Env Var: RCLONE_KOOFR_USER • Type: string • Default: "" –koofr-password Your Koofr password for rclone (generate one at https://app.koofr.net/app/admin/preferences/password) NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: password • Env Var: RCLONE_KOOFR_PASSWORD • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to koofr (Koofr). –koofr-endpoint The Koofr API endpoint to use • Config: endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_KOOFR_ENDPOINT • Type: string • Default: “https://app.koofr.net” –koofr-mountid Mount ID of the mount to use. If omitted, the primary mount is used. • Config: mountid • Env Var: RCLONE_KOOFR_MOUNTID • Type: string • Default: "" –koofr-setmtime Does the backend support setting modification time. Set this to false if you use a mount ID that points to a Dropbox or Amazon Drive backend. • Config: setmtime • Env Var: RCLONE_KOOFR_SETMTIME • Type: bool • Default: true –koofr-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_KOOFR_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot Limitations Note that Koofr is case insensitive so you can’t have a file called “Hello.doc” and one called “hello.doc”. Mail.ru Cloud Mail.ru Cloud (https://cloud.mail.ru/) is a cloud storage provided by a Russian internet company Mail.Ru Group (https://mail.ru). The official desktop client is Disk-O: (https://disk-o.cloud/), available only on Windows. (Please note that official sites are in Russian) Currently it is recommended to disable 2FA on Mail.ru accounts intended for rclone until it gets eventually implemented. Features highlights • Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory • Files have a last modified time property, directories don’t • Deleted files are by default moved to the trash • Files and directories can be shared via public links • Partial uploads or streaming are not supported, file size must be known before upload • Maximum file size is limited to 2G for a free account, unlimited for paid accounts • Storage keeps hash for all files and performs transparent deduplication, the hash algorithm is a modified SHA1 • If a particular file is already present in storage, one can quickly submit file hash instead of long file upload (this optimization is supported by rclone) Configuration Here is an example of making a mailru configuration. First create a Mail.ru Cloud account and choose a tariff, then run rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Mail.ru Cloud \ "mailru" [snip] Storage> mailru User name (usually email) Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). user> username@mail.ru Password y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password y/g> y Enter the password: password: Confirm the password: password: Skip full upload if there is another file with same data hash. This feature is called "speedup" or "put by hash". It is especially efficient in case of generally available files like popular books, video or audio clips [snip] Enter a boolean value (true or false). Press Enter for the default ("true"). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Enable \ "true" 2 / Disable \ "false" speedup_enable> 1 Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No y/n> n Remote config -------------------- [remote] type = mailru user = username@mail.ru pass = *** ENCRYPTED *** speedup_enable = true -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Configuration of this backend does not require a local web browser. You can use the configured backend as shown below: See top level directories rclone lsd remote: Make a new directory rclone mkdir remote:directory List the contents of a directory rclone ls remote:directory Sync /home/local/directory to the remote path, deleting any excess files in the path. rclone sync -i /home/local/directory remote:directory Modified time Files support a modification time attribute with up to 1 second precision. Directories do not have a modification time, which is shown as “Jan 1 1970”. Hash checksums Hash sums use a custom Mail.ru algorithm based on SHA1. If file size is less than or equal to the SHA1 block size (20 bytes), its hash is simply its data right-padded with zero bytes. Hash sum of a larger file is computed as a SHA1 sum of the file data bytes concatenated with a decimal representation of the data length. Emptying Trash Removing a file or directory actually moves it to the trash, which is not visible to rclone but can be seen in a web browser. The trashed file still occupies part of total quota. If you wish to empty your trash and free some quota, you can use the rclone cleanup remote: command, which will permanently delete all your trashed files. This command does not take any path arguments. Quota information To view your current quota you can use the rclone about remote: command which will display your usage limit (quota) and the current usage. Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── " 0x22 " * 0x2A * : 0x3A : < 0x3C < > 0x3E > ? 0x3F ? \ 0x5C \ | 0x7C | Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Limitations File size limits depend on your account. A single file size is limited by 2G for a free account and unlimited for paid tariffs. Please refer to the Mail.ru site for the total uploaded size limits. Note that Mailru is case insensitive so you can’t have a file called “Hello.doc” and one called “hello.doc”. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to mailru (Mail.ru Cloud). –mailru-user User name (usually email) • Config: user • Env Var: RCLONE_MAILRU_USER • Type: string • Default: "" –mailru-pass Password NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: pass • Env Var: RCLONE_MAILRU_PASS • Type: string • Default: "" –mailru-speedup-enable Skip full upload if there is another file with same data hash. This feature is called “speedup” or “put by hash”. It is especially efficient in case of generally available files like popular books, video or audio clips, because files are searched by hash in all accounts of all mailru users. Please note that rclone may need local memory and disk space to calculate content hash in advance and decide whether full upload is required. Also, if rclone does not know file size in advance (e.g. in case of streaming or partial uploads), it will not even try this optimization. • Config: speedup_enable • Env Var: RCLONE_MAILRU_SPEEDUP_ENABLE • Type: bool • Default: true • Examples: • “true” • Enable • “false” • Disable Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to mailru (Mail.ru Cloud). –mailru-speedup-file-patterns Comma separated list of file name patterns eligible for speedup (put by hash). Patterns are case insensitive and can contain ’*’ or `?' meta characters. • Config: speedup_file_patterns • Env Var: RCLONE_MAILRU_SPEEDUP_FILE_PATTERNS • Type: string • Default: “.mkv,.avi,.mp4,.mp3,.zip,.gz,.rar,.pdf” • Examples: • "" • Empty list completely disables speedup (put by hash). • "*" • All files will be attempted for speedup. • “.mkv,.avi,.mp4,.mp3” • Only common audio/video files will be tried for put by hash. • “.zip,.gz,.rar,.pdf” • Only common archives or PDF books will be tried for speedup. –mailru-speedup-max-disk This option allows you to disable speedup (put by hash) for large files (because preliminary hashing can exhaust you RAM or disk space) • Config: speedup_max_disk • Env Var: RCLONE_MAILRU_SPEEDUP_MAX_DISK • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 3G • Examples: • “0” • Completely disable speedup (put by hash). • “1G” • Files larger than 1Gb will be uploaded directly. • “3G” • Choose this option if you have less than 3Gb free on local disk. –mailru-speedup-max-memory Files larger than the size given below will always be hashed on disk. • Config: speedup_max_memory • Env Var: RCLONE_MAILRU_SPEEDUP_MAX_MEMORY • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 32M • Examples: • “0” • Preliminary hashing will always be done in a temporary disk location. • “32M” • Do not dedicate more than 32Mb RAM for preliminary hashing. • “256M” • You have at most 256Mb RAM free for hash calculations. –mailru-check-hash What should copy do if file checksum is mismatched or invalid • Config: check_hash • Env Var: RCLONE_MAILRU_CHECK_HASH • Type: bool • Default: true • Examples: • “true” • Fail with error. • “false” • Ignore and continue. –mailru-user-agent HTTP user agent used internally by client. Defaults to “rclone/VERSION” or “–user-agent” provided on command line. • Config: user_agent • Env Var: RCLONE_MAILRU_USER_AGENT • Type: string • Default: "" –mailru-quirks Comma separated list of internal maintenance flags. This option must not be used by an ordinary user. It is intended only to facilitate remote troubleshooting of backend issues. Strict meaning of flags is not documented and not guaranteed to persist between releases. Quirks will be removed when the backend grows stable. Supported quirks: atomicmkdir binlist gzip insecure retry400 • Config: quirks • Env Var: RCLONE_MAILRU_QUIRKS • Type: string • Default: "" –mailru-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_MAILRU_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot Mega Mega (https://mega.nz/) is a cloud storage and file hosting service known for its security feature where all files are encrypted locally before they are uploaded. This prevents anyone (including employees of Mega) from accessing the files without knowledge of the key used for encryption. This is an rclone backend for Mega which supports the file transfer features of Mega using the same client side encryption. Paths are specified as remote:path Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Mega \ "mega" [snip] Storage> mega User name user> you@example.com Password. y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password n) No leave this optional password blank y/g/n> y Enter the password: password: Confirm the password: password: Remote config -------------------- [remote] type = mega user = you@example.com pass = *** ENCRYPTED *** -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y NOTE: The encryption keys need to have been already generated after a regular login via the browser, otherwise attempting to use the credentials in rclone will fail. Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level of your Mega rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your Mega rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to an Mega directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Modified time and hashes Mega does not support modification times or hashes yet. Restricted filename characters Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── NUL 0x00 ␀ / 0x2F / Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Duplicated files Mega can have two files with exactly the same name and path (unlike a normal file system). Duplicated files cause problems with the syncing and you will see messages in the log about duplicates. Use rclone dedupe to fix duplicated files. Failure to log-in Mega remotes seem to get blocked (reject logins) under “heavy use”. We haven’t worked out the exact blocking rules but it seems to be related to fast paced, successive rclone commands. For example, executing this command 90 times in a row rclone link remote:file will cause the remote to become “blocked”. This is not an abnormal situation, for example if you wish to get the public links of a directory with hundred of files... After more or less a week, the remote will remote accept rclone logins normally again. You can mitigate this issue by mounting the remote it with rclone mount. This will log-in when mounting and a log-out when unmounting only. You can also run rclone rcd and then use rclone rc to run the commands over the API to avoid logging in each time. Rclone does not currently close mega sessions (you can see them in the web interface), however closing the sessions does not solve the issue. If you space rclone commands by 3 seconds it will avoid blocking the remote. We haven’t identified the exact blocking rules, so perhaps one could execute the command 80 times without waiting and avoid blocking by waiting 3 seconds, then continuing... Note that this has been observed by trial and error and might not be set in stone. Other tools seem not to produce this blocking effect, as they use a different working approach (state-based, using sessionIDs instead of log-in) which isn’t compatible with the current stateless rclone approach. Note that once blocked, the use of other tools (such as megacmd) is not a sure workaround: following megacmd login times have been observed in succession for blocked remote: 7 minutes, 20 min, 30min, 30 min, 30min. Web access looks unaffected though. Investigation is continuing in relation to workarounds based on timeouts, pacers, retrials and tpslimits - if you discover something relevant, please post on the forum. So, if rclone was working nicely and suddenly you are unable to log-in and you are sure the user and the password are correct, likely you have got the remote blocked for a while. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to mega (Mega). –mega-user User name • Config: user • Env Var: RCLONE_MEGA_USER • Type: string • Default: "" –mega-pass Password. NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: pass • Env Var: RCLONE_MEGA_PASS • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to mega (Mega). –mega-debug Output more debug from Mega. If this flag is set (along with -vv) it will print further debugging information from the mega backend. • Config: debug • Env Var: RCLONE_MEGA_DEBUG • Type: bool • Default: false –mega-hard-delete Delete files permanently rather than putting them into the trash. Normally the mega backend will put all deletions into the trash rather than permanently deleting them. If you specify this then rclone will permanently delete objects instead. • Config: hard_delete • Env Var: RCLONE_MEGA_HARD_DELETE • Type: bool • Default: false –mega-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_MEGA_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,InvalidUtf8,Dot Limitations This backend uses the go-mega go library (https://github.com/t3rm1n4l/go-mega) which is an opensource go library implementing the Mega API. There doesn’t appear to be any documentation for the mega protocol beyond the mega C++ SDK (https://github.com/meganz/sdk) source code so there are likely quite a few errors still remaining in this library. Mega allows duplicate files which may confuse rclone. Memory The memory backend is an in RAM backend. It does not persist its data - use the local backend for that. The memory backend behaves like a bucket based remote (eg like s3). Because it has no parameters you can just use it with the :memory: remote name. You can configure it as a remote like this with rclone config too if you want to: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Memory \ "memory" [snip] Storage> memory ** See help for memory backend at: https://rclone.org/memory/ ** Remote config -------------------- [remote] type = memory -------------------- y) Yes this is OK (default) e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Because the memory backend isn’t persistent it is most useful for testing or with an rclone server or rclone mount, eg rclone mount :memory: /mnt/tmp rclone serve webdav :memory: rclone serve sftp :memory: Modified time and hashes The memory backend supports MD5 hashes and modification times accurate to 1 nS. Restricted filename characters The memory backend replaces the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters). Microsoft Azure Blob Storage Paths are specified as remote:container (or remote: for the lsd command.) You may put subdirectories in too, eg remote:container/path/to/dir. Here is an example of making a Microsoft Azure Blob Storage configuration. For a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Microsoft Azure Blob Storage \ "azureblob" [snip] Storage> azureblob Storage Account Name account> account_name Storage Account Key key> base64encodedkey== Endpoint for the service - leave blank normally. endpoint> Remote config -------------------- [remote] account = account_name key = base64encodedkey== endpoint = -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y See all containers rclone lsd remote: Make a new container rclone mkdir remote:container List the contents of a container rclone ls remote:container Sync /home/local/directory to the remote container, deleting any excess files in the container. rclone sync -i /home/local/directory remote:container –fast-list This remote supports --fast-list which allows you to use fewer transactions in exchange for more memory. See the rclone docs (https://rclone.org/docs/#fast-list) for more details. Modified time The modified time is stored as metadata on the object with the mtime key. It is stored using RFC3339 Format time with nanosecond precision. The metadata is supplied during directory listings so there is no overhead to using it. Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── / 0x2F / \ 0x5C \ File names can also not end with the following characters. These only get replaced if they are the last character in the name: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── . 0x2E . Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Hashes MD5 hashes are stored with blobs. However blobs that were uploaded in chunks only have an MD5 if the source remote was capable of MD5 hashes, eg the local disk. Authenticating with Azure Blob Storage Rclone has 3 ways of authenticating with Azure Blob Storage: Account and Key This is the most straight forward and least flexible way. Just fill in the account and key lines and leave the rest blank. SAS URL This can be an account level SAS URL or container level SAS URL. To use it leave account, key blank and fill in sas_url. An account level SAS URL or container level SAS URL can be obtained from the Azure portal or the Azure Storage Explorer. To get a container level SAS URL right click on a container in the Azure Blob explorer in the Azure portal. If you use a container level SAS URL, rclone operations are permitted only on a particular container, eg rclone ls azureblob:container You can also list the single container from the root. This will only show the container specified by the SAS URL. $ rclone lsd azureblob: container/ Note that you can’t see or access any other containers - this will fail rclone ls azureblob:othercontainer Container level SAS URLs are useful for temporarily allowing third parties access to a single container or putting credentials into an untrusted environment such as a CI build server. Multipart uploads Rclone supports multipart uploads with Azure Blob storage. Files bigger than 256MB will be uploaded using chunked upload by default. The files will be uploaded in parallel in 4MB chunks (by default). Note that these chunks are buffered in memory and there may be up to --transfers of them being uploaded at once. Files can’t be split into more than 50,000 chunks so by default, so the largest file that can be uploaded with 4MB chunk size is 195GB. Above this rclone will double the chunk size until it creates less than 50,000 chunks. By default this will mean a maximum file size of 3.2TB can be uploaded. This can be raised to 5TB using --azureblob-chunk-size 100M. Note that rclone doesn’t commit the block list until the end of the upload which means that there is a limit of 9.5TB of multipart uploads in progress as Azure won’t allow more than that amount of uncommitted blocks. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to azureblob (Microsoft Azure Blob Storage). –azureblob-account Storage Account Name (leave blank to use SAS URL or Emulator) • Config: account • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_ACCOUNT • Type: string • Default: "" –azureblob-key Storage Account Key (leave blank to use SAS URL or Emulator) • Config: key • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_KEY • Type: string • Default: "" –azureblob-sas-url SAS URL for container level access only (leave blank if using account/key or Emulator) • Config: sas_url • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_SAS_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –azureblob-use-emulator Uses local storage emulator if provided as `true' (leave blank if using real azure storage endpoint) • Config: use_emulator • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_USE_EMULATOR • Type: bool • Default: false Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to azureblob (Microsoft Azure Blob Storage). –azureblob-endpoint Endpoint for the service Leave blank normally. • Config: endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_ENDPOINT • Type: string • Default: "" –azureblob-upload-cutoff Cutoff for switching to chunked upload (<= 256MB). • Config: upload_cutoff • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_UPLOAD_CUTOFF • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 256M –azureblob-chunk-size Upload chunk size (<= 100MB). Note that this is stored in memory and there may be up to “–transfers” chunks stored at once in memory. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 4M –azureblob-list-chunk Size of blob list. This sets the number of blobs requested in each listing chunk. Default is the maximum, 5000. “List blobs” requests are permitted 2 minutes per megabyte to complete. If an operation is taking longer than 2 minutes per megabyte on average, it will time out ( source (https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/rest/api/storageservices/setting-timeouts-for- blob-service-operations#exceptions-to-default-timeout-interval) ). This can be used to limit the number of blobs items to return, to avoid the time out. • Config: list_chunk • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_LIST_CHUNK • Type: int • Default: 5000 –azureblob-access-tier Access tier of blob: hot, cool or archive. Archived blobs can be restored by setting access tier to hot or cool. Leave blank if you intend to use default access tier, which is set at account level If there is no “access tier” specified, rclone doesn’t apply any tier. rclone performs “Set Tier” operation on blobs while uploading, if objects are not modified, specifying “access tier” to new one will have no effect. If blobs are in “archive tier” at remote, trying to perform data transfer operations from remote will not be allowed. User should first restore by tiering blob to “Hot” or “Cool”. • Config: access_tier • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_ACCESS_TIER • Type: string • Default: "" –azureblob-disable-checksum Don’t store MD5 checksum with object metadata. Normally rclone will calculate the MD5 checksum of the input before uploading it so it can add it to metadata on the object. This is great for data integrity checking but can cause long delays for large files to start uploading. • Config: disable_checksum • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_DISABLE_CHECKSUM • Type: bool • Default: false –azureblob-memory-pool-flush-time How often internal memory buffer pools will be flushed. Uploads which requires additional buffers (f.e multipart) will use memory pool for allocations. This option controls how often unused buffers will be removed from the pool. • Config: memory_pool_flush_time • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_MEMORY_POOL_FLUSH_TIME • Type: Duration • Default: 1m0s –azureblob-memory-pool-use-mmap Whether to use mmap buffers in internal memory pool. • Config: memory_pool_use_mmap • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_MEMORY_POOL_USE_MMAP • Type: bool • Default: false –azureblob-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_AZUREBLOB_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8 Limitations MD5 sums are only uploaded with chunked files if the source has an MD5 sum. This will always be the case for a local to azure copy. Azure Storage Emulator Support You can test rclone with storage emulator locally, to do this make sure azure storage emulator installed locally and set up a new remote with rclone config follow instructions described in introduction, set use_emulator config as true, you do not need to provide default account name or key if using emulator. Microsoft OneDrive Paths are specified as remote:path Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. The initial setup for OneDrive involves getting a token from Microsoft which you need to do in your browser. rclone config walks you through it. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: e) Edit existing remote n) New remote d) Delete remote r) Rename remote c) Copy remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config e/n/d/r/c/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Microsoft OneDrive \ "onedrive" [snip] Storage> onedrive Microsoft App Client Id Leave blank normally. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). client_id> Microsoft App Client Secret Leave blank normally. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). client_secret> Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No y/n> n Remote config Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code Choose a number from below, or type in an existing value 1 / OneDrive Personal or Business \ "onedrive" 2 / Sharepoint site \ "sharepoint" 3 / Type in driveID \ "driveid" 4 / Type in SiteID \ "siteid" 5 / Search a Sharepoint site \ "search" Your choice> 1 Found 1 drives, please select the one you want to use: 0: OneDrive (business) id=b!Eqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnm-7mnbvcxzlkjhgfdsapoiuytrewqk Chose drive to use:> 0 Found drive 'root' of type 'business', URL: https://org-my.sharepoint.com/personal/you/Documents Is that okay? y) Yes n) No y/n> y -------------------- [remote] type = onedrive token = {"access_token":"youraccesstoken","token_type":"Bearer","refresh_token":"yourrefreshtoken","expiry":"2018-08-26T22:39:52.486512262+08:00"} drive_id = b!Eqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnm-7mnbvcxzlkjhgfdsapoiuytrewqk drive_type = business -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y See the remote setup docs (https://rclone.org/remote_setup/) for how to set it up on a machine with no Internet browser available. Note that rclone runs a webserver on your local machine to collect the token as returned from Microsoft. This only runs from the moment it opens your browser to the moment you get back the verification code. This is on http://127.0.0.1:53682/ and this it may require you to unblock it temporarily if you are running a host firewall. Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level of your OneDrive rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your OneDrive rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to an OneDrive directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Getting your own Client ID and Key You can use your own Client ID if the default (client_id left blank) one doesn’t work for you or you see lots of throttling. The default Client ID and Key is shared by all rclone users when performing requests. If you are having problems with them (E.g., seeing a lot of throttling), you can get your own Client ID and Key by following the steps below: 1. Open https://portal.azure.com/#blade/Microsoft_AAD_RegisteredApps/ApplicationsListBlade and then click New registration. 2. Enter a name for your app, choose account type Accounts in any organizational directory (Any Azure AD directory - Multitenant) and personal Microsoft accounts (e.g. Skype, Xbox), select Web in Redirect URI Enter http://localhost:53682/ and click Register. Copy and keep the Application (client) ID under the app name for later use. 3. Under manage select Certificates & secrets, click New client secret. Copy and keep that secret for later use. 4. Under manage select API permissions, click Add a permission and select Microsoft Graph then select delegated permissions. 5. Search and select the following permissions: Files.Read, Files.ReadWrite, Files.Read.All, Files.ReadWrite.All, offline_access, User.Read. Once selected click Add permissions at the bottom. Now the application is complete. Run rclone config to create or edit a OneDrive remote. Supply the app ID and password as Client ID and Secret, respectively. rclone will walk you through the remaining steps. Modification time and hashes OneDrive allows modification times to be set on objects accurate to 1 second. These will be used to detect whether objects need syncing or not. OneDrive personal supports SHA1 type hashes. OneDrive for business and Sharepoint Server support QuickXorHash (https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/onedrive/developer/code- snippets/quickxorhash). For all types of OneDrive you can use the --checksum flag. Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── " 0x22 " * 0x2A * : 0x3A : < 0x3C < > 0x3E > ? 0x3F ? \ 0x5C \ | 0x7C | # 0x23 # % 0x25 % File names can also not end with the following characters. These only get replaced if they are the last character in the name: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── SP 0x20 ␠ . 0x2E . File names can also not begin with the following characters. These only get replaced if they are the first character in the name: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── SP 0x20 ␠ ~ 0x7E ~ Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Deleting files Any files you delete with rclone will end up in the trash. Microsoft doesn’t provide an API to permanently delete files, nor to empty the trash, so you will have to do that with one of Microsoft’s apps or via the OneDrive website. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to onedrive (Microsoft OneDrive). –onedrive-client-id OAuth Client Id Leave blank normally. • Config: client_id • Env Var: RCLONE_ONEDRIVE_CLIENT_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –onedrive-client-secret OAuth Client Secret Leave blank normally. • Config: client_secret • Env Var: RCLONE_ONEDRIVE_CLIENT_SECRET • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to onedrive (Microsoft OneDrive). –onedrive-token OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. • Config: token • Env Var: RCLONE_ONEDRIVE_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –onedrive-auth-url Auth server URL. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: auth_url • Env Var: RCLONE_ONEDRIVE_AUTH_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –onedrive-token-url Token server url. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: token_url • Env Var: RCLONE_ONEDRIVE_TOKEN_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –onedrive-chunk-size Chunk size to upload files with - must be multiple of 320k (327,680 bytes). Above this size files will be chunked - must be multiple of 320k (327,680 bytes) and should not exceed 250M (262,144,000 bytes) else you may encounter "Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.InvalidClientQueryException: The request message is too big." Note that the chunks will be buffered into memory. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_ONEDRIVE_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 10M –onedrive-drive-id The ID of the drive to use • Config: drive_id • Env Var: RCLONE_ONEDRIVE_DRIVE_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –onedrive-drive-type The type of the drive ( personal | business | documentLibrary ) • Config: drive_type • Env Var: RCLONE_ONEDRIVE_DRIVE_TYPE • Type: string • Default: "" –onedrive-expose-onenote-files Set to make OneNote files show up in directory listings. By default rclone will hide OneNote files in directory listings because operations like “Open” and “Update” won’t work on them. But this behaviour may also prevent you from deleting them. If you want to delete OneNote files or otherwise want them to show up in directory listing, set this option. • Config: expose_onenote_files • Env Var: RCLONE_ONEDRIVE_EXPOSE_ONENOTE_FILES • Type: bool • Default: false –onedrive-server-side-across-configs Allow server side operations (eg copy) to work across different onedrive configs. This can be useful if you wish to do a server side copy between two different Onedrives. Note that this isn’t enabled by default because it isn’t easy to tell if it will work between any two configurations. • Config: server_side_across_configs • Env Var: RCLONE_ONEDRIVE_SERVER_SIDE_ACROSS_CONFIGS • Type: bool • Default: false –onedrive-no-versions Remove all versions on modifying operations Onedrive for business creates versions when rclone uploads new files overwriting an existing one and when it sets the modification time. These versions take up space out of the quota. This flag checks for versions after file upload and setting modification time and removes all but the last version. NB Onedrive personal can’t currently delete versions so don’t use this flag there. • Config: no_versions • Env Var: RCLONE_ONEDRIVE_NO_VERSIONS • Type: bool • Default: false –onedrive-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_ONEDRIVE_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,Hash,Percent,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,LeftSpace,LeftTilde,RightSpace,RightPeriod,InvalidUtf8,Dot Limitations If you don’t use rclone for 90 days the refresh token will expire. This will result in authorization problems. This is easy to fix by running the rclone config reconnect remote: command to get a new token and refresh token. Naming Note that OneDrive is case insensitive so you can’t have a file called “Hello.doc” and one called “hello.doc”. There are quite a few characters that can’t be in OneDrive file names. These can’t occur on Windows platforms, but on non-Windows platforms they are common. Rclone will map these names to and from an identical looking unicode equivalent. For example if a file has a ? in it will be mapped to ? instead. File sizes The largest allowed file size is 100GB for both OneDrive Personal and OneDrive for Business (Updated 17 June 2020) (https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/invalid-file- names-and-file-types-in-onedrive-and- sharepoint-64883a5d-228e-48f5-b3d2-eb39e07630fa?ui=en-us&rs=en- us&ad=us#individualfilesize). Path length The entire path, including the file name, must contain fewer than 400 characters for OneDrive, OneDrive for Business and SharePoint Online. If you are encrypting file and folder names with rclone, you may want to pay attention to this limitation because the encrypted names are typically longer than the original ones. Number of files OneDrive seems to be OK with at least 50,000 files in a folder, but at 100,000 rclone will get errors listing the directory like couldn’t list files: UnknownError:. See #2707 (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2707) for more info. An official document about the limitations for different types of OneDrive can be found here (https://support.office.com/en-us/article/invalid-file-names-and-file-types-in- onedrive-onedrive-for-business-and-sharepoint-64883a5d-228e-48f5-b3d2-eb39e07630fa). Versions Every change in a file OneDrive causes the service to create a new version of the the file. This counts against a users quota. For example changing the modification time of a file creates a second version, so the file apparently uses twice the space. For example the copy command is affected by this as rclone copies the file and then afterwards sets the modification time to match the source file which uses another version. You can use the rclone cleanup command (see below) to remove all old versions. Or you can set the no_versions parameter to true and rclone will remove versions after operations which create new versions. This takes extra transactions so only enable it if you need it. Note At the time of writing Onedrive Personal creates versions (but not for setting the modification time) but the API for removing them returns “API not found” so cleanup and no_versions should not be used on Onedrive Personal. Disabling versioning Starting October 2018, users will no longer be able to disable versioning by default. This is because Microsoft has brought an update (https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/Microsoft-OneDrive-Blog/New-Updates-to-OneDrive- and-SharePoint-Team-Site-Versioning/ba-p/204390) to the mechanism. To change this new default setting, a PowerShell command is required to be run by a SharePoint admin. If you are an admin, you can run these commands in PowerShell to change that setting: 1. Install-Module -Name Microsoft.Online.SharePoint.PowerShell (in case you haven’t installed this already) 2. Import-Module Microsoft.Online.SharePoint.PowerShell -DisableNameChecking 3. Connect-SPOService -Url https://YOURSITE-admin.sharepoint.com -Credential YOU@YOURSITE.COM (replacing YOURSITE, YOU, YOURSITE.COM with the actual values; this will prompt for your credentials) 4. Set-SPOTenant -EnableMinimumVersionRequirement $False 5. Disconnect-SPOService (to disconnect from the server) Below are the steps for normal users to disable versioning. If you don’t see the “No Versioning” option, make sure the above requirements are met. User Weropol (https://github.com/Weropol) has found a method to disable versioning on OneDrive 1. Open the settings menu by clicking on the gear symbol at the top of the OneDrive Business page. 2. Click Site settings. 3. Once on the Site settings page, navigate to Site Administration > Site libraries and lists. 4. Click Customize “Documents”. 5. Click General Settings > Versioning Settings. 6. Under Document Version History select the option No versioning. Note: This will disable the creation of new file versions, but will not remove any previous versions. Your documents are safe. 7. Apply the changes by clicking OK. 8. Use rclone to upload or modify files. (I also use the –no-update-modtime flag) 9. Restore the versioning settings after using rclone. (Optional) Cleanup OneDrive supports rclone cleanup which causes rclone to look through every file under the path supplied and delete all version but the current version. Because this involves traversing all the files, then querying each file for versions it can be quite slow. Rclone does --checkers tests in parallel. The command also supports -i which is a great way to see what it would do. rclone cleanup -i remote:path/subdir # interactively remove all old version for path/subdir rclone cleanup remote:path/subdir # unconditionally remove all old version for path/subdir NB Onedrive personal can’t currently delete versions Troubleshooting Unexpected file size/hash differences on Sharepoint It is a known (https://github.com/OneDrive/onedrive-api- docs/issues/935#issuecomment-441741631) issue that Sharepoint (not OneDrive or OneDrive for Business) silently modifies uploaded files, mainly Office files (.docx, .xlsx, etc.), causing file size and hash checks to fail. There are also other situations that will cause OneDrive to report inconsistent file sizes. To use rclone with such affected files on Sharepoint, you may disable these checks with the following command line arguments: --ignore-checksum --ignore-size Alternatively, if you have write access to the OneDrive files, it may be possible to fix this problem for certain files, by attempting the steps below. Open the web interface for OneDrive (https://onedrive.live.com) and find the affected files (which will be in the error messages/log for rclone). Simply click on each of these files, causing OneDrive to open them on the web. This will cause each file to be converted in place to a format that is functionally equivalent but which will no longer trigger the size discrepancy. Once all problematic files are converted you will no longer need the ignore options above. Replacing/deleting existing files on Sharepoint gets “item not found” It is a known (https://github.com/OneDrive/onedrive-api-docs/issues/1068) issue that Sharepoint (not OneDrive or OneDrive for Business) may return “item not found” errors when users try to replace or delete uploaded files; this seems to mainly affect Office files (.docx, .xlsx, etc.). As a workaround, you may use the --backup-dir <BACKUP_DIR> command line argument so rclone moves the files to be replaced/deleted into a given backup directory (instead of directly replacing/deleting them). For example, to instruct rclone to move the files into the directory rclone-backup-dir on backend mysharepoint, you may use: --backup-dir mysharepoint:rclone-backup-dir access_denied (AADSTS65005) Error: access_denied Code: AADSTS65005 Description: Using application 'rclone' is currently not supported for your organization [YOUR_ORGANIZATION] because it is in an unmanaged state. An administrator needs to claim ownership of the company by DNS validation of [YOUR_ORGANIZATION] before the application rclone can be provisioned. This means that rclone can’t use the OneDrive for Business API with your account. You can’t do much about it, maybe write an email to your admins. However, there are other ways to interact with your OneDrive account. Have a look at the webdav backend: https://rclone.org/webdav/#sharepoint invalid_grant (AADSTS50076) Error: invalid_grant Code: AADSTS50076 Description: Due to a configuration change made by your administrator, or because you moved to a new location, you must use multi-factor authentication to access '...'. If you see the error above after enabling multi-factor authentication for your account, you can fix it by refreshing your OAuth refresh token. To do that, run rclone config, and choose to edit your OneDrive backend. Then, you don’t need to actually make any changes until you reach this question: Already have a token - refresh?. For this question, answer y and go through the process to refresh your token, just like the first time the backend is configured. After this, rclone should work again for this backend. OpenDrive Paths are specified as remote:path Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: n) New remote d) Delete remote q) Quit config e/n/d/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / OpenDrive \ "opendrive" [snip] Storage> opendrive Username username> Password y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password y/g> y Enter the password: password: Confirm the password: password: -------------------- [remote] username = password = *** ENCRYPTED *** -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y List directories in top level of your OpenDrive rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your OpenDrive rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to an OpenDrive directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Modified time and MD5SUMs OpenDrive allows modification times to be set on objects accurate to 1 second. These will be used to detect whether objects need syncing or not. Restricted filename characters Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── NUL 0x00 ␀ / 0x2F / " 0x22 " * 0x2A * : 0x3A : < 0x3C < > 0x3E > ? 0x3F ? \ 0x5C \ | 0x7C | File names can also not begin or end with the following characters. These only get replaced if they are the first or last character in the name: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── SP 0x20 ␠ HT 0x09 ␉ LF 0x0A ␊ VT 0x0B ␋ CR 0x0D ␍ Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to opendrive (OpenDrive). –opendrive-username Username • Config: username • Env Var: RCLONE_OPENDRIVE_USERNAME • Type: string • Default: "" –opendrive-password Password. NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: password • Env Var: RCLONE_OPENDRIVE_PASSWORD • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to opendrive (OpenDrive). –opendrive-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_OPENDRIVE_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,LtGt,DoubleQuote,Colon,Question,Asterisk,Pipe,BackSlash,LeftSpace,LeftCrLfHtVt,RightSpace,RightCrLfHtVt,InvalidUtf8,Dot –opendrive-chunk-size Files will be uploaded in chunks this size. Note that these chunks are buffered in memory so increasing them will increase memory use. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_OPENDRIVE_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 10M Limitations Note that OpenDrive is case insensitive so you can’t have a file called “Hello.doc” and one called “hello.doc”. There are quite a few characters that can’t be in OpenDrive file names. These can’t occur on Windows platforms, but on non-Windows platforms they are common. Rclone will map these names to and from an identical looking unicode equivalent. For example if a file has a ? in it will be mapped to ? instead. QingStor Paths are specified as remote:bucket (or remote: for the lsd command.) You may put subdirectories in too, eg remote:bucket/path/to/dir. Here is an example of making an QingStor configuration. First run rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process. No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote r) Rename remote c) Copy remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/r/c/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / QingStor Object Storage \ "qingstor" [snip] Storage> qingstor Get QingStor credentials from runtime. Only applies if access_key_id and secret_access_key is blank. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Enter QingStor credentials in the next step \ "false" 2 / Get QingStor credentials from the environment (env vars or IAM) \ "true" env_auth> 1 QingStor Access Key ID - leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. access_key_id> access_key QingStor Secret Access Key (password) - leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. secret_access_key> secret_key Enter an endpoint URL to connection QingStor API. Leave blank will use the default value "https://qingstor.com:443" endpoint> Zone connect to. Default is "pek3a". Choose a number from below, or type in your own value / The Beijing (China) Three Zone 1 | Needs location constraint pek3a. \ "pek3a" / The Shanghai (China) First Zone 2 | Needs location constraint sh1a. \ "sh1a" zone> 1 Number of connection retry. Leave blank will use the default value "3". connection_retries> Remote config -------------------- [remote] env_auth = false access_key_id = access_key secret_access_key = secret_key endpoint = zone = pek3a connection_retries = -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y This remote is called remote and can now be used like this See all buckets rclone lsd remote: Make a new bucket rclone mkdir remote:bucket List the contents of a bucket rclone ls remote:bucket Sync /home/local/directory to the remote bucket, deleting any excess files in the bucket. rclone sync -i /home/local/directory remote:bucket –fast-list This remote supports --fast-list which allows you to use fewer transactions in exchange for more memory. See the rclone docs (https://rclone.org/docs/#fast-list) for more details. Multipart uploads rclone supports multipart uploads with QingStor which means that it can upload files bigger than 5GB. Note that files uploaded with multipart upload don’t have an MD5SUM. Note that incomplete multipart uploads older than 24 hours can be removed with rclone cleanup remote:bucket just for one bucket rclone cleanup remote: for all buckets. QingStor does not ever remove incomplete multipart uploads so it may be necessary to run this from time to time. Buckets and Zone With QingStor you can list buckets (rclone lsd) using any zone, but you can only access the content of a bucket from the zone it was created in. If you attempt to access a bucket from the wrong zone, you will get an error, incorrect zone, the bucket is not in 'XXX' zone. Authentication There are two ways to supply rclone with a set of QingStor credentials. In order of precedence: • Directly in the rclone configuration file (as configured by rclone config) • set access_key_id and secret_access_key • Runtime configuration: • set env_auth to true in the config file • Exporting the following environment variables before running rclone • Access Key ID: QS_ACCESS_KEY_ID or QS_ACCESS_KEY • Secret Access Key: QS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY or QS_SECRET_KEY Restricted filename characters The control characters 0x00-0x1F and / are replaced as in the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters). Note that 0x7F is not replaced. Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to qingstor (QingCloud Object Storage). –qingstor-env-auth Get QingStor credentials from runtime. Only applies if access_key_id and secret_access_key is blank. • Config: env_auth • Env Var: RCLONE_QINGSTOR_ENV_AUTH • Type: bool • Default: false • Examples: • “false” • Enter QingStor credentials in the next step • “true” • Get QingStor credentials from the environment (env vars or IAM) –qingstor-access-key-id QingStor Access Key ID Leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. • Config: access_key_id • Env Var: RCLONE_QINGSTOR_ACCESS_KEY_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –qingstor-secret-access-key QingStor Secret Access Key (password) Leave blank for anonymous access or runtime credentials. • Config: secret_access_key • Env Var: RCLONE_QINGSTOR_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY • Type: string • Default: "" –qingstor-endpoint Enter an endpoint URL to connection QingStor API. Leave blank will use the default value “https://qingstor.com:443” • Config: endpoint • Env Var: RCLONE_QINGSTOR_ENDPOINT • Type: string • Default: "" –qingstor-zone Zone to connect to. Default is “pek3a”. • Config: zone • Env Var: RCLONE_QINGSTOR_ZONE • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “pek3a” • The Beijing (China) Three Zone • Needs location constraint pek3a. • “sh1a” • The Shanghai (China) First Zone • Needs location constraint sh1a. • “gd2a” • The Guangdong (China) Second Zone • Needs location constraint gd2a. Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to qingstor (QingCloud Object Storage). –qingstor-connection-retries Number of connection retries. • Config: connection_retries • Env Var: RCLONE_QINGSTOR_CONNECTION_RETRIES • Type: int • Default: 3 –qingstor-upload-cutoff Cutoff for switching to chunked upload Any files larger than this will be uploaded in chunks of chunk_size. The minimum is 0 and the maximum is 5GB. • Config: upload_cutoff • Env Var: RCLONE_QINGSTOR_UPLOAD_CUTOFF • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 200M –qingstor-chunk-size Chunk size to use for uploading. When uploading files larger than upload_cutoff they will be uploaded as multipart uploads using this chunk size. Note that “–qingstor-upload-concurrency” chunks of this size are buffered in memory per transfer. If you are transferring large files over high speed links and you have enough memory, then increasing this will speed up the transfers. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_QINGSTOR_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 4M –qingstor-upload-concurrency Concurrency for multipart uploads. This is the number of chunks of the same file that are uploaded concurrently. NB if you set this to > 1 then the checksums of multpart uploads become corrupted (the uploads themselves are not corrupted though). If you are uploading small numbers of large file over high speed link and these uploads do not fully utilize your bandwidth, then increasing this may help to speed up the transfers. • Config: upload_concurrency • Env Var: RCLONE_QINGSTOR_UPLOAD_CONCURRENCY • Type: int • Default: 1 –qingstor-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_QINGSTOR_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,Ctl,InvalidUtf8 Swift Swift refers to OpenStack Object Storage (https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/). Commercial implementations of that being: • Rackspace Cloud Files (https://www.rackspace.com/cloud/files/) • Memset Memstore (https://www.memset.com/cloud/storage/) • OVH Object Storage (https://www.ovh.co.uk/public-cloud/storage/object-storage/) • Oracle Cloud Storage (https://cloud.oracle.com/storage-opc) • IBM Bluemix Cloud ObjectStorage Swift (https://console.bluemix.net/docs/infrastructure/objectstorage-swift/index.html) Paths are specified as remote:container (or remote: for the lsd command.) You may put subdirectories in too, eg remote:container/path/to/dir. Here is an example of making a swift configuration. First run rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process. No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / OpenStack Swift (Rackspace Cloud Files, Memset Memstore, OVH) \ "swift" [snip] Storage> swift Get swift credentials from environment variables in standard OpenStack form. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Enter swift credentials in the next step \ "false" 2 / Get swift credentials from environment vars. Leave other fields blank if using this. \ "true" env_auth> true User name to log in (OS_USERNAME). user> API key or password (OS_PASSWORD). key> Authentication URL for server (OS_AUTH_URL). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Rackspace US \ "https://auth.api.rackspacecloud.com/v1.0" 2 / Rackspace UK \ "https://lon.auth.api.rackspacecloud.com/v1.0" 3 / Rackspace v2 \ "https://identity.api.rackspacecloud.com/v2.0" 4 / Memset Memstore UK \ "https://auth.storage.memset.com/v1.0" 5 / Memset Memstore UK v2 \ "https://auth.storage.memset.com/v2.0" 6 / OVH \ "https://auth.cloud.ovh.net/v3" auth> User ID to log in - optional - most swift systems use user and leave this blank (v3 auth) (OS_USER_ID). user_id> User domain - optional (v3 auth) (OS_USER_DOMAIN_NAME) domain> Tenant name - optional for v1 auth, this or tenant_id required otherwise (OS_TENANT_NAME or OS_PROJECT_NAME) tenant> Tenant ID - optional for v1 auth, this or tenant required otherwise (OS_TENANT_ID) tenant_id> Tenant domain - optional (v3 auth) (OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_NAME) tenant_domain> Region name - optional (OS_REGION_NAME) region> Storage URL - optional (OS_STORAGE_URL) storage_url> Auth Token from alternate authentication - optional (OS_AUTH_TOKEN) auth_token> AuthVersion - optional - set to (1,2,3) if your auth URL has no version (ST_AUTH_VERSION) auth_version> Endpoint type to choose from the service catalogue (OS_ENDPOINT_TYPE) Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Public (default, choose this if not sure) \ "public" 2 / Internal (use internal service net) \ "internal" 3 / Admin \ "admin" endpoint_type> Remote config -------------------- [test] env_auth = true user = key = auth = user_id = domain = tenant = tenant_id = tenant_domain = region = storage_url = auth_token = auth_version = endpoint_type = -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y This remote is called remote and can now be used like this See all containers rclone lsd remote: Make a new container rclone mkdir remote:container List the contents of a container rclone ls remote:container Sync /home/local/directory to the remote container, deleting any excess files in the container. rclone sync -i /home/local/directory remote:container Configuration from an OpenStack credentials file An OpenStack credentials file typically looks something something like this (without the comments) export OS_AUTH_URL=https://a.provider.net/v2.0 export OS_TENANT_ID=ffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff export OS_TENANT_NAME="1234567890123456" export OS_USERNAME="123abc567xy" echo "Please enter your OpenStack Password: " read -sr OS_PASSWORD_INPUT export OS_PASSWORD=$OS_PASSWORD_INPUT export OS_REGION_NAME="SBG1" if [ -z "$OS_REGION_NAME" ]; then unset OS_REGION_NAME; fi The config file needs to look something like this where $OS_USERNAME represents the value of the OS_USERNAME variable - 123abc567xy in the example above. [remote] type = swift user = $OS_USERNAME key = $OS_PASSWORD auth = $OS_AUTH_URL tenant = $OS_TENANT_NAME Note that you may (or may not) need to set region too - try without first. Configuration from the environment If you prefer you can configure rclone to use swift using a standard set of OpenStack environment variables. When you run through the config, make sure you choose true for env_auth and leave everything else blank. rclone will then set any empty config parameters from the environment using standard OpenStack environment variables. There is a list of the variables (https://godoc.org/github.com/ncw/swift#Connection.ApplyEnvironment) in the docs for the swift library. Using an alternate authentication method If your OpenStack installation uses a non-standard authentication method that might not be yet supported by rclone or the underlying swift library, you can authenticate externally (e.g. calling manually the openstack commands to get a token). Then, you just need to pass the two configuration variables auth_token and storage_url. If they are both provided, the other variables are ignored. rclone will not try to authenticate but instead assume it is already authenticated and use these two variables to access the OpenStack installation. Using rclone without a config file You can use rclone with swift without a config file, if desired, like this: source openstack-credentials-file export RCLONE_CONFIG_MYREMOTE_TYPE=swift export RCLONE_CONFIG_MYREMOTE_ENV_AUTH=true rclone lsd myremote: –fast-list This remote supports --fast-list which allows you to use fewer transactions in exchange for more memory. See the rclone docs (https://rclone.org/docs/#fast-list) for more details. –update and –use-server-modtime As noted below, the modified time is stored on metadata on the object. It is used by default for all operations that require checking the time a file was last updated. It allows rclone to treat the remote more like a true filesystem, but it is inefficient because it requires an extra API call to retrieve the metadata. For many operations, the time the object was last uploaded to the remote is sufficient to determine if it is “dirty”. By using --update along with --use-server-modtime, you can avoid the extra API call and simply upload files whose local modtime is newer than the time it was last uploaded. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to swift (OpenStack Swift (Rackspace Cloud Files, Memset Memstore, OVH)). –swift-env-auth Get swift credentials from environment variables in standard OpenStack form. • Config: env_auth • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_ENV_AUTH • Type: bool • Default: false • Examples: • “false” • Enter swift credentials in the next step • “true” • Get swift credentials from environment vars. Leave other fields blank if using this. –swift-user User name to log in (OS_USERNAME). • Config: user • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_USER • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-key API key or password (OS_PASSWORD). • Config: key • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_KEY • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-auth Authentication URL for server (OS_AUTH_URL). • Config: auth • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_AUTH • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “https://auth.api.rackspacecloud.com/v1.0” • Rackspace US • “https://lon.auth.api.rackspacecloud.com/v1.0” • Rackspace UK • “https://identity.api.rackspacecloud.com/v2.0” • Rackspace v2 • “https://auth.storage.memset.com/v1.0” • Memset Memstore UK • “https://auth.storage.memset.com/v2.0” • Memset Memstore UK v2 • “https://auth.cloud.ovh.net/v3” • OVH –swift-user-id User ID to log in - optional - most swift systems use user and leave this blank (v3 auth) (OS_USER_ID). • Config: user_id • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_USER_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-domain User domain - optional (v3 auth) (OS_USER_DOMAIN_NAME) • Config: domain • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_DOMAIN • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-tenant Tenant name - optional for v1 auth, this or tenant_id required otherwise (OS_TENANT_NAME or OS_PROJECT_NAME) • Config: tenant • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_TENANT • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-tenant-id Tenant ID - optional for v1 auth, this or tenant required otherwise (OS_TENANT_ID) • Config: tenant_id • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_TENANT_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-tenant-domain Tenant domain - optional (v3 auth) (OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_NAME) • Config: tenant_domain • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_TENANT_DOMAIN • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-region Region name - optional (OS_REGION_NAME) • Config: region • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_REGION • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-storage-url Storage URL - optional (OS_STORAGE_URL) • Config: storage_url • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_STORAGE_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-auth-token Auth Token from alternate authentication - optional (OS_AUTH_TOKEN) • Config: auth_token • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_AUTH_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-application-credential-id Application Credential ID (OS_APPLICATION_CREDENTIAL_ID) • Config: application_credential_id • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_APPLICATION_CREDENTIAL_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-application-credential-name Application Credential Name (OS_APPLICATION_CREDENTIAL_NAME) • Config: application_credential_name • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_APPLICATION_CREDENTIAL_NAME • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-application-credential-secret Application Credential Secret (OS_APPLICATION_CREDENTIAL_SECRET) • Config: application_credential_secret • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_APPLICATION_CREDENTIAL_SECRET • Type: string • Default: "" –swift-auth-version AuthVersion - optional - set to (1,2,3) if your auth URL has no version (ST_AUTH_VERSION) • Config: auth_version • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_AUTH_VERSION • Type: int • Default: 0 –swift-endpoint-type Endpoint type to choose from the service catalogue (OS_ENDPOINT_TYPE) • Config: endpoint_type • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_ENDPOINT_TYPE • Type: string • Default: “public” • Examples: • “public” • Public (default, choose this if not sure) • “internal” • Internal (use internal service net) • “admin” • Admin –swift-storage-policy The storage policy to use when creating a new container This applies the specified storage policy when creating a new container. The policy cannot be changed afterwards. The allowed configuration values and their meaning depend on your Swift storage provider. • Config: storage_policy • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_STORAGE_POLICY • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • "" • Default • “pcs” • OVH Public Cloud Storage • “pca” • OVH Public Cloud Archive Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to swift (OpenStack Swift (Rackspace Cloud Files, Memset Memstore, OVH)). –swift-chunk-size Above this size files will be chunked into a _segments container. Above this size files will be chunked into a _segments container. The default for this is 5GB which is its maximum value. • Config: chunk_size • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_CHUNK_SIZE • Type: SizeSuffix • Default: 5G –swift-no-chunk Don’t chunk files during streaming upload. When doing streaming uploads (eg using rcat or mount) setting this flag will cause the swift backend to not upload chunked files. This will limit the maximum upload size to 5GB. However non chunked files are easier to deal with and have an MD5SUM. Rclone will still chunk files bigger than chunk_size when doing normal copy operations. • Config: no_chunk • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_NO_CHUNK • Type: bool • Default: false –swift-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_SWIFT_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,InvalidUtf8 Modified time The modified time is stored as metadata on the object as X-Object-Meta-Mtime as floating point since the epoch accurate to 1 ns. This is a de facto standard (used in the official python-swiftclient amongst others) for storing the modification time for an object. Restricted filename characters Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── NUL 0x00 ␀ / 0x2F / Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Limitations The Swift API doesn’t return a correct MD5SUM for segmented files (Dynamic or Static Large Objects) so rclone won’t check or use the MD5SUM for these. Troubleshooting Rclone gives Failed to create file system for “remote:”: Bad Request Due to an oddity of the underlying swift library, it gives a “Bad Request” error rather than a more sensible error when the authentication fails for Swift. So this most likely means your username / password is wrong. You can investigate further with the --dump-bodies flag. This may also be caused by specifying the region when you shouldn’t have (eg OVH). Rclone gives Failed to create file system: Response didn’t have storage url and auth token This is most likely caused by forgetting to specify your tenant when setting up a swift remote. pCloud Paths are specified as remote:path Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. The initial setup for pCloud involves getting a token from pCloud which you need to do in your browser. rclone config walks you through it. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Pcloud \ "pcloud" [snip] Storage> pcloud Pcloud App Client Id - leave blank normally. client_id> Pcloud App Client Secret - leave blank normally. client_secret> Remote config Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code -------------------- [remote] client_id = client_secret = token = {"access_token":"XXX","token_type":"bearer","expiry":"0001-01-01T00:00:00Z"} -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y See the remote setup docs (https://rclone.org/remote_setup/) for how to set it up on a machine with no Internet browser available. Note that rclone runs a webserver on your local machine to collect the token as returned from pCloud. This only runs from the moment it opens your browser to the moment you get back the verification code. This is on http://127.0.0.1:53682/ and this it may require you to unblock it temporarily if you are running a host firewall. Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level of your pCloud rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your pCloud rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to an pCloud directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Modified time and hashes pCloud allows modification times to be set on objects accurate to 1 second. These will be used to detect whether objects need syncing or not. In order to set a Modification time pCloud requires the object be re-uploaded. pCloud supports MD5 and SHA1 type hashes, so you can use the --checksum flag. Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── \ 0x5C \ Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Deleting files Deleted files will be moved to the trash. Your subscription level will determine how long items stay in the trash. rclone cleanup can be used to empty the trash. Root folder ID You can set the root_folder_id for rclone. This is the directory (identified by its Folder ID) that rclone considers to be the root of your pCloud drive. Normally you will leave this blank and rclone will determine the correct root to use itself. However you can set this to restrict rclone to a specific folder hierarchy. In order to do this you will have to find the Folder ID of the directory you wish rclone to display. This will be the folder field of the URL when you open the relevant folder in the pCloud web interface. So if the folder you want rclone to use has a URL which looks like https://my.pcloud.com/#page=filemanager&folder=5xxxxxxxx8&tpl=foldergrid in the browser, then you use 5xxxxxxxx8 as the root_folder_id in the config. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to pcloud (Pcloud). –pcloud-client-id OAuth Client Id Leave blank normally. • Config: client_id • Env Var: RCLONE_PCLOUD_CLIENT_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –pcloud-client-secret OAuth Client Secret Leave blank normally. • Config: client_secret • Env Var: RCLONE_PCLOUD_CLIENT_SECRET • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to pcloud (Pcloud). –pcloud-token OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. • Config: token • Env Var: RCLONE_PCLOUD_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –pcloud-auth-url Auth server URL. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: auth_url • Env Var: RCLONE_PCLOUD_AUTH_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –pcloud-token-url Token server url. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: token_url • Env Var: RCLONE_PCLOUD_TOKEN_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –pcloud-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_PCLOUD_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot –pcloud-root-folder-id Fill in for rclone to use a non root folder as its starting point. • Config: root_folder_id • Env Var: RCLONE_PCLOUD_ROOT_FOLDER_ID • Type: string • Default: “d0” –pcloud-hostname Hostname to connect to. This is normally set when rclone initially does the oauth connection, however you will need to set it by hand if you are using remote config with rclone authorize. • Config: hostname • Env Var: RCLONE_PCLOUD_HOSTNAME • Type: string • Default: “api.pcloud.com” • Examples: • “api.pcloud.com” • Original/US region • “eapi.pcloud.com” • EU region premiumize.me Paths are specified as remote:path Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. The initial setup for premiumize.me (https://premiumize.me/) involves getting a token from premiumize.me which you need to do in your browser. rclone config walks you through it. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / premiumize.me \ "premiumizeme" [snip] Storage> premiumizeme ** See help for premiumizeme backend at: https://rclone.org/premiumizeme/ ** Remote config Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code -------------------- [remote] type = premiumizeme token = {"access_token":"XXX","token_type":"Bearer","refresh_token":"XXX","expiry":"2029-08-07T18:44:15.548915378+01:00"} -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> See the remote setup docs (https://rclone.org/remote_setup/) for how to set it up on a machine with no Internet browser available. Note that rclone runs a webserver on your local machine to collect the token as returned from premiumize.me. This only runs from the moment it opens your browser to the moment you get back the verification code. This is on http://127.0.0.1:53682/ and this it may require you to unblock it temporarily if you are running a host firewall. Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level of your premiumize.me rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your premiumize.me rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to an premiumize.me directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Modified time and hashes premiumize.me does not support modification times or hashes, therefore syncing will default to --size-only checking. Note that using --update will work. Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── \ 0x5C \ " 0x22 " Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to premiumizeme (premiumize.me). –premiumizeme-api-key API Key. This is not normally used - use oauth instead. • Config: api_key • Env Var: RCLONE_PREMIUMIZEME_API_KEY • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to premiumizeme (premiumize.me). –premiumizeme-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_PREMIUMIZEME_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,DoubleQuote,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot Limitations Note that premiumize.me is case insensitive so you can’t have a file called “Hello.doc” and one called “hello.doc”. premiumize.me file names can’t have the \ or " characters in. rclone maps these to and from an identical looking unicode equivalents \ and " premiumize.me only supports filenames up to 255 characters in length. put.io Paths are specified as remote:path put.io paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. The initial setup for put.io involves getting a token from put.io which you need to do in your browser. rclone config walks you through it. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> putio Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Put.io \ "putio" [snip] Storage> putio ** See help for putio backend at: https://rclone.org/putio/ ** Remote config Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code -------------------- [putio] type = putio token = {"access_token":"XXXXXXXX","expiry":"0001-01-01T00:00:00Z"} -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Current remotes: Name Type ==== ==== putio putio e) Edit existing remote n) New remote d) Delete remote r) Rename remote c) Copy remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config e/n/d/r/c/s/q> q Note that rclone runs a webserver on your local machine to collect the token as returned from Google if you use auto config mode. This only runs from the moment it opens your browser to the moment you get back the verification code. This is on http://127.0.0.1:53682/ and this it may require you to unblock it temporarily if you are running a host firewall, or use manual mode. You can then use it like this, List directories in top level of your put.io rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your put.io rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to a put.io directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── \ 0x5C \ Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to putio (Put.io). –putio-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_PUTIO_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,BackSlash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot Seafile This is a backend for the Seafile (https://www.seafile.com/) storage service: - It works with both the free community edition or the professional edition. - Seafile versions 6.x and 7.x are all supported. - Encrypted libraries are also supported. - It supports 2FA enabled users Root mode vs Library mode There are two distinct modes you can setup your remote: - you point your remote to the root of the server, meaning you don’t specify a library during the configuration: Paths are specified as remote:library. You may put subdirectories in too, eg remote:library/path/to/dir. - you point your remote to a specific library during the configuration: Paths are specified as remote:path/to/dir. This is the recommended mode when using encrypted libraries. (This mode is possibly slightly faster than the root mode) Configuration in root mode Here is an example of making a seafile configuration for a user with no two-factor authentication. First run rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process. To authenticate you will need the URL of your server, your email (or username) and your password. No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> seafile Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Seafile \ "seafile" [snip] Storage> seafile ** See help for seafile backend at: https://rclone.org/seafile/ ** URL of seafile host to connect to Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Connect to cloud.seafile.com \ "https://cloud.seafile.com/" url> http://my.seafile.server/ User name (usually email address) Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). user> me@example.com Password y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password n) No leave this optional password blank (default) y/g> y Enter the password: password: Confirm the password: password: Two-factor authentication ('true' if the account has 2FA enabled) Enter a boolean value (true or false). Press Enter for the default ("false"). 2fa> false Name of the library. Leave blank to access all non-encrypted libraries. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). library> Library password (for encrypted libraries only). Leave blank if you pass it through the command line. y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password n) No leave this optional password blank (default) y/g/n> n Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No (default) y/n> n Remote config Two-factor authentication is not enabled on this account. -------------------- [seafile] type = seafile url = http://my.seafile.server/ user = me@example.com pass = *** ENCRYPTED *** 2fa = false -------------------- y) Yes this is OK (default) e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y This remote is called seafile. It’s pointing to the root of your seafile server and can now be used like this: See all libraries rclone lsd seafile: Create a new library rclone mkdir seafile:library List the contents of a library rclone ls seafile:library Sync /home/local/directory to the remote library, deleting any excess files in the library. rclone sync -i /home/local/directory seafile:library Configuration in library mode Here’s an example of a configuration in library mode with a user that has the two-factor authentication enabled. Your 2FA code will be asked at the end of the configuration, and will attempt to authenticate you: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> seafile Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Seafile \ "seafile" [snip] Storage> seafile ** See help for seafile backend at: https://rclone.org/seafile/ ** URL of seafile host to connect to Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Connect to cloud.seafile.com \ "https://cloud.seafile.com/" url> http://my.seafile.server/ User name (usually email address) Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). user> me@example.com Password y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password n) No leave this optional password blank (default) y/g> y Enter the password: password: Confirm the password: password: Two-factor authentication ('true' if the account has 2FA enabled) Enter a boolean value (true or false). Press Enter for the default ("false"). 2fa> true Name of the library. Leave blank to access all non-encrypted libraries. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). library> My Library Library password (for encrypted libraries only). Leave blank if you pass it through the command line. y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password n) No leave this optional password blank (default) y/g/n> n Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No (default) y/n> n Remote config Two-factor authentication: please enter your 2FA code 2fa code> 123456 Authenticating... Success! -------------------- [seafile] type = seafile url = http://my.seafile.server/ user = me@example.com pass = 2fa = true library = My Library -------------------- y) Yes this is OK (default) e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y You’ll notice your password is blank in the configuration. It’s because we only need the password to authenticate you once. You specified My Library during the configuration. The root of the remote is pointing at the root of the library My Library: See all files in the library: rclone lsd seafile: Create a new directory inside the library rclone mkdir seafile:directory List the contents of a directory rclone ls seafile:directory Sync /home/local/directory to the remote library, deleting any excess files in the library. rclone sync -i /home/local/directory seafile: –fast-list Seafile version 7+ supports --fast-list which allows you to use fewer transactions in exchange for more memory. See the rclone docs (https://rclone.org/docs/#fast-list) for more details. Please note this is not supported on seafile server version 6.x Restricted filename characters In addition to the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) the following characters are also replaced: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── / 0x2F / " 0x22 " \ 0x5C \ Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Seafile and rclone link Rclone supports generating share links for non-encrypted libraries only. They can either be for a file or a directory: rclone link seafile:seafile-tutorial.doc http://my.seafile.server/f/fdcd8a2f93f84b8b90f4/ or if run on a directory you will get: rclone link seafile:dir http://my.seafile.server/d/9ea2455f6f55478bbb0d/ Please note a share link is unique for each file or directory. If you run a link command on a file/dir that has already been shared, you will get the exact same link. Compatibility It has been actively tested using the seafile docker image (https://github.com/haiwen/seafile-docker) of these versions: - 6.3.4 community edition - 7.0.5 community edition - 7.1.3 community edition Versions below 6.0 are not supported. Versions between 6.0 and 6.3 haven’t been tested and might not work properly. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to seafile (seafile). –seafile-url URL of seafile host to connect to • Config: url • Env Var: RCLONE_SEAFILE_URL • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “https://cloud.seafile.com/” • Connect to cloud.seafile.com –seafile-user User name (usually email address) • Config: user • Env Var: RCLONE_SEAFILE_USER • Type: string • Default: "" –seafile-pass Password NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: pass • Env Var: RCLONE_SEAFILE_PASS • Type: string • Default: "" –seafile-2fa Two-factor authentication (`true' if the account has 2FA enabled) • Config: 2fa • Env Var: RCLONE_SEAFILE_2FA • Type: bool • Default: false –seafile-library Name of the library. Leave blank to access all non-encrypted libraries. • Config: library • Env Var: RCLONE_SEAFILE_LIBRARY • Type: string • Default: "" –seafile-library-key Library password (for encrypted libraries only). Leave blank if you pass it through the command line. NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: library_key • Env Var: RCLONE_SEAFILE_LIBRARY_KEY • Type: string • Default: "" –seafile-auth-token Authentication token • Config: auth_token • Env Var: RCLONE_SEAFILE_AUTH_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to seafile (seafile). –seafile-create-library Should rclone create a library if it doesn’t exist • Config: create_library • Env Var: RCLONE_SEAFILE_CREATE_LIBRARY • Type: bool • Default: false –seafile-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_SEAFILE_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,DoubleQuote,BackSlash,Ctl,InvalidUtf8 SFTP SFTP is the Secure (or SSH) File Transfer Protocol (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSH_File_Transfer_Protocol). The SFTP backend can be used with a number of different providers: • C14 • rsync.net SFTP runs over SSH v2 and is installed as standard with most modern SSH installations. Paths are specified as remote:path. If the path does not begin with a / it is relative to the home directory of the user. An empty path remote: refers to the user’s home directory. "Note that some SFTP servers will need the leading / - Synology is a good example of this. rsync.net, on the other hand, requires users to OMIT the leading /. Here is an example of making an SFTP configuration. First run rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process. No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / SSH/SFTP Connection \ "sftp" [snip] Storage> sftp SSH host to connect to Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Connect to example.com \ "example.com" host> example.com SSH username, leave blank for current username, ncw user> sftpuser SSH port, leave blank to use default (22) port> SSH password, leave blank to use ssh-agent. y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password n) No leave this optional password blank y/g/n> n Path to unencrypted PEM-encoded private key file, leave blank to use ssh-agent. key_file> Remote config -------------------- [remote] host = example.com user = sftpuser port = pass = key_file = -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y This remote is called remote and can now be used like this: See all directories in the home directory rclone lsd remote: Make a new directory rclone mkdir remote:path/to/directory List the contents of a directory rclone ls remote:path/to/directory Sync /home/local/directory to the remote directory, deleting any excess files in the directory. rclone sync -i /home/local/directory remote:directory SSH Authentication The SFTP remote supports three authentication methods: • Password • Key file • ssh-agent Key files should be PEM-encoded private key files. For instance /home/$USER/.ssh/id_rsa. Only unencrypted OpenSSH or PEM encrypted files are supported. The key file can be specified in either an external file (key_file) or contained within the rclone config file (key_pem). If using key_pem in the config file, the entry should be on a single line with new line (`' or `') separating lines. i.e. key_pem = —–BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY—–0gAMbMbaSsd—–END RSA PRIVATE KEY—– This will generate it correctly for key_pem for use in the config: awk '{printf "%s\\n", $0}' < ~/.ssh/id_rsa If you don’t specify pass, key_file, or key_pem then rclone will attempt to contact an ssh-agent. You can also specify key_use_agent to force the usage of an ssh-agent. In this case key_file or key_pem can also be specified to force the usage of a specific key in the ssh- agent. Using an ssh-agent is the only way to load encrypted OpenSSH keys at the moment. If you set the --sftp-ask-password option, rclone will prompt for a password when needed and no password has been configured. ssh-agent on macOS Note that there seem to be various problems with using an ssh-agent on macOS due to recent changes in the OS. The most effective work-around seems to be to start an ssh-agent in each session, eg eval `ssh-agent -s` && ssh-add -A And then at the end of the session eval `ssh-agent -k` These commands can be used in scripts of course. Modified time Modified times are stored on the server to 1 second precision. Modified times are used in syncing and are fully supported. Some SFTP servers disable setting/modifying the file modification time after upload (for example, certain configurations of ProFTPd with mod_sftp). If you are using one of these servers, you can set the option set_modtime = false in your RClone backend configuration to disable this behaviour. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to sftp (SSH/SFTP Connection). –sftp-host SSH host to connect to • Config: host • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_HOST • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “example.com” • Connect to example.com –sftp-user SSH username, leave blank for current username, ncw • Config: user • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_USER • Type: string • Default: "" –sftp-port SSH port, leave blank to use default (22) • Config: port • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_PORT • Type: string • Default: "" –sftp-pass SSH password, leave blank to use ssh-agent. NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: pass • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_PASS • Type: string • Default: "" –sftp-key-pem Raw PEM-encoded private key, If specified, will override key_file parameter. • Config: key_pem • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_KEY_PEM • Type: string • Default: "" –sftp-key-file Path to PEM-encoded private key file, leave blank or set key-use-agent to use ssh-agent. Leading ~ will be expanded in the file name as will environment variables such as ${RCLONE_CONFIG_DIR}. • Config: key_file • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_KEY_FILE • Type: string • Default: "" –sftp-key-file-pass The passphrase to decrypt the PEM-encoded private key file. Only PEM encrypted key files (old OpenSSH format) are supported. Encrypted keys in the new OpenSSH format can’t be used. NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: key_file_pass • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_KEY_FILE_PASS • Type: string • Default: "" –sftp-key-use-agent When set forces the usage of the ssh-agent. When key-file is also set, the “.pub” file of the specified key-file is read and only the associated key is requested from the ssh-agent. This allows to avoid Too many authentication failures for *username* errors when the ssh-agent contains many keys. • Config: key_use_agent • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_KEY_USE_AGENT • Type: bool • Default: false –sftp-use-insecure-cipher Enable the use of insecure ciphers and key exchange methods. This enables the use of the following insecure ciphers and key exchange methods: • aes128-cbc • aes192-cbc • aes256-cbc • 3des-cbc • diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha256 • diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1 Those algorithms are insecure and may allow plaintext data to be recovered by an attacker. • Config: use_insecure_cipher • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_USE_INSECURE_CIPHER • Type: bool • Default: false • Examples: • “false” • Use default Cipher list. • “true” • Enables the use of the aes128-cbc cipher and diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha256, diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1 key exchange. –sftp-disable-hashcheck Disable the execution of SSH commands to determine if remote file hashing is available. Leave blank or set to false to enable hashing (recommended), set to true to disable hashing. • Config: disable_hashcheck • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_DISABLE_HASHCHECK • Type: bool • Default: false Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to sftp (SSH/SFTP Connection). –sftp-ask-password Allow asking for SFTP password when needed. If this is set and no password is supplied then rclone will: - ask for a password - not contact the ssh agent • Config: ask_password • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_ASK_PASSWORD • Type: bool • Default: false –sftp-path-override Override path used by SSH connection. This allows checksum calculation when SFTP and SSH paths are different. This issue affects among others Synology NAS boxes. Shared folders can be found in directories representing volumes rclone sync /home/local/directory remote:/directory --ssh-path-override /volume2/directory Home directory can be found in a shared folder called “home” rclone sync /home/local/directory remote:/home/directory --ssh-path-override /volume1/homes/USER/directory • Config: path_override • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_PATH_OVERRIDE • Type: string • Default: "" –sftp-set-modtime Set the modified time on the remote if set. • Config: set_modtime • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_SET_MODTIME • Type: bool • Default: true –sftp-md5sum-command The command used to read md5 hashes. Leave blank for autodetect. • Config: md5sum_command • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_MD5SUM_COMMAND • Type: string • Default: "" –sftp-sha1sum-command The command used to read sha1 hashes. Leave blank for autodetect. • Config: sha1sum_command • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_SHA1SUM_COMMAND • Type: string • Default: "" –sftp-skip-links Set to skip any symlinks and any other non regular files. • Config: skip_links • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_SKIP_LINKS • Type: bool • Default: false –sftp-subsystem Specifies the SSH2 subsystem on the remote host. • Config: subsystem • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_SUBSYSTEM • Type: string • Default: “sftp” –sftp-server-command Specifies the path or command to run a sftp server on the remote host. The subsystem option is ignored when server_command is defined. • Config: server_command • Env Var: RCLONE_SFTP_SERVER_COMMAND • Type: string • Default: "" Limitations SFTP supports checksums if the same login has shell access and md5sum or sha1sum as well as echo are in the remote’s PATH. This remote checksumming (file hashing) is recommended and enabled by default. Disabling the checksumming may be required if you are connecting to SFTP servers which are not under your control, and to which the execution of remote commands is prohibited. Set the configuration option disable_hashcheck to true to disable checksumming. SFTP also supports about if the same login has shell access and df are in the remote’s PATH. about will return the total space, free space, and used space on the remote for the disk of the specified path on the remote or, if not set, the disk of the root on the remote. about will fail if it does not have shell access or if df is not in the remote’s PATH. Note that some SFTP servers (eg Synology) the paths are different for SSH and SFTP so the hashes can’t be calculated properly. For them using disable_hashcheck is a good idea. The only ssh agent supported under Windows is Putty’s pageant. The Go SSH library disables the use of the aes128-cbc cipher by default, due to security concerns. This can be re-enabled on a per-connection basis by setting the use_insecure_cipher setting in the configuration file to true. Further details on the insecurity of this cipher can be found [in this paper] (http://www.isg.rhul.ac.uk/~kp/SandPfinal.pdf). SFTP isn’t supported under plan9 until this issue (https://github.com/pkg/sftp/issues/156) is fixed. Note that since SFTP isn’t HTTP based the following flags don’t work with it: --dump- headers, --dump-bodies, --dump-auth Note that --timeout isn’t supported (but --contimeout is). C14 C14 is supported through the SFTP backend. See C14’s documentation (https://www.online.net/en/storage/c14-cold-storage) rsync.net rsync.net is supported through the SFTP backend. See rsync.net’s documentation of rclone examples (https://www.rsync.net/products/rclone.html). SugarSync SugarSync (https://sugarsync.com) is a cloud service that enables active synchronization of files across computers and other devices for file backup, access, syncing, and sharing. The initial setup for SugarSync involves getting a token from SugarSync which you can do with rclone. rclone config walks you through it. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Sugarsync \ "sugarsync" [snip] Storage> sugarsync ** See help for sugarsync backend at: https://rclone.org/sugarsync/ ** Sugarsync App ID. Leave blank to use rclone's. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). app_id> Sugarsync Access Key ID. Leave blank to use rclone's. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). access_key_id> Sugarsync Private Access Key Leave blank to use rclone's. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). private_access_key> Permanently delete files if true otherwise put them in the deleted files. Enter a boolean value (true or false). Press Enter for the default ("false"). hard_delete> Edit advanced config? (y/n) y) Yes n) No (default) y/n> n Remote config Username (email address)> nick@craig-wood.com Your Sugarsync password is only required during setup and will not be stored. password: -------------------- [remote] type = sugarsync refresh_token = https://api.sugarsync.com/app-authorization/XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX -------------------- y) Yes this is OK (default) e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Note that the config asks for your email and password but doesn’t store them, it only uses them to get the initial token. Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories (sync folders) in top level of your SugarSync rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your SugarSync folder “Test” rclone ls remote:Test To copy a local directory to an SugarSync folder called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Paths are specified as remote:path Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. NB you can’t create files in the top level folder you have to create a folder, which rclone will create as a “Sync Folder” with SugarSync. Modified time and hashes SugarSync does not support modification times or hashes, therefore syncing will default to --size-only checking. Note that using --update will work as rclone can read the time files were uploaded. Restricted filename characters SugarSync replaces the default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) except for DEL. Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in XML strings. Deleting files Deleted files will be moved to the “Deleted items” folder by default. However you can supply the flag --sugarsync-hard-delete or set the config parameter hard_delete = true if you would like files to be deleted straight away. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to sugarsync (Sugarsync). –sugarsync-app-id Sugarsync App ID. Leave blank to use rclone’s. • Config: app_id • Env Var: RCLONE_SUGARSYNC_APP_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –sugarsync-access-key-id Sugarsync Access Key ID. Leave blank to use rclone’s. • Config: access_key_id • Env Var: RCLONE_SUGARSYNC_ACCESS_KEY_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –sugarsync-private-access-key Sugarsync Private Access Key Leave blank to use rclone’s. • Config: private_access_key • Env Var: RCLONE_SUGARSYNC_PRIVATE_ACCESS_KEY • Type: string • Default: "" –sugarsync-hard-delete Permanently delete files if true otherwise put them in the deleted files. • Config: hard_delete • Env Var: RCLONE_SUGARSYNC_HARD_DELETE • Type: bool • Default: false Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to sugarsync (Sugarsync). –sugarsync-refresh-token Sugarsync refresh token Leave blank normally, will be auto configured by rclone. • Config: refresh_token • Env Var: RCLONE_SUGARSYNC_REFRESH_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –sugarsync-authorization Sugarsync authorization Leave blank normally, will be auto configured by rclone. • Config: authorization • Env Var: RCLONE_SUGARSYNC_AUTHORIZATION • Type: string • Default: "" –sugarsync-authorization-expiry Sugarsync authorization expiry Leave blank normally, will be auto configured by rclone. • Config: authorization_expiry • Env Var: RCLONE_SUGARSYNC_AUTHORIZATION_EXPIRY • Type: string • Default: "" –sugarsync-user Sugarsync user Leave blank normally, will be auto configured by rclone. • Config: user • Env Var: RCLONE_SUGARSYNC_USER • Type: string • Default: "" –sugarsync-root-id Sugarsync root id Leave blank normally, will be auto configured by rclone. • Config: root_id • Env Var: RCLONE_SUGARSYNC_ROOT_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –sugarsync-deleted-id Sugarsync deleted folder id Leave blank normally, will be auto configured by rclone. • Config: deleted_id • Env Var: RCLONE_SUGARSYNC_DELETED_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –sugarsync-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_SUGARSYNC_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot Tardigrade Tardigrade (https://tardigrade.io) is an encrypted, secure, and cost-effective object storage service that enables you to store, back up, and archive large amounts of data in a decentralized manner. Setup To make a new Tardigrade configuration you need one of the following: * Access Grant that someone else shared with you. * API Key (https://documentation.tardigrade.io/getting- started/uploading-your-first-object/create-an-api-key) of a Tardigrade project you are a member of. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: Setup with access grant No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Tardigrade Decentralized Cloud Storage \ "tardigrade" [snip] Storage> tardigrade ** See help for tardigrade backend at: https://rclone.org/tardigrade/ ** Choose an authentication method. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default ("existing"). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Use an existing access grant. \ "existing" 2 / Create a new access grant from satellite address, API key, and passphrase. \ "new" provider> existing Access Grant. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). access_grant> your-access-grant-received-by-someone-else Remote config -------------------- [remote] type = tardigrade access_grant = your-access-grant-received-by-someone-else -------------------- y) Yes this is OK (default) e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Setup with API key and passhprase No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Tardigrade Decentralized Cloud Storage \ "tardigrade" [snip] Storage> tardigrade ** See help for tardigrade backend at: https://rclone.org/tardigrade/ ** Choose an authentication method. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default ("existing"). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Use an existing access grant. \ "existing" 2 / Create a new access grant from satellite address, API key, and passphrase. \ "new" provider> new Satellite Address. Custom satellite address should match the format: `<nodeid>@<address>:<port>`. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default ("us-central-1.tardigrade.io"). Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / US Central 1 \ "us-central-1.tardigrade.io" 2 / Europe West 1 \ "europe-west-1.tardigrade.io" 3 / Asia East 1 \ "asia-east-1.tardigrade.io" satellite_address> 1 API Key. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). api_key> your-api-key-for-your-tardigrade-project Encryption Passphrase. To access existing objects enter passphrase used for uploading. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). passphrase> your-human-readable-encryption-passphrase Remote config -------------------- [remote] type = tardigrade satellite_address = 12EayRS2V1kEsWESU9QMRseFhdxYxKicsiFmxrsLZHeLUtdps3S@us-central-1.tardigrade.io:7777 api_key = your-api-key-for-your-tardigrade-project passphrase = your-human-readable-encryption-passphrase access_grant = the-access-grant-generated-from-the-api-key-and-passphrase -------------------- y) Yes this is OK (default) e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Usage Paths are specified as remote:bucket (or remote: for the lsf command.) You may put subdirectories in too, eg remote:bucket/path/to/dir. Once configured you can then use rclone like this. Create a new bucket Use the mkdir command to create new bucket, e.g. bucket. rclone mkdir remote:bucket List all buckets Use the lsf command to list all buckets. rclone lsf remote: Note the colon (:) character at the end of the command line. Delete a bucket Use the rmdir command to delete an empty bucket. rclone rmdir remote:bucket Use the purge command to delete a non-empty bucket with all its content. rclone purge remote:bucket Upload objects Use the copy command to upload an object. rclone copy --progress /home/local/directory/file.ext remote:bucket/path/to/dir/ The --progress flag is for displaying progress information. Remove it if you don’t need this information. Use a folder in the local path to upload all its objects. rclone copy --progress /home/local/directory/ remote:bucket/path/to/dir/ Only modified files will be copied. List objects Use the ls command to list recursively all objects in a bucket. rclone ls remote:bucket Add the folder to the remote path to list recursively all objects in this folder. rclone ls remote:bucket/path/to/dir/ Use the lsf command to list non-recursively all objects in a bucket or a folder. rclone lsf remote:bucket/path/to/dir/ Download objects Use the copy command to download an object. rclone copy --progress remote:bucket/path/to/dir/file.ext /home/local/directory/ The --progress flag is for displaying progress information. Remove it if you don’t need this information. Use a folder in the remote path to download all its objects. rclone copy --progress remote:bucket/path/to/dir/ /home/local/directory/ Delete objects Use the deletefile command to delete a single object. rclone deletefile remote:bucket/path/to/dir/file.ext Use the delete command to delete all object in a folder. rclone delete remote:bucket/path/to/dir/ Print the total size of objects Use the size command to print the total size of objects in a bucket or a folder. rclone size remote:bucket/path/to/dir/ Sync two Locations Use the sync command to sync the source to the destination, changing the destination only, deleting any excess files. rclone sync -i --progress /home/local/directory/ remote:bucket/path/to/dir/ The --progress flag is for displaying progress information. Remove it if you don’t need this information. Since this can cause data loss, test first with the --dry-run flag to see exactly what would be copied and deleted. The sync can be done also from Tardigrade to the local file system. rclone sync -i --progress remote:bucket/path/to/dir/ /home/local/directory/ Or between two Tardigrade buckets. rclone sync -i --progress remote-us:bucket/path/to/dir/ remote-europe:bucket/path/to/dir/ Or even between another cloud storage and Tardigrade. rclone sync -i --progress s3:bucket/path/to/dir/ tardigrade:bucket/path/to/dir/ Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to tardigrade (Tardigrade Decentralized Cloud Storage). –tardigrade-provider Choose an authentication method. • Config: provider • Env Var: RCLONE_TARDIGRADE_PROVIDER • Type: string • Default: “existing” • Examples: • “existing” • Use an existing access grant. • “new” • Create a new access grant from satellite address, API key, and passphrase. –tardigrade-access-grant Access Grant. • Config: access_grant • Env Var: RCLONE_TARDIGRADE_ACCESS_GRANT • Type: string • Default: "" –tardigrade-satellite-address Satellite Address. Custom satellite address should match the format: <nodeid>@<address>:<port>. • Config: satellite_address • Env Var: RCLONE_TARDIGRADE_SATELLITE_ADDRESS • Type: string • Default: “us-central-1.tardigrade.io” • Examples: • “us-central-1.tardigrade.io” • US Central 1 • “europe-west-1.tardigrade.io” • Europe West 1 • “asia-east-1.tardigrade.io” • Asia East 1 –tardigrade-api-key API Key. • Config: api_key • Env Var: RCLONE_TARDIGRADE_API_KEY • Type: string • Default: "" –tardigrade-passphrase Encryption Passphrase. To access existing objects enter passphrase used for uploading. • Config: passphrase • Env Var: RCLONE_TARDIGRADE_PASSPHRASE • Type: string • Default: "" Union The union remote provides a unification similar to UnionFS using other remotes. Paths may be as deep as required or a local path, eg remote:directory/subdirectory or /directory/subdirectory. During the initial setup with rclone config you will specify the upstream remotes as a space separated list. The upstream remotes can either be a local paths or other remotes. Attribute :ro and :nc can be attach to the end of path to tag the remote as read only or no create, eg remote:directory/subdirectory:ro or remote:directory/subdirectory:nc. Subfolders can be used in upstream remotes. Assume a union remote named backup with the remotes mydrive:private/backup. Invoking rclone mkdir backup:desktop is exactly the same as invoking rclone mkdir mydrive2:/backup/desktop. There will be no special handling of paths containing .. segments. Invoking rclone mkdir backup:../desktop is exactly the same as invoking rclone mkdir mydrive2:/backup/../desktop. Behavior / Policies The behavior of union backend is inspired by trapexit/mergerfs (https://github.com/trapexit/mergerfs). All functions are grouped into 3 categories: action, create and search. These functions and categories can be assigned a policy which dictates what file or directory is chosen when performing that behavior. Any policy can be assigned to a function or category though some may not be very useful in practice. For instance: rand (random) may be useful for file creation (create) but could lead to very odd behavior if used for delete if there were more than one copy of the file. Function / Category classifications Category Description Functions ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── action Writing move, rmdir, rmdirs, delete, purge and copy, sync Existing file (as destination when file exist) create Create non- copy, sync (as destination when file not exist) existing file search Reading and ls, lsd, lsl, cat, md5sum, sha1sum and copy, sync listing file (as source) N/A size, about Path Preservation Policies, as described below, are of two basic types. path preserving and non-path preserving. All policies which start with ep (epff, eplfs, eplus, epmfs, eprand) are path preserving. ep stands for existing path. A path preserving policy will only consider upstreams where the relative path being accessed already exists. When using non-path preserving policies paths will be created in target upstreams as necessary. Quota Relevant Policies Some policies rely on quota information. These policies should be used only if your upstreams support the respective quota fields. Policy Required Field ──────────────────────────── lfs, eplfs Free mfs, epmfs Free lus, eplus Used lno, eplno Objects To check if your upstream supports the field, run rclone about remote: [flags] and see if the required field exists. Filters Policies basically search upstream remotes and create a list of files / paths for functions to work on. The policy is responsible for filtering and sorting. The policy type defines the sorting but filtering is mostly uniform as described below. • No search policies filter. • All action policies will filter out remotes which are tagged as read-only. • All create policies will filter out remotes which are tagged read-only or no-create. If all remotes are filtered an error will be returned. Policy descriptions The policies definition are inspired by trapexit/mergerfs (https://github.com/trapexit/mergerfs) but not exactly the same. Some policy definition could be different due to the much larger latency of remote file systems. Policy Description ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── all Search category: same as epall. Action category: same as epall. Create category: act on all upstreams. epall (existing Search category: Given this order configured, act on path, all) the first one found where the relative path exists. Action category: apply to all found. Create category: act on all upstreams where the relative path exists. epff (existing Act on the first one found, by the time upstreams path, first reply, where the relative path exists. found) eplfs (existing Of all the upstreams on which the relative path exists path, least free choose the one with the least free space. space) eplus (existing Of all the upstreams on which the relative path exists path, least used choose the one with the least used space. space) eplno (existing Of all the upstreams on which the relative path exists path, least choose the one with the least number of objects. number of objects) epmfs (existing Of all the upstreams on which the relative path exists path, most free choose the one with the most free space. space) eprand (existing Calls epall and then randomizes. Returns only one path, random) upstream. ff (first found) Search category: same as epff. Action category: same as epff. Create category: Act on the first one found by the time upstreams reply. lfs (least free Search category: same as eplfs. Action category: same space) as eplfs. Create category: Pick the upstream with the least available free space. lus (least used Search category: same as eplus. Action category: same space) as eplus. Create category: Pick the upstream with the least used space. lno (least Search category: same as eplno. Action category: same number of as eplno. Create category: Pick the upstream with the objects) least number of objects. mfs (most free Search category: same as epmfs. Action category: same space) as epmfs. Create category: Pick the upstream with the most available free space. newest Pick the file / directory with the largest mtime. rand (random) Calls all and then randomizes. Returns only one upstream. Setup Here is an example of how to make a union called remote for local folders. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Union merges the contents of several remotes \ "union" [snip] Storage> union List of space separated upstreams. Can be 'upstreama:test/dir upstreamb:', '\"upstreama:test/space:ro dir\" upstreamb:', etc. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default (""). upstreams> Policy to choose upstream on ACTION class. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default ("epall"). action_policy> Policy to choose upstream on CREATE class. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default ("epmfs"). create_policy> Policy to choose upstream on SEARCH class. Enter a string value. Press Enter for the default ("ff"). search_policy> Cache time of usage and free space (in seconds). This option is only useful when a path preserving policy is used. Enter a signed integer. Press Enter for the default ("120"). cache_time> Remote config -------------------- [remote] type = union upstreams = C:\dir1 C:\dir2 C:\dir3 -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Current remotes: Name Type ==== ==== remote union e) Edit existing remote n) New remote d) Delete remote r) Rename remote c) Copy remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config e/n/d/r/c/s/q> q Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level in C:\dir1, C:\dir2 and C:\dir3 rclone lsd remote: List all the files in C:\dir1, C:\dir2 and C:\dir3 rclone ls remote: Copy another local directory to the union directory called source, which will be placed into C:\dir3 rclone copy C:\source remote:source Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to union (Union merges the contents of several upstream fs). –union-upstreams List of space separated upstreams. Can be `upstreama:test/dir upstreamb:', `“upstreama:test/space:ro dir” upstreamb:', etc. • Config: upstreams • Env Var: RCLONE_UNION_UPSTREAMS • Type: string • Default: "" –union-action-policy Policy to choose upstream on ACTION category. • Config: action_policy • Env Var: RCLONE_UNION_ACTION_POLICY • Type: string • Default: “epall” –union-create-policy Policy to choose upstream on CREATE category. • Config: create_policy • Env Var: RCLONE_UNION_CREATE_POLICY • Type: string • Default: “epmfs” –union-search-policy Policy to choose upstream on SEARCH category. • Config: search_policy • Env Var: RCLONE_UNION_SEARCH_POLICY • Type: string • Default: “ff” –union-cache-time Cache time of usage and free space (in seconds). This option is only useful when a path preserving policy is used. • Config: cache_time • Env Var: RCLONE_UNION_CACHE_TIME • Type: int • Default: 120 WebDAV Paths are specified as remote:path Paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. To configure the WebDAV remote you will need to have a URL for it, and a username and password. If you know what kind of system you are connecting to then rclone can enable extra features. Here is an example of how to make a remote called remote. First run: rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password q) Quit config n/s/q> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Webdav \ "webdav" [snip] Storage> webdav URL of http host to connect to Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Connect to example.com \ "https://example.com" url> https://example.com/remote.php/webdav/ Name of the Webdav site/service/software you are using Choose a number from below, or type in your own value 1 / Nextcloud \ "nextcloud" 2 / Owncloud \ "owncloud" 3 / Sharepoint \ "sharepoint" 4 / Other site/service or software \ "other" vendor> 1 User name user> user Password. y) Yes type in my own password g) Generate random password n) No leave this optional password blank y/g/n> y Enter the password: password: Confirm the password: password: Bearer token instead of user/pass (eg a Macaroon) bearer_token> Remote config -------------------- [remote] type = webdav url = https://example.com/remote.php/webdav/ vendor = nextcloud user = user pass = *** ENCRYPTED *** bearer_token = -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y Once configured you can then use rclone like this, List directories in top level of your WebDAV rclone lsd remote: List all the files in your WebDAV rclone ls remote: To copy a local directory to an WebDAV directory called backup rclone copy /home/source remote:backup Modified time and hashes Plain WebDAV does not support modified times. However when used with Owncloud or Nextcloud rclone will support modified times. Likewise plain WebDAV does not support hashes, however when used with Owncloud or Nextcloud rclone will support SHA1 and MD5 hashes. Depending on the exact version of Owncloud or Nextcloud hashes may appear on all objects, or only on objects which had a hash uploaded with them. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to webdav (Webdav). –webdav-url URL of http host to connect to • Config: url • Env Var: RCLONE_WEBDAV_URL • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “https://example.com” • Connect to example.com –webdav-vendor Name of the Webdav site/service/software you are using • Config: vendor • Env Var: RCLONE_WEBDAV_VENDOR • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “nextcloud” • Nextcloud • “owncloud” • Owncloud • “sharepoint” • Sharepoint • “other” • Other site/service or software –webdav-user User name • Config: user • Env Var: RCLONE_WEBDAV_USER • Type: string • Default: "" –webdav-pass Password. NB Input to this must be obscured - see rclone obscure (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_obscure/). • Config: pass • Env Var: RCLONE_WEBDAV_PASS • Type: string • Default: "" –webdav-bearer-token Bearer token instead of user/pass (eg a Macaroon) • Config: bearer_token • Env Var: RCLONE_WEBDAV_BEARER_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to webdav (Webdav). –webdav-bearer-token-command Command to run to get a bearer token • Config: bearer_token_command • Env Var: RCLONE_WEBDAV_BEARER_TOKEN_COMMAND • Type: string • Default: "" Provider notes See below for notes on specific providers. Owncloud Click on the settings cog in the bottom right of the page and this will show the WebDAV URL that rclone needs in the config step. It will look something like https://example.com/remote.php/webdav/. Owncloud supports modified times using the X-OC-Mtime header. Nextcloud This is configured in an identical way to Owncloud. Note that Nextcloud does not support streaming of files (rcat) whereas Owncloud does. This may be fixed (https://github.com/nextcloud/nextcloud-snap/issues/365) in the future. Sharepoint Rclone can be used with Sharepoint provided by OneDrive for Business or Office365 Education Accounts. This feature is only needed for a few of these Accounts, mostly Office365 Education ones. These accounts are sometimes not verified by the domain owner github#1975 (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/1975) This means that these accounts can’t be added using the official API (other Accounts should work with the “onedrive” option). However, it is possible to access them using webdav. To use a sharepoint remote with rclone, add it like this: First, you need to get your remote’s URL: • Go here (https://onedrive.live.com/about/en-us/signin/) to open your OneDrive or to sign in • Now take a look at your address bar, the URL should look like this: https://[YOUR- DOMAIN]-my.sharepoint.com/personal/[YOUR-EMAIL]/_layouts/15/onedrive.aspx You’ll only need this URL up to the email address. After that, you’ll most likely want to add “/Documents”. That subdirectory contains the actual data stored on your OneDrive. Add the remote to rclone like this: Configure the url as https://[YOUR- DOMAIN]-my.sharepoint.com/personal/[YOUR-EMAIL]/Documents and use your normal account email and password for user and pass. If you have 2FA enabled, you have to generate an app password. Set the vendor to sharepoint. Your config file should look like this: [sharepoint] type = webdav url = https://[YOUR-DOMAIN]-my.sharepoint.com/personal/[YOUR-EMAIL]/Documents vendor = other user = YourEmailAddress pass = encryptedpassword Required Flags for SharePoint As SharePoint does some special things with uploaded documents, you won’t be able to use the documents size or the documents hash to compare if a file has been changed since the upload / which file is newer. For Rclone calls copying files (especially Office files such as .docx, .xlsx, etc.) from/to SharePoint (like copy, sync, etc.), you should append these flags to ensure Rclone uses the “Last Modified” datetime property to compare your documents: --ignore-size --ignore-checksum --update dCache dCache is a storage system that supports many protocols and authentication/authorisation schemes. For WebDAV clients, it allows users to authenticate with username and password (BASIC), X.509, Kerberos, and various bearer tokens, including Macaroons (https://www.dcache.org/manuals/workshop-2017-05-29-Umea/000-Final/anupam_macaroons_v02.pdf) and OpenID-Connect (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenID_Connect) access tokens. Configure as normal using the other type. Don’t enter a username or password, instead enter your Macaroon as the bearer_token. The config will end up looking something like this. [dcache] type = webdav url = https://dcache... vendor = other user = pass = bearer_token = your-macaroon There is a script (https://github.com/sara-nl/GridScripts/blob/master/get-macaroon) that obtains a Macaroon from a dCache WebDAV endpoint, and creates an rclone config file. Macaroons may also be obtained from the dCacheView web-browser/JavaScript client that comes with dCache. OpenID-Connect dCache also supports authenticating with OpenID-Connect access tokens. OpenID-Connect is a protocol (based on OAuth 2.0) that allows services to identify users who have authenticated with some central service. Support for OpenID-Connect in rclone is currently achieved using another software package called oidc-agent (https://github.com/indigo-dc/oidc-agent). This is a command-line tool that facilitates obtaining an access token. Once installed and configured, an access token is obtained by running the oidc-token command. The following example shows a (shortened) access token obtained from the XDC OIDC Provider. paul@celebrimbor:~$ oidc-token XDC eyJraWQ[...]QFXDt0 paul@celebrimbor:~$ Note Before the oidc-token command will work, the refresh token must be loaded into the oidc agent. This is done with the oidc-add command (e.g., oidc-add XDC). This is typically done once per login session. Full details on this and how to register oidc- agent with your OIDC Provider are provided in the oidc-agent documentation (https://indigo-dc.gitbooks.io/oidc-agent/). The rclone bearer_token_command configuration option is used to fetch the access token from oidc-agent. Configure as a normal WebDAV endpoint, using the `other' vendor, leaving the username and password empty. When prompted, choose to edit the advanced config and enter the command to get a bearer token (e.g., oidc-agent XDC). The following example config shows a WebDAV endpoint that uses oidc-agent to supply an access token from the XDC OIDC Provider. [dcache] type = webdav url = https://dcache.example.org/ vendor = other bearer_token_command = oidc-token XDC Yandex Disk Yandex Disk (https://disk.yandex.com) is a cloud storage solution created by Yandex (https://yandex.com). Here is an example of making a yandex configuration. First run rclone config This will guide you through an interactive setup process: No remotes found - make a new one n) New remote s) Set configuration password n/s> n name> remote Type of storage to configure. Choose a number from below, or type in your own value [snip] XX / Yandex Disk \ "yandex" [snip] Storage> yandex Yandex Client Id - leave blank normally. client_id> Yandex Client Secret - leave blank normally. client_secret> Remote config Use auto config? * Say Y if not sure * Say N if you are working on a remote or headless machine y) Yes n) No y/n> y If your browser doesn't open automatically go to the following link: http://127.0.0.1:53682/auth Log in and authorize rclone for access Waiting for code... Got code -------------------- [remote] client_id = client_secret = token = {"access_token":"xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx","token_type":"bearer","expiry":"2016-12-29T12:27:11.362788025Z"} -------------------- y) Yes this is OK e) Edit this remote d) Delete this remote y/e/d> y See the remote setup docs (https://rclone.org/remote_setup/) for how to set it up on a machine with no Internet browser available. Note that rclone runs a webserver on your local machine to collect the token as returned from Yandex Disk. This only runs from the moment it opens your browser to the moment you get back the verification code. This is on http://127.0.0.1:53682/ and this it may require you to unblock it temporarily if you are running a host firewall. Once configured you can then use rclone like this, See top level directories rclone lsd remote: Make a new directory rclone mkdir remote:directory List the contents of a directory rclone ls remote:directory Sync /home/local/directory to the remote path, deleting any excess files in the path. rclone sync -i /home/local/directory remote:directory Yandex paths may be as deep as required, eg remote:directory/subdirectory. Modified time Modified times are supported and are stored accurate to 1 ns in custom metadata called rclone_modified in RFC3339 with nanoseconds format. MD5 checksums MD5 checksums are natively supported by Yandex Disk. Emptying Trash If you wish to empty your trash you can use the rclone cleanup remote: command which will permanently delete all your trashed files. This command does not take any path arguments. Quota information To view your current quota you can use the rclone about remote: command which will display your usage limit (quota) and the current usage. Restricted filename characters The default restricted characters set (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted-characters) are replaced. Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be used in JSON strings. Limitations When uploading very large files (bigger than about 5GB) you will need to increase the --timeout parameter. This is because Yandex pauses (perhaps to calculate the MD5SUM for the entire file) before returning confirmation that the file has been uploaded. The default handling of timeouts in rclone is to assume a 5 minute pause is an error and close the connection - you’ll see net/http: timeout awaiting response headers errors in the logs if this is happening. Setting the timeout to twice the max size of file in GB should be enough, so if you want to upload a 30GB file set a timeout of 2 * 30 = 60m, that is --timeout 60m. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to yandex (Yandex Disk). –yandex-client-id OAuth Client Id Leave blank normally. • Config: client_id • Env Var: RCLONE_YANDEX_CLIENT_ID • Type: string • Default: "" –yandex-client-secret OAuth Client Secret Leave blank normally. • Config: client_secret • Env Var: RCLONE_YANDEX_CLIENT_SECRET • Type: string • Default: "" Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to yandex (Yandex Disk). –yandex-token OAuth Access Token as a JSON blob. • Config: token • Env Var: RCLONE_YANDEX_TOKEN • Type: string • Default: "" –yandex-auth-url Auth server URL. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: auth_url • Env Var: RCLONE_YANDEX_AUTH_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –yandex-token-url Token server url. Leave blank to use the provider defaults. • Config: token_url • Env Var: RCLONE_YANDEX_TOKEN_URL • Type: string • Default: "" –yandex-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_YANDEX_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,Del,Ctl,InvalidUtf8,Dot Local Filesystem Local paths are specified as normal filesystem paths, eg /path/to/wherever, so rclone sync -i /home/source /tmp/destination Will sync /home/source to /tmp/destination These can be configured into the config file for consistencies sake, but it is probably easier not to. Modified time Rclone reads and writes the modified time using an accuracy determined by the OS. Typically this is 1ns on Linux, 10 ns on Windows and 1 Second on OS X. Filenames Filenames should be encoded in UTF-8 on disk. This is the normal case for Windows and OS X. There is a bit more uncertainty in the Linux world, but new distributions will have UTF-8 encoded files names. If you are using an old Linux filesystem with non UTF-8 file names (eg latin1) then you can use the convmv tool to convert the filesystem to UTF-8. This tool is available in most distributions’ package managers. If an invalid (non-UTF8) filename is read, the invalid characters will be replaced with a quoted representation of the invalid bytes. The name gro\xdf will be transferred as gro‛DF. rclone will emit a debug message in this case (use -v to see), eg Local file system at .: Replacing invalid UTF-8 characters in "gro\xdf" Restricted characters On non Windows platforms the following characters are replaced when handling file names. Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── NUL 0x00 ␀ / 0x2F / When running on Windows the following characters are replaced. This list is based on the Windows file naming conventions (https://docs.microsoft.com/de- de/windows/desktop/FileIO/naming-a-file#naming-conventions). Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── NUL 0x00 ␀ SOH 0x01 ␁ STX 0x02 ␂ ETX 0x03 ␃ EOT 0x04 ␄ ENQ 0x05 ␅ ACK 0x06 ␆ BEL 0x07 ␇ BS 0x08 ␈ HT 0x09 ␉ LF 0x0A ␊ VT 0x0B ␋ FF 0x0C ␌ CR 0x0D ␍ SO 0x0E ␎ SI 0x0F ␏ DLE 0x10 ␐ DC1 0x11 ␑ DC2 0x12 ␒ DC3 0x13 ␓ DC4 0x14 ␔ NAK 0x15 ␕ SYN 0x16 ␖ ETB 0x17 ␗ CAN 0x18 ␘ EM 0x19 ␙ SUB 0x1A ␚ ESC 0x1B ␛ FS 0x1C ␜ GS 0x1D ␝ RS 0x1E ␞ US 0x1F ␟ / 0x2F / " 0x22 " * 0x2A * : 0x3A : < 0x3C < > 0x3E > ? 0x3F ? \ 0x5C \ | 0x7C | File names on Windows can also not end with the following characters. These only get replaced if they are the last character in the name: Character Value Replacement ──────────────────────────────── SP 0x20 ␠ . 0x2E . Invalid UTF-8 bytes will also be replaced (https://rclone.org/overview/#invalid-utf8), as they can’t be converted to UTF-16. Long paths on Windows Rclone handles long paths automatically, by converting all paths to long UNC paths (https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa365247(v=vs.85).aspx#maxpath) which allows paths up to 32,767 characters. This is why you will see that your paths, for instance c:\files is converted to the UNC path \\?\c:\files in the output, and \\server\share is converted to \\?\UNC\server\share. However, in rare cases this may cause problems with buggy file system drivers like EncFS (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/261). To disable UNC conversion globally, add this to your .rclone.conf file: [local] nounc = true If you want to selectively disable UNC, you can add it to a separate entry like this: [nounc] type = local nounc = true And use rclone like this: rclone copy c:\src nounc:z:\dst This will use UNC paths on c:\src but not on z:\dst. Of course this will cause problems if the absolute path length of a file exceeds 258 characters on z, so only use this option if you have to. Symlinks / Junction points Normally rclone will ignore symlinks or junction points (which behave like symlinks under Windows). If you supply --copy-links or -L then rclone will follow the symlink and copy the pointed to file or directory. Note that this flag is incompatible with -links / -l. This flag applies to all commands. For example, supposing you have a directory structure like this $ tree /tmp/a /tmp/a ├── b -> ../b ├── expected -> ../expected ├── one └── two └── three Then you can see the difference with and without the flag like this $ rclone ls /tmp/a 6 one 6 two/three and $ rclone -L ls /tmp/a 4174 expected 6 one 6 two/three 6 b/two 6 b/one –links, -l Normally rclone will ignore symlinks or junction points (which behave like symlinks under Windows). If you supply this flag then rclone will copy symbolic links from the local storage, and store them as text files, with a `.rclonelink' suffix in the remote storage. The text file will contain the target of the symbolic link (see example). This flag applies to all commands. For example, supposing you have a directory structure like this $ tree /tmp/a /tmp/a ├── file1 -> ./file4 └── file2 -> /home/user/file3 Copying the entire directory with `-l' $ rclone copyto -l /tmp/a/file1 remote:/tmp/a/ The remote files are created with a `.rclonelink' suffix $ rclone ls remote:/tmp/a 5 file1.rclonelink 14 file2.rclonelink The remote files will contain the target of the symbolic links $ rclone cat remote:/tmp/a/file1.rclonelink ./file4 $ rclone cat remote:/tmp/a/file2.rclonelink /home/user/file3 Copying them back with `-l' $ rclone copyto -l remote:/tmp/a/ /tmp/b/ $ tree /tmp/b /tmp/b ├── file1 -> ./file4 └── file2 -> /home/user/file3 However, if copied back without `-l' $ rclone copyto remote:/tmp/a/ /tmp/b/ $ tree /tmp/b /tmp/b ├── file1.rclonelink └── file2.rclonelink Note that this flag is incompatible with -copy-links / -L. Restricting filesystems with –one-file-system Normally rclone will recurse through filesystems as mounted. However if you set --one-file-system or -x this tells rclone to stay in the filesystem specified by the root and not to recurse into different file systems. For example if you have a directory hierarchy like this root ├── disk1 - disk1 mounted on the root │ └── file3 - stored on disk1 ├── disk2 - disk2 mounted on the root │ └── file4 - stored on disk12 ├── file1 - stored on the root disk └── file2 - stored on the root disk Using rclone --one-file-system copy root remote: will only copy file1 and file2. Eg $ rclone -q --one-file-system ls root 0 file1 0 file2 $ rclone -q ls root 0 disk1/file3 0 disk2/file4 0 file1 0 file2 NB Rclone (like most unix tools such as du, rsync and tar) treats a bind mount to the same device as being on the same filesystem. NB This flag is only available on Unix based systems. On systems where it isn’t supported (eg Windows) it will be ignored. Standard Options Here are the standard options specific to local (Local Disk). –local-nounc Disable UNC (long path names) conversion on Windows • Config: nounc • Env Var: RCLONE_LOCAL_NOUNC • Type: string • Default: "" • Examples: • “true” • Disables long file names Advanced Options Here are the advanced options specific to local (Local Disk). –copy-links / -L Follow symlinks and copy the pointed to item. • Config: copy_links • Env Var: RCLONE_LOCAL_COPY_LINKS • Type: bool • Default: false –links / -l Translate symlinks to/from regular files with a `.rclonelink' extension • Config: links • Env Var: RCLONE_LOCAL_LINKS • Type: bool • Default: false –skip-links Don’t warn about skipped symlinks. This flag disables warning messages on skipped symlinks or junction points, as you explicitly acknowledge that they should be skipped. • Config: skip_links • Env Var: RCLONE_LOCAL_SKIP_LINKS • Type: bool • Default: false –local-no-unicode-normalization Don’t apply unicode normalization to paths and filenames (Deprecated) This flag is deprecated now. Rclone no longer normalizes unicode file names, but it compares them with unicode normalization in the sync routine instead. • Config: no_unicode_normalization • Env Var: RCLONE_LOCAL_NO_UNICODE_NORMALIZATION • Type: bool • Default: false –local-no-check-updated Don’t check to see if the files change during upload Normally rclone checks the size and modification time of files as they are being uploaded and aborts with a message which starts “can’t copy - source file is being updated” if the file changes during upload. However on some file systems this modification time check may fail (eg Glusterfs #2206 (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/2206)) so this check can be disabled with this flag. If this flag is set, rclone will use its best efforts to transfer a file which is being updated. If the file is only having things appended to it (eg a log) then rclone will transfer the log file with the size it had the first time rclone saw it. If the file is being modified throughout (not just appended to) then the transfer may fail with a hash check failure. In detail, once the file has had stat() called on it for the first time we: • Only transfer the size that stat gave • Only checksum the size that stat gave • Don’t update the stat info for the file • Config: no_check_updated • Env Var: RCLONE_LOCAL_NO_CHECK_UPDATED • Type: bool • Default: false –one-file-system / -x Don’t cross filesystem boundaries (unix/macOS only). • Config: one_file_system • Env Var: RCLONE_LOCAL_ONE_FILE_SYSTEM • Type: bool • Default: false –local-case-sensitive Force the filesystem to report itself as case sensitive. Normally the local backend declares itself as case insensitive on Windows/macOS and case sensitive for everything else. Use this flag to override the default choice. • Config: case_sensitive • Env Var: RCLONE_LOCAL_CASE_SENSITIVE • Type: bool • Default: false –local-case-insensitive Force the filesystem to report itself as case insensitive Normally the local backend declares itself as case insensitive on Windows/macOS and case sensitive for everything else. Use this flag to override the default choice. • Config: case_insensitive • Env Var: RCLONE_LOCAL_CASE_INSENSITIVE • Type: bool • Default: false –local-no-sparse Disable sparse files for multi-thread downloads On Windows platforms rclone will make sparse files when doing multi-thread downloads. This avoids long pauses on large files where the OS zeros the file. However sparse files may be undesirable as they cause disk fragmentation and can be slow to work with. • Config: no_sparse • Env Var: RCLONE_LOCAL_NO_SPARSE • Type: bool • Default: false –local-no-set-modtime Disable setting modtime Normally rclone updates modification time of files after they are done uploading. This can cause permissions issues on Linux platforms when the user rclone is running as does not own the file uploaded, such as when copying to a CIFS mount owned by another user. If this option is enabled, rclone will no longer update the modtime after copying a file. • Config: no_set_modtime • Env Var: RCLONE_LOCAL_NO_SET_MODTIME • Type: bool • Default: false –local-encoding This sets the encoding for the backend. See: the encoding section in the overview (https://rclone.org/overview/#encoding) for more info. • Config: encoding • Env Var: RCLONE_LOCAL_ENCODING • Type: MultiEncoder • Default: Slash,Dot Backend commands Here are the commands specific to the local backend. Run them with rclone backend COMMAND remote: The help below will explain what arguments each command takes. See the “rclone backend” command (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_backend/) for more info on how to pass options and arguments. These can be run on a running backend using the rc command backend/command (https://rclone.org/rc/#backend/command). noop A null operation for testing backend commands rclone backend noop remote: [options] [<arguments>+] This is a test command which has some options you can try to change the output. Options: • “echo”: echo the input arguments • “error”: return an error based on option value
Changelog
v1.53.3 - 2020-11-19 See commits (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/compare/v1.53.2...v1.53.3) • Bug Fixes • random: Fix incorrect use of math/rand instead of crypto/rand CVE-2020-28924 (Nick Craig-Wood) • Passwords you have generated with rclone config may be insecure • See issue #4783 (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/4783) for more details and a checking tool • random: Seed math/rand in one place with crypto strong seed (Nick Craig-Wood) • VFS • Fix vfs/refresh calls with fs= parameter (Nick Craig-Wood) • Sharefile • Fix backend due to API swapping integers for strings (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.53.2 - 2020-10-26 See commits (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/compare/v1.53.1...v1.53.2) • Bug Fixes • acounting • Fix incorrect speed and transferTime in core/stats (Nick Craig-Wood) • Stabilize display order of transfers on Windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • operations • Fix use of –suffix without –backup-dir (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix spurious “–checksum is in use but the source and destination have no hashes in common” (Nick Craig-Wood) • build • Work around GitHub actions brew problem (Nick Craig-Wood) • Stop using set-env and set-path in the GitHub actions (Nick Craig-Wood) • Mount • mount2: Fix the swapped UID / GID values (Russell Cattelan) • VFS • Detect and recover from a file being removed externally from the cache (Nick Craig- Wood) • Fix a deadlock vulnerability in downloaders.Close (Leo Luan) • Fix a race condition in retryFailedResets (Leo Luan) • Fix missed concurrency control between some item operations and reset (Leo Luan) • Add exponential backoff during ENOSPC retries (Leo Luan) • Add a missed update of used cache space (Leo Luan) • Fix –no-modtime to not attempt to set modtimes (as documented) (Nick Craig-Wood) • Local • Fix sizes and syncing with –links option on Windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • Chunker • Disable ListR to fix missing files on GDrive (workaround) (Ivan Andreev) • Fix upload over crypt (Ivan Andreev) • Fichier • Increase maximum file size from 100GB to 300GB (gyutw) • Jottacloud • Remove clientSecret from config when upgrading to token based authentication (buengese) • Avoid double url escaping of device/mountpoint (albertony) • Remove DirMove workaround as it’s not required anymore - also (buengese) • Mailru • Fix uploads after recent changes on server (Ivan Andreev) • Fix range requests after june changes on server (Ivan Andreev) • Fix invalid timestamp on corrupted files (fixes) (Ivan Andreev) • Onedrive • Fix disk usage for sharepoint (Nick Craig-Wood) • S3 • Add missing regions for AWS (Anagh Kumar Baranwal) • Seafile • Fix accessing libraries > 2GB on 32 bit systems (Muffin King) • SFTP • Always convert the checksum to lower case (buengese) • Union • Create root directories if none exist (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.53.1 - 2020-09-13 See commits (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/compare/v1.53.0...v1.53.1) • Bug Fixes • accounting: Remove new line from end of –stats-one-line display (Nick Craig-Wood) • check • Add back missing –download flag (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix docs (Nick Craig-Wood) • docs • Note –log-file does append (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add full stops for consistency in rclone –help (edwardxml) • Add Tencent COS to s3 provider list (wjielai) • Updated mount command to reflect that it requires Go 1.13 or newer (Evan Harris) • jottacloud: Mention that uploads from local disk will not need to cache files to disk for md5 calculation (albertony) • Fix formatting of rc docs page (Nick Craig-Wood) • build • Include vendor tar ball in release and fix startdev (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix “Illegal instruction” error for ARMv6 builds (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix architecture name in ARMv7 build (Nick Craig-Wood) • VFS • Fix spurious error "vfs cache: failed to _ensure cache EOF" (Nick Craig-Wood) • Log an ERROR if we fail to set the file to be sparse (Nick Craig-Wood) • Local • Log an ERROR if we fail to set the file to be sparse (Nick Craig-Wood) • Drive • Re-adds special oauth help text (Tim Gallant) • Opendrive • Do not retry 400 errors (Evan Harris) v1.53.0 - 2020-09-02 See commits (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/compare/v1.52.0...v1.53.0) • New Features • The VFS layer (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_mount/#vfs-virtual-file-system) was heavily reworked for this release - see below for more details • Interactive mode -i/–interactive (https://rclone.org/docs/#interactive) for destructive operations (fishbullet) • Add –bwlimit-file (https://rclone.org/docs/#bwlimit-file-bandwidth-spec) flag to limit speeds of individual file transfers (Nick Craig-Wood) • Transfers are sorted by start time in the stats and progress output (Max Sum) • Make sure backends expand ~ and environment vars in file names they use (Nick Craig- Wood) • Add –refresh-times (https://rclone.org/docs/#refresh-times) flag to set modtimes on hashless backends (Nick Craig-Wood) • build • Remove vendor directory in favour of Go modules (Nick Craig-Wood) • Build with go1.15.x by default (Nick Craig-Wood) • Drop macOS 386 build as it is no longer supported by go1.15 (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add ARMv7 to the supported builds (Nick Craig-Wood) • Enable rclone cmount on macOS (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make rclone build with gccgo (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make rclone build with wasm (Nick Craig-Wood) • Change beta numbering to be semver compatible (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add file properties and icon to Windows executable (albertony) • Add experimental interface for integrating rclone into browsers (Nick Craig-Wood) • lib: Add file name compression (Klaus Post) • rc • Allow installation and use of plugins and test plugins with rclone-webui (Chaitanya Bankanhal) • Add reverse proxy pluginsHandler for serving plugins (Chaitanya Bankanhal) • Add mount/listmounts option for listing current mounts (Chaitanya Bankanhal) • Add operations/uploadfile to upload a file through rc using encoding multipart/form- data (Chaitanya Bankanhal) • Add core/copmmand to execute rclone terminal commands. (Chaitanya Bankanhal) • rclone check • Add reporting of filenames for same/missing/changed (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make check command obey --dry-run/-i/--interactive (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make check do --checkers files concurrently (Nick Craig-Wood) • Retry downloads if they fail when using the --download flag (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make it show stats by default (Nick Craig-Wood) • rclone obscure: Allow obscure command to accept password on STDIN (David Ibarra) • rclone config • Set RCLONE_CONFIG_DIR for use in config files and subprocesses (Nick Craig-Wood) • Reject remote names starting with a dash. (jtagcat) • rclone cryptcheck: Add reporting of filenames for same/missing/changed (Nick Craig- Wood) • rclone dedupe: Make it obey the --size-only flag for duplicate detection (Nick Craig- Wood) • rclone link: Add --expire and --unlink flags (Roman Kredentser) • rclone mkdir: Warn when using mkdir on remotes which can’t have empty directories (Nick Craig-Wood) • rclone rc: Allow JSON parameters to simplify command line usage (Nick Craig-Wood) • rclone serve ftp • Don’t compile on < go1.13 after dependency update (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add error message if auth proxy fails (Nick Craig-Wood) • Use refactored goftp.io/server library for binary shrink (Nick Craig-Wood) • rclone serve restic: Expose interfaces so that rclone can be used as a library from within restic (Jack) • rclone sync: Add --track-renames-strategy leaf (Nick Craig-Wood) • rclone touch: Add ability to set nanosecond resolution times (Nick Craig-Wood) • rclone tree: Remove -i shorthand for --noindent as it conflicts with -i/--interactive (Nick Craig-Wood) • Bug Fixes • accounting • Fix documentation for speed/speedAvg (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix elapsed time not show actual time since beginning (Chaitanya Bankanhal) • Fix deadlock in stats printing (Nick Craig-Wood) • build • Fix file handle leak in GitHub release tool (Garrett Squire) • rclone check: Fix successful retries with --download counting errors (Nick Craig-Wood) • rclone dedupe: Fix logging to be easier to understand (Nick Craig-Wood) • Mount • Warn macOS users that mount implementation is changing (Nick Craig-Wood) • to test the new implementation use rclone cmount instead of rclone mount • this is because the library rclone uses has dropped macOS support • rc interface • Add call for unmount all (Chaitanya Bankanhal) • Make mount/mount remote control take vfsOpt option (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add mountOpt to mount/mount (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add VFS and Mount options to mount/listmounts (Nick Craig-Wood) • Catch panics in cgofuse initialization and turn into error messages (Nick Craig-Wood) • Always supply stat information in Readdir (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add support for reading unknown length files using direct IO (Windows) (Nick Craig- Wood) • Fix On Windows don’t add -o uid/gid=-1 if user supplies -o uid/gid. (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix macOS losing directory contents in cmount (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix volume name broken in recent refactor (Nick Craig-Wood) • VFS • Implement partial reads for --vfs-cache-mode full (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --vfs-writeback option to delay writes back to cloud storage (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --vfs-read-ahead parameter for use with --vfs-cache-mode full (Nick Craig-Wood) • Restart pending uploads on restart of the cache (Nick Craig-Wood) • Support synchronous cache space recovery upon ENOSPC (Leo Luan) • Allow ReadAt and WriteAt to run concurrently with themselves (Nick Craig-Wood) • Change modtime of file before upload to current (Rob Calistri) • Recommend --vfs-cache-modes writes on backends which can’t stream (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add an optional fs parameter to vfs rc methods (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix errors when using > 260 char files in the cache in Windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix renaming of items while they are being uploaded (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix very high load caused by slow directory listings (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix renamed files not being uploaded with --vfs-cache-mode minimal (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix directory locking caused by slow directory listings (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix saving from chrome without --vfs-cache-mode writes (Nick Craig-Wood) • Local • Add --local-no-updated to provide a consistent view of changing objects (Nick Craig- Wood) • Add --local-no-set-modtime option to prevent modtime changes (tyhuber1) • Fix race conditions updating and reading Object metadata (Nick Craig-Wood) • Cache • Make any created backends be cached to fix rc problems (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix dedupe on caches wrapping drives (Nick Craig-Wood) • Crypt • Add --crypt-server-side-across-configs flag (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make any created backends be cached to fix rc problems (Nick Craig-Wood) • Alias • Make any created backends be cached to fix rc problems (Nick Craig-Wood) • Azure Blob • Don’t compile on < go1.13 after dependency update (Nick Craig-Wood) • B2 • Implement server side copy for files > 5GB (Nick Craig-Wood) • Cancel in progress multipart uploads and copies on rclone exit (Nick Craig-Wood) • Note that b2’s encoding now allows but rclone’s hasn’t changed (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix transfers when using download_url (Nick Craig-Wood) • Box • Implement rclone cleanup (buengese) • Cancel in progress multipart uploads and copies on rclone exit (Nick Craig-Wood) • Allow authentication with access token (David) • Chunker • Make any created backends be cached to fix rc problems (Nick Craig-Wood) • Drive • Add rclone backend drives to list shared drives (teamdrives) (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement rclone backend untrash (Nick Craig-Wood) • Work around drive bug which didn’t set modtime of copied docs (Nick Craig-Wood) • Added --drive-starred-only to only show starred files (Jay McEntire) • Deprecate --drive-alternate-export as it is no longer needed (themylogin) • Fix duplication of Google docs on server side copy (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix “panic: send on closed channel” when recycling dir entries (Nick Craig-Wood) • Dropbox • Add copyright detector info in limitations section in the docs (Alex Guerrero) • Fix rclone link by removing expires parameter (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fichier • Detect Flood detected: IP Locked error and sleep for 30s (Nick Craig-Wood) • FTP • Add explicit TLS support (Heiko Bornholdt) • Add support for --dump bodies and --dump auth for debugging (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix interoperation with pure-ftpd (Nick Craig-Wood) • Google Cloud Storage • Add support for anonymous access (Kai Lüke) • Jottacloud • Bring back legacy authentification for use with whitelabel versions (buengese) • Switch to new api root - also implement a very ugly workaround for the DirMove failures (buengese) • Onedrive • Rework cancel of multipart uploads on rclone exit (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement rclone cleanup (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --onedrive-no-versions flag to remove old versions (Nick Craig-Wood) • Pcloud • Implement rclone link for public link creation (buengese) • Qingstor • Cancel in progress multipart uploads on rclone exit (Nick Craig-Wood) • S3 • Preserve metadata when doing multipart copy (Nick Craig-Wood) • Cancel in progress multipart uploads and copies on rclone exit (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add rclone link for public link sharing (Roman Kredentser) • Add rclone backend restore command to restore objects from GLACIER (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add rclone cleanup and rclone backend cleanup to clean unfinished multipart uploads (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add rclone backend list-multipart-uploads to list unfinished multipart uploads (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --s3-max-upload-parts support (Kamil Trzciński) • Add --s3-no-check-bucket for minimising rclone transactions and perms (Nick Craig- Wood) • Add --s3-profile and --s3-shared-credentials-file options (Nick Craig-Wood) • Use regional s3 us-east-1 endpoint (David) • Add Scaleway provider (Vincent Feltz) • Update IBM COS endpoints (Egor Margineanu) • Reduce the default --s3-copy-cutoff to < 5GB for Backblaze S3 compatibility (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix detection of bucket existing (Nick Craig-Wood) • SFTP • Use the absolute path instead of the relative path for listing for improved compatibility (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --sftp-subsystem and --sftp-server-command options (aus) • Swift • Fix dangling large objects breaking the listing (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix purge not deleting directory markers (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix update multipart object removing all of its own parts (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix missing hash from object returned from upload (Nick Craig-Wood) • Tardigrade • Upgrade to uplink v1.2.0 (Kaloyan Raev) • Union • Fix writing with the all policy (Nick Craig-Wood) • WebDAV • Fix directory creation with 4shared (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.52.3 - 2020-08-07 See commits (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/compare/v1.52.2...v1.52.3) • Bug Fixes • docs • Disable smart typography (eg en-dash) in MANUAL.* and man page (Nick Craig-Wood) • Update install.md to reflect minimum Go version (Evan Harris) • Update install from source instructions (Nick Craig-Wood) • make_manual: Support SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH (Morten Linderud) • log: Fix –use-json-log going to stderr not –log-file on Windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • serve dlna: Fix file list on Samsung Series 6+ TVs (Matteo Pietro Dazzi) • sync: Fix deadlock with –track-renames-strategy modtime (Nick Craig-Wood) • Cache • Fix moveto/copyto remote:file remote:file2 (Nick Craig-Wood) • Drive • Stop using root_folder_id as a cache (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make dangling shortcuts appear in listings (Nick Craig-Wood) • Drop “Disabling ListR” messages down to debug (Nick Craig-Wood) • Workaround and policy for Google Drive API (Dmitry Ustalov) • FTP • Add note to docs about home vs root directory selection (Nick Craig-Wood) • Onedrive • Fix reverting to Copy when Move would have worked (Nick Craig-Wood) • Avoid comma rendered in URL in onedrive.md (Kevin) • Pcloud • Fix oauth on European region “eapi.pcloud.com” (Nick Craig-Wood) • S3 • Fix bucket Region auto detection when Region unset in config (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.52.2 - 2020-06-24 See commits (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/compare/v1.52.1...v1.52.2) • Bug Fixes • build • Fix docker release build action (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix custom timezone in Docker image (NoLooseEnds) • check: Fix misleading message which printed errors instead of differences (Nick Craig- Wood) • errors: Add WSAECONNREFUSED and more to the list of retriable Windows errors (Nick Craig-Wood) • rcd: Fix incorrect prometheus metrics (Gary Kim) • serve restic: Fix flags so they use environment variables (Nick Craig-Wood) • serve webdav: Fix flags so they use environment variables (Nick Craig-Wood) • sync: Fix –track-renames-strategy modtime (Nick Craig-Wood) • Drive • Fix not being able to delete a directory with a trashed shortcut (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix creating a directory inside a shortcut (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix –drive-impersonate with cached root_folder_id (Nick Craig-Wood) • SFTP • Fix SSH key PEM loading (Zac Rubin) • Swift • Speed up deletes by not retrying segment container deletes (Nick Craig-Wood) • Tardigrade • Upgrade to uplink v1.1.1 (Caleb Case) • WebDAV • Fix free/used display for rclone about/df for certain backends (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.52.1 - 2020-06-10 See commits (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/compare/v1.52.0...v1.52.1) • Bug Fixes • lib/file: Fix SetSparse on Windows 7 which fixes downloads of files > 250MB (Nick Craig-Wood) • build • Update go.mod to go1.14 to enable -mod=vendor build (Nick Craig-Wood) • Remove quicktest from Dockerfile (Nick Craig-Wood) • Build Docker images with GitHub actions (Matteo Pietro Dazzi) • Update Docker build workflows (Nick Craig-Wood) • Set user_allow_other in /etc/fuse.conf in the Docker image (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix xgo build after go1.14 go.mod update (Nick Craig-Wood) • docs • Add link to source and modified time to footer of every page (Nick Craig-Wood) • Remove manually set dates and use git dates instead (Nick Craig-Wood) • Minor tense, punctuation, brevity and positivity changes for the home page (edwardxml) • Remove leading slash in page reference in footer when present (Nick Craig-Wood) • Note commands which need obscured input in the docs (Nick Craig-Wood) • obscure: Write more help as we are referencing it elsewhere (Nick Craig-Wood) • VFS • Fix OS vs Unix path confusion - fixes ChangeNotify on Windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • Drive • Fix missing items when listing using –fast-list / ListR (Nick Craig-Wood) • Putio • Fix panic on Object.Open (Cenk Alti) • S3 • Fix upload of single files into buckets without create permission (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix –header-upload (Nick Craig-Wood) • Tardigrade • Fix listing bug by upgrading to v1.0.7 • Set UserAgent to rclone (Caleb Case) v1.52.0 - 2020-05-27 Special thanks to Martin Michlmayr for proof reading and correcting all the docs and Edward Barker for helping re-write the front page. See commits (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/compare/v1.51.0...v1.52.0) • New backends • Tardigrade (https://rclone.org/tardigrade/) backend for use with storj.io (Caleb Case) • Union (https://rclone.org/union/) re-write to have multiple writable remotes (Max Sum) • Seafile for Seafile server (Fred @creativeprojects) • New commands • backend: command for backend specific commands (see backends) (Nick Craig-Wood) • cachestats: Deprecate in favour of rclone backend stats cache: (Nick Craig-Wood) • dbhashsum: Deprecate in favour of rclone hashsum DropboxHash (Nick Craig-Wood) • New Features • Add --header-download and --header-upload flags for setting HTTP headers when uploading/downloading (Tim Gallant) • Add --header flag to add HTTP headers to every HTTP transaction (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --check-first to do all checking before starting transfers (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --track-renames-strategy for configurable matching criteria for --track-renames (Bernd Schoolmann) • Add --cutoff-mode hard,soft,catious (Shing Kit Chan & Franklyn Tackitt) • Filter flags (eg --files-from -) can read from stdin (fishbullet) • Add --error-on-no-transfer option (Jon Fautley) • Implement --order-by xxx,mixed for copying some small and some big files (Nick Craig- Wood) • Allow --max-backlog to be negative meaning as large as possible (Nick Craig-Wood) • Added --no-unicode-normalization flag to allow Unicode filenames to remain unique (Ben Zenker) • Allow --min-age/--max-age to take a date as well as a duration (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add rename statistics for file and directory renames (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add statistics output to JSON log (reddi) • Make stats be printed on non-zero exit code (Nick Craig-Wood) • When running --password-command allow use of stdin (Sébastien Gross) • Stop empty strings being a valid remote path (Nick Craig-Wood) • accounting: support WriterTo for less memory copying (Nick Craig-Wood) • build • Update to use go1.14 for the build (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add -trimpath to release build for reproduceable builds (Nick Craig-Wood) • Remove GOOS and GOARCH from Dockerfile (Brandon Philips) • config • Fsync the config file after writing to save more reliably (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --obscure and --no-obscure flags to config create/update (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make config show take remote: as well as remote (Nick Craig-Wood) • copyurl: Add --no-clobber flag (Denis) • delete: Added --rmdirs flag to delete directories as well (Kush) • filter: Added --files-from-raw flag (Ankur Gupta) • genautocomplete: Add support for fish shell (Matan Rosenberg) • log: Add support for syslog LOCAL facilities (Patryk Jakuszew) • lsjson: Add --hash-type parameter and use it in lsf to speed up hashing (Nick Craig- Wood) • rc • Add -o/--opt and -a/--arg for more structured input (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement backend/command for running backend specific commands remotely (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add mount/mount command for starting rclone mount via the API (Chaitanya) • rcd: Add Prometheus metrics support (Gary Kim) • serve http • Added a --template flag for user defined markup (calistri) • Add Last-Modified headers to files and directories (Nick Craig-Wood) • serve sftp: Add support for multiple host keys by repeating --key flag (Maxime Suret) • touch: Add --localtime flag to make --timestamp localtime not UTC (Nick Craig-Wood) • Bug Fixes • accounting • Restore “Max number of stats groups reached” log line (Michał Matczuk) • Correct exitcode on Transfer Limit Exceeded flag. (Anuar Serdaliyev) • Reset bytes read during copy retry (Ankur Gupta) • Fix race clearing stats (Nick Craig-Wood) • copy: Only create empty directories when they don’t exist on the remote (Ishuah Kariuki) • dedupe: Stop dedupe deleting files with identical IDs (Nick Craig-Wood) • oauth • Use custom http client so that --no-check-certificate is honored by oauth token fetch (Mark Spieth) • Replace deprecated oauth2.NoContext (Lars Lehtonen) • operations • Fix setting the timestamp on Windows for multithread copy (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make rcat obey --ignore-checksum (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make --max-transfer more accurate (Nick Craig-Wood) • rc • Fix dropped error (Lars Lehtonen) • Fix misplaced http server config (Xiaoxing Ye) • Disable duplicate log (ElonH) • serve dlna • Cds: don’t specify childCount at all when unknown (Dan Walters) • Cds: use modification time as date in dlna metadata (Dan Walters) • serve restic: Fix tests after restic project removed vendoring (Nick Craig-Wood) • sync • Fix incorrect “nothing to transfer” message using --delete-before (Nick Craig-Wood) • Only create empty directories when they don’t exist on the remote (Ishuah Kariuki) • Mount • Add --async-read flag to disable asynchronous reads (Nick Craig-Wood) • Ignore --allow-root flag with a warning as it has been removed upstream (Nick Craig- Wood) • Warn if --allow-non-empty used on Windows and clarify docs (Nick Craig-Wood) • Constrain to go1.13 or above otherwise bazil.org/fuse fails to compile (Nick Craig- Wood) • Fix fail because of too long volume name (evileye) • Report 1PB free for unknown disk sizes (Nick Craig-Wood) • Map more rclone errors into file systems errors (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix disappearing cwd problem (Nick Craig-Wood) • Use ReaddirPlus on Windows to improve directory listing performance (Nick Craig-Wood) • Send a hint as to whether the filesystem is case insensitive or not (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add rc command mount/types (Nick Craig-Wood) • Change maximum leaf name length to 1024 bytes (Nick Craig-Wood) • VFS • Add --vfs-read-wait and --vfs-write-wait flags to control time waiting for a sequential read/write (Nick Craig-Wood) • Change default --vfs-read-wait to 20ms (it was 5ms and not configurable) (Nick Craig- Wood) • Make df output more consistent on a rclone mount. (Yves G) • Report 1PB free for unknown disk sizes (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix race condition caused by unlocked reading of Dir.path (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make File lock and Dir lock not overlap to avoid deadlock (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement lock ordering between File and Dir to eliminate deadlocks (Nick Craig-Wood) • Factor the vfs cache into its own package (Nick Craig-Wood) • Pin the Fs in use in the Fs cache (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add SetSys() methods to Node to allow caching stuff on a node (Nick Craig-Wood) • Ignore file not found errors from Hash in Read.Release (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix hang in read wait code (Nick Craig-Wood) • Local • Speed up multi thread downloads by using sparse files on Windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement --local-no-sparse flag for disabling sparse files (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement rclone backend noop for testing purposes (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix “file not found” errors on post transfer Hash calculation (Nick Craig-Wood) • Cache • Implement rclone backend stats command (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix Server Side Copy with Temp Upload (Brandon McNama) • Remove Unused Functions (Lars Lehtonen) • Disable race tests until bbolt is fixed (Nick Craig-Wood) • Move methods used for testing into test file (greatroar) • Add Pin and Unpin and canonicalised lookup (Nick Craig-Wood) • Use proper import path go.etcd.io/bbolt (Robert-André Mauchin) • Crypt • Calculate hashes for uploads from local disk (Nick Craig-Wood) • This allows crypted Jottacloud uploads without using local disk • This means crypted s3/b2 uploads will now have hashes • Added rclone backend decode/encode commands to replicate functionality of cryptdecode (Anagh Kumar Baranwal) • Get rid of the unused Cipher interface as it obfuscated the code (Nick Craig-Wood) • Azure Blob • Implement streaming of unknown sized files so rcat is now supported (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement memory pooling to control memory use (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --azureblob-disable-checksum flag (Nick Craig-Wood) • Retry InvalidBlobOrBlock error as it may indicate block concurrency problems (Nick Craig-Wood) • Remove unused Object.parseTimeString() (Lars Lehtonen) • Fix permission error on SAS URL limited to container (Nick Craig-Wood) • B2 • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Ignore directory markers at the root also (Nick Craig-Wood) • Force the case of the SHA1 to lowercase (Nick Craig-Wood) • Remove unused largeUpload.clearUploadURL() (Lars Lehtonen) • Box • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Implement About to read size used (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add token renew function for jwt auth (David Bramwell) • Added support for interchangeable root folder for Box backend (Sunil Patra) • Remove unnecessary iat from jws claims (David) • Drive • Follow shortcuts by default, skip with --drive-skip-shortcuts (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement rclone backend shortcut command for creating shortcuts (Nick Craig-Wood) • Added rclone backend command to change service_account_file and chunk_size (Anagh Kumar Baranwal) • Fix missing files when using --fast-list and --drive-shared-with-me (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix duplicate items when using --drive-shared-with-me (Nick Craig-Wood) • Extend --drive-stop-on-upload-limit to respond to teamDriveFileLimitExceeded. (harry) • Don’t delete files with multiple parents to avoid data loss (Nick Craig-Wood) • Server side copy docs use default description if empty (Nick Craig-Wood) • Dropbox • Make error insufficient space to be fatal (harry) • Add info about required redirect url (Elan Ruusamäe) • Fichier • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Implement custom pacer to deal with the new rate limiting (buengese) • FTP • Fix lockup when using concurrency limit on failed connections (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix lockup on failed upload when using concurrency limit (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix lockup on Close failures when using concurrency limit (Nick Craig-Wood) • Work around pureftp sending spurious 150 messages (Nick Craig-Wood) • Google Cloud Storage • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add ARCHIVE storage class to help (Adam Stroud) • Ignore directory markers at the root (Nick Craig-Wood) • Googlephotos • Make the start year configurable (Daven) • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Create feature/favorites directory (Brandon Philips) • Fix “concurrent map write” error (Nick Craig-Wood) • Don’t put an image in error message (Nick Craig-Wood) • HTTP • Improved directory listing with new template from Caddy project (calisro) • Jottacloud • Implement --jottacloud-trashed-only (buengese) • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Use RawURLEncoding when decoding base64 encoded login token (buengese) • Implement cleanup (buengese) • Update docs regarding cleanup, removed remains from old auth, and added warning about special mountpoints. (albertony) • Mailru • Describe 2FA requirements (valery1707) • Onedrive • Implement --onedrive-server-side-across-configs (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Fix occasional 416 errors on multipart uploads (Nick Craig-Wood) • Added maximum chunk size limit warning in the docs (Harry) • Fix missing drive on config (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make error quotaLimitReached to be fatal (harry) • Opendrive • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Pcloud • Added support for interchangeable root folder for pCloud backend (Sunil Patra) • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Fix initial config “Auth state doesn’t match” message (Nick Craig-Wood) • Premiumizeme • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Prune unused functions (Lars Lehtonen) • Putio • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make downloading files use the rclone http Client (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix parsing of remotes with leading and trailing / (Nick Craig-Wood) • Qingstor • Make rclone cleanup remove pending multipart uploads older than 24h (Nick Craig-Wood) • Try harder to cancel failed multipart uploads (Nick Craig-Wood) • Prune multiUploader.list() (Lars Lehtonen) • Lint fix (Lars Lehtonen) • S3 • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Use memory pool for buffer allocations (Maciej Zimnoch) • Add SSE-C support for AWS, Ceph, and MinIO (Jack Anderson) • Fail fast multipart upload (Michał Matczuk) • Report errors on bucket creation (mkdir) correctly (Nick Craig-Wood) • Specify that Minio supports URL encoding in listings (Nick Craig-Wood) • Added 500 as retryErrorCode (Michał Matczuk) • Use --low-level-retries as the number of SDK retries (Aleksandar Janković) • Fix multipart abort context (Aleksandar Jankovic) • Replace deprecated session.New() with session.NewSession() (Lars Lehtonen) • Use the provided size parameter when allocating a new memory pool (Joachim Brandon LeBlanc) • Use rclone’s low level retries instead of AWS SDK to fix listing retries (Nick Craig- Wood) • Ignore directory markers at the root also (Nick Craig-Wood) • Use single memory pool (Michał Matczuk) • Do not resize buf on put to memBuf (Michał Matczuk) • Improve docs for --s3-disable-checksum (Nick Craig-Wood) • Don’t leak memory or tokens in edge cases for multipart upload (Nick Craig-Wood) • Seafile • Implement 2FA (Fred) • SFTP • Added --sftp-pem-key to support inline key files (calisro) • Fix post transfer copies failing with 0 size when using set_modtime=false (Nick Craig- Wood) • Sharefile • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Sugarsync • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Swift • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix cosmetic issue in error message (Martin Michlmayr) • Union • Implement multiple writable remotes (Max Sum) • Fix server-side copy (Max Sum) • Implement ListR (Max Sum) • Enable ListR when upstreams contain local (Max Sum) • WebDAV • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) • Fix X-OC-Mtime header for Transip compatibility (Nick Craig-Wood) • Report full and consistent usage with about (Yves G) • Yandex • Add support for --header-upload and --header-download (Tim Gallant) v1.51.0 - 2020-02-01 • New backends • Memory (https://rclone.org/memory/) (Nick Craig-Wood) • Sugarsync (https://rclone.org/sugarsync/) (Nick Craig-Wood) • New Features • Adjust all backends to have --backend-encoding parameter (Nick Craig-Wood) • this enables the encoding for special characters to be adjusted or disabled • Add --max-duration flag to control the maximum duration of a transfer session (boosh) • Add --expect-continue-timeout flag, default 1s (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --no-check-dest flag for copying without testing the destination (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement --order-by flag to order transfers (Nick Craig-Wood) • accounting • Don’t show entries in both transferring and checking (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add option to delete stats (Aleksandar Jankovic) • build • Compress the test builds with gzip (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement a framework for starting test servers during tests (Nick Craig-Wood) • cmd: Always print elapsed time to tenth place seconds in progress (Gary Kim) • config • Add --password-command to allow dynamic config password (Damon Permezel) • Give config questions default values (Nick Craig-Wood) • Check a remote exists when creating a new one (Nick Craig-Wood) • copyurl: Add --stdout flag to write to stdout (Nick Craig-Wood) • dedupe: Implement keep smallest too (Nick Craig-Wood) • hashsum: Add flag --base64 flag (landall) • lsf: Speed up on s3/swift/etc by not reading mimetype by default (Nick Craig-Wood) • lsjson: Add --no-mimetype flag (Nick Craig-Wood) • rc: Add methods to turn on blocking and mutex profiling (Nick Craig-Wood) • rcd • Adding group parameter to stats (Chaitanya) • Move webgui apart; option to disable browser (Xiaoxing Ye) • serve sftp: Add support for public key with auth proxy (Paul Tinsley) • stats: Show deletes in stats and hide zero stats (anuar45) • Bug Fixes • accounting • Fix error counter counting multiple times (Ankur Gupta) • Fix error count shown as checks (Cnly) • Clear finished transfer in stats-reset (Maciej Zimnoch) • Added StatsInfo locking in statsGroups sum function (Michał Matczuk) • asyncreader: Fix EOF error (buengese) • check: Fix --one-way recursing more directories than it needs to (Nick Craig-Wood) • chunkedreader: Disable hash calculation for first segment (Nick Craig-Wood) • config • Do not open browser on headless on drive/gcs/google photos (Xiaoxing Ye) • SetValueAndSave ignore error if config section does not exist yet (buengese) • cmd: Fix completion with an encrypted config (Danil Semelenov) • dbhashsum: Stop it returning UNSUPPORTED on dropbox (Nick Craig-Wood) • dedupe: Add missing modes to help string (Nick Craig-Wood) • operations • Fix dedupe continuing on errors like insufficientFilePermisson (SezalAgrawal) • Clear accounting before low level retry (Maciej Zimnoch) • Write debug message when hashes could not be checked (Ole Schütt) • Move interface assertion to tests to remove pflag dependency (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make NewOverrideObjectInfo public and factor uses (Nick Craig-Wood) • proxy: Replace use of bcrypt with sha256 (Nick Craig-Wood) • vendor • Update bazil.org/fuse to fix FreeBSD 12.1 (Nick Craig-Wood) • Update github.com/t3rm1n4l/go-mega to fix mega “illegal base64 data at input byte 22” (Nick Craig-Wood) • Update termbox-go to fix ncdu command on FreeBSD (Kuang-che Wu) • Update t3rm1n4l/go-mega - fixes mega: couldn’t login: crypto/aes: invalid key size 0 (Nick Craig-Wood) • Mount • Enable async reads for a 20% speedup (Nick Craig-Wood) • Replace use of WriteAt with Write for cache mode >= writes and O_APPEND (Brett Dutro) • Make sure we call unmount when exiting (Nick Craig-Wood) • Don’t build on go1.10 as bazil/fuse no longer supports it (Nick Craig-Wood) • When setting dates discard out of range dates (Nick Craig-Wood) • VFS • Add a newly created file straight into the directory (Nick Craig-Wood) • Only calculate one hash for reads for a speedup (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make ReadAt for non cached files work better with non-sequential reads (Nick Craig- Wood) • Fix edge cases when reading ModTime from file (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make sure existing files opened for write show correct size (Nick Craig-Wood) • Don’t cache the path in RW file objects to fix renaming (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix rename of open files when using the VFS cache (Nick Craig-Wood) • When renaming files in the cache, rename the cache item in memory too (Nick Craig- Wood) • Fix open file renaming on drive when using --vfs-cache-mode writes (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix incorrect modtime for mv into mount with --vfs-cache-modes writes (Nick Craig- Wood) • On rename, rename in cache too if the file exists (Anagh Kumar Baranwal) • Local • Make source file being updated errors be NoLowLevelRetry errors (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix update of hidden files on Windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • Cache • Follow move of upstream library github.com/coreos/bbolt github.com/etcd-io/bbolt (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix fatal error: concurrent map writes (Nick Craig-Wood) • Crypt • Reorder the filename encryption options (Thomas Eales) • Correctly handle trailing dot (buengese) • Chunker • Reduce length of temporary suffix (Ivan Andreev) • Drive • Add --drive-stop-on-upload-limit flag to stop syncs when upload limit reached (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --drive-use-shared-date to use date file was shared instead of modified date (Garry McNulty) • Make sure invalid auth for teamdrives always reports an error (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix --fast-list when using appDataFolder (Nick Craig-Wood) • Use multipart resumable uploads for streaming and uploads in mount (Nick Craig-Wood) • Log an ERROR if an incomplete search is returned (Nick Craig-Wood) • Hide dangerous config from the configurator (Nick Craig-Wood) • Dropbox • Treat insufficient_space errors as non retriable errors (Nick Craig-Wood) • Jottacloud • Use new auth method used by official client (buengese) • Add URL to generate Login Token to config wizard (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add support whitelabel versions (buengese) • Koofr • Use rclone HTTP client. (jaKa) • Onedrive • Add Sites.Read.All permission (Benjamin Richter) • Add support “Retry-After” header (Motonori IWAMURO) • Opendrive • Implement --opendrive-chunk-size (Nick Craig-Wood) • S3 • Re-implement multipart upload to fix memory issues (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --s3-copy-cutoff for size to switch to multipart copy (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add new region Asia Patific (Hong Kong) (Outvi V) • Reduce memory usage streaming files by reducing max stream upload size (Nick Craig- Wood) • Add --s3-list-chunk option for bucket listing (Thomas Kriechbaumer) • Force path style bucket access to off for AWS deprecation (Nick Craig-Wood) • Use AWS web identity role provider if available (Tennix) • Add StackPath Object Storage Support (Dave Koston) • Fix ExpiryWindow value (Aleksandar Jankovic) • Fix DisableChecksum condition (Aleksandar Janković) • Fix URL decoding of NextMarker (Nick Craig-Wood) • SFTP • Add --sftp-skip-links to skip symlinks and non regular files (Nick Craig-Wood) • Retry Creation of Connection (Sebastian Brandt) • Fix “failed to parse private key file: ssh: not an encrypted key” error (Nick Craig- Wood) • Open files for update write only to fix AWS SFTP interop (Nick Craig-Wood) • Swift • Reserve segments of dynamic large object when delete objects in container what was enabled versioning. (Nguyễn Hữu Luân) • Fix parsing of X-Object-Manifest (Nick Craig-Wood) • Update OVH API endpoint (unbelauscht) • WebDAV • Make nextcloud only upload SHA1 checksums (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix case of “Bearer” in Authorization: header to agree with RFC (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add Referer header to fix problems with WAFs (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.50.2 - 2019-11-19 • Bug Fixes • accounting: Fix memory leak on retries operations (Nick Craig-Wood) • Drive • Fix listing of the root directory with drive.files scope (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix –drive-root-folder-id with team/shared drives (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.50.1 - 2019-11-02 • Bug Fixes • hash: Fix accidentally changed hash names for DropboxHash and CRC-32 (Nick Craig-Wood) • fshttp: Fix error reporting on tpslimit token bucket errors (Nick Craig-Wood) • fshttp: Don’t print token bucket errors on context cancelled (Nick Craig-Wood) • Local • Fix listings of . on Windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • Onedrive • Fix DirMove/Move after Onedrive change (Xiaoxing Ye) v1.50.0 - 2019-10-26 • New backends • Citrix Sharefile (https://rclone.org/sharefile/) (Nick Craig-Wood) • Chunker (https://rclone.org/chunker/) - an overlay backend to split files into smaller parts (Ivan Andreev) • Mail.ru Cloud (https://rclone.org/mailru/) (Ivan Andreev) • New Features • encodings (Fabian Möller & Nick Craig-Wood) • All backends now use file name encoding to ensure any file name can be written to any backend. • See the restricted file name docs (https://rclone.org/overview/#restricted- filenames) for more info and the local backend docs. • Some file names may look different in rclone if you are using any control characters in names or unicode FULLWIDTH symbols (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halfwidth_and_Fullwidth_Forms_(Unicode_block)). • build • Update to use go1.13 for the build (Nick Craig-Wood) • Drop support for go1.9 (Nick Craig-Wood) • Build rclone with GitHub actions (Nick Craig-Wood) • Convert python scripts to python3 (Nick Craig-Wood) • Swap Azure/go-ansiterm for mattn/go-colorable (Nick Craig-Wood) • Dockerfile fixes (Matei David) • Add plugin support (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#writing-a-plugin) for backends and commands (Richard Patel) • config • Use alternating Red/Green in config to make more obvious (Nick Craig-Wood) • contrib • Add sample DLNA server Docker Compose manifest. (pataquets) • Add sample WebDAV server Docker Compose manifest. (pataquets) • copyurl • Add --auto-filename flag for using file name from URL in destination path (Denis) • serve dlna: • Many compatibility improvements (Dan Walters) • Support for external srt subtitles (Dan Walters) • rc • Added command core/quit (Saksham Khanna) • Bug Fixes • sync • Make --update/-u not transfer files that haven’t changed (Nick Craig-Wood) • Free objects after they come out of the transfer pipe to save memory (Nick Craig- Wood) • Fix --files-from without --no-traverse doing a recursive scan (Nick Craig-Wood) • operations • Fix accounting for server side copies (Nick Craig-Wood) • Display `All duplicates removed' only if dedupe successful (Sezal Agrawal) • Display `Deleted X extra copies' only if dedupe successful (Sezal Agrawal) • accounting • Only allow up to 100 completed transfers in the accounting list to save memory (Nick Craig-Wood) • Cull the old time ranges when possible to save memory (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix panic due to server-side copy fallback (Ivan Andreev) • Fix memory leak noticeable for transfers of large numbers of objects (Nick Craig- Wood) • Fix total duration calculation (Nick Craig-Wood) • cmd • Fix environment variables not setting command line flags (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make autocomplete compatible with bash’s posix mode for macOS (Danil Semelenov) • Make --progress work in git bash on Windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix `compopt: command not found' on autocomplete on macOS (Danil Semelenov) • config • Fix setting of non top level flags from environment variables (Nick Craig-Wood) • Check config names more carefully and report errors (Nick Craig-Wood) • Remove error: can’t use --size-only and --ignore-size together. (Nick Craig-Wood) • filter: Prevent mixing options when --files-from is in use (Michele Caci) • serve sftp: Fix crash on unsupported operations (eg Readlink) (Nick Craig-Wood) • Mount • Allow files of unknown size to be read properly (Nick Craig-Wood) • Skip tests on <= 2 CPUs to avoid lockup (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix panic on File.Open (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix “mount_fusefs: -o timeout=: option not supported” on FreeBSD (Nick Craig-Wood) • Don’t pass huge filenames (>4k) to FUSE as it can’t cope (Nick Craig-Wood) • VFS • Add flag --vfs-case-insensitive for windows/macOS mounts (Ivan Andreev) • Make objects of unknown size readable through the VFS (Nick Craig-Wood) • Move writeback of dirty data out of close() method into its own method (FlushWrites) and remove close() call from Flush() (Brett Dutro) • Stop empty dirs disappearing when renamed on bucket based remotes (Nick Craig-Wood) • Stop change notify polling clearing so much of the directory cache (Nick Craig-Wood) • Azure Blob • Disable logging to the Windows event log (Nick Craig-Wood) • B2 • Remove unverified: prefix on sha1 to improve interop (eg with CyberDuck) (Nick Craig- Wood) • Box • Add options to get access token via JWT auth (David) • Drive • Disable HTTP/2 by default to work around INTERNAL_ERROR problems (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make sure that drive root ID is always canonical (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix --drive-shared-with-me from the root with lsand --fast-list (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix ChangeNotify polling for shared drives (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix change notify polling when using appDataFolder (Nick Craig-Wood) • Dropbox • Make disallowed filenames errors not retry (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix nil pointer exception on restricted files (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fichier • Fix accessing files > 2GB on 32 bit systems (Nick Craig-Wood) • FTP • Allow disabling EPSV mode (Jon Fautley) • HTTP • HEAD directory entries in parallel to speedup (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --http-no-head to stop rclone doing HEAD in listings (Nick Craig-Wood) • Putio • Add ability to resume uploads (Cenk Alti) • S3 • Fix signature v2_auth headers (Anthony Rusdi) • Fix encoding for control characters (Nick Craig-Wood) • Only ask for URL encoded directory listings if we need them on Ceph (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add option for multipart failure behaviour (Aleksandar Jankovic) • Support for multipart copy (庄天翼) • Fix nil pointer reference if no metadata returned for object (Nick Craig-Wood) • SFTP • Fix --sftp-ask-password trying to contact the ssh agent (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix hashes of files with backslashes (Nick Craig-Wood) • Include more ciphers with --sftp-use-insecure-cipher (Carlos Ferreyra) • WebDAV • Parse and return Sharepoint error response (Henning Surmeier) v1.49.5 - 2019-10-05 • Bug Fixes • Revert back to go1.12.x for the v1.49.x builds as go1.13.x was causing issues (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix rpm packages by using master builds of nfpm (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix macOS build after brew changes (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.49.4 - 2019-09-29 • Bug Fixes • cmd/rcd: Address ZipSlip vulnerability (Richard Patel) • accounting: Fix file handle leak on errors (Nick Craig-Wood) • oauthutil: Fix security problem when running with two users on the same machine (Nick Craig-Wood) • FTP • Fix listing of an empty root returning: error dir not found (Nick Craig-Wood) • S3 • Fix SetModTime on GLACIER/ARCHIVE objects and implement set/get tier (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.49.3 - 2019-09-15 • Bug Fixes • accounting • Fix total duration calculation (Aleksandar Jankovic) • Fix “file already closed” on transfer retries (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.49.2 - 2019-09-08 • New Features • build: Add Docker workflow support (Alfonso Montero) • Bug Fixes • accounting: Fix locking in Transfer to avoid deadlock with --progress (Nick Craig- Wood) • docs: Fix template argument for mktemp in install.sh (Cnly) • operations: Fix -u/--update with google photos / files of unknown size (Nick Craig- Wood) • rc: Fix docs for config/create /update /password (Nick Craig-Wood) • Google Cloud Storage • Fix need for elevated permissions on SetModTime (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.49.1 - 2019-08-28 • Bug Fixes • config: Fix generated passwords being stored as empty password (Nick Craig-Wood) • rcd: Added missing parameter for web-gui info logs. (Chaitanya) • Googlephotos • Fix crash on error response (Nick Craig-Wood) • Onedrive • Fix crash on error response (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.49.0 - 2019-08-26 • New backends • 1fichier (https://rclone.org/fichier/) (Laura Hausmann) • Google Photos (https://rclone.org/googlephotos/) (Nick Craig-Wood) • Putio (https://rclone.org/putio/) (Cenk Alti) • premiumize.me (https://rclone.org/premiumizeme/) (Nick Craig-Wood) • New Features • Experimental web GUI (https://rclone.org/gui/) (Chaitanya Bankanhal) • Implement --compare-dest & --copy-dest (yparitcher) • Implement --suffix without --backup-dir for backup to current dir (yparitcher) • config reconnect to re-login (re-run the oauth login) for the backend. (Nick Craig- Wood) • config userinfo to discover which user you are logged in as. (Nick Craig-Wood) • config disconnect to disconnect you (log out) from the backend. (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --use-json-log for JSON logging (justinalin) • Add context propagation to rclone (Aleksandar Jankovic) • Reworking internal statistics interfaces so they work with rc jobs (Aleksandar Jankovic) • Add Higher units for ETA (AbelThar) • Update rclone logos to new design (Andreas Chlupka) • hash: Add CRC-32 support (Cenk Alti) • help showbackend: Fixed advanced option category when there are no standard options (buengese) • ncdu: Display/Copy to Clipboard Current Path (Gary Kim) • operations: • Run hashing operations in parallel (Nick Craig-Wood) • Don’t calculate checksums when using --ignore-checksum (Nick Craig-Wood) • Check transfer hashes when using --size-only mode (Nick Craig-Wood) • Disable multi thread copy for local to local copies (Nick Craig-Wood) • Debug successful hashes as well as failures (Nick Craig-Wood) • rc • Add ability to stop async jobs (Aleksandar Jankovic) • Return current settings if core/bwlimit called without parameters (Nick Craig-Wood) • Rclone-WebUI integration with rclone (Chaitanya Bankanhal) • Added command line parameter to control the cross origin resource sharing (CORS) in the rcd. (Security Improvement) (Chaitanya Bankanhal) • Add anchor tags to the docs so links are consistent (Nick Craig-Wood) • Remove _async key from input parameters after parsing so later operations won’t get confused (buengese) • Add call to clear stats (Aleksandar Jankovic) • rcd • Auto-login for web-gui (Chaitanya Bankanhal) • Implement --baseurl for rcd and web-gui (Chaitanya Bankanhal) • serve dlna • Only select interfaces which can multicast for SSDP (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add more builtin mime types to cover standard audio/video (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix missing mime types on Android causing missing videos (Nick Craig-Wood) • serve ftp • Refactor to bring into line with other serve commands (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement --auth-proxy (Nick Craig-Wood) • serve http: Implement --baseurl (Nick Craig-Wood) • serve restic: Implement --baseurl (Nick Craig-Wood) • serve sftp • Implement auth proxy (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix detection of whether server is authorized (Nick Craig-Wood) • serve webdav • Implement --baseurl (Nick Craig-Wood) • Support --auth-proxy (Nick Craig-Wood) • Bug Fixes • Make “bad record MAC” a retriable error (Nick Craig-Wood) • copyurl: Fix copying files that return HTTP errors (Nick Craig-Wood) • march: Fix checking sub-directories when using --no-traverse (buengese) • rc • Fix unmarshalable http.AuthFn in options and put in test for marshalability (Nick Craig-Wood) • Move job expire flags to rc to fix initialization problem (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix --loopback with rc/list and others (Nick Craig-Wood) • rcat: Fix slowdown on systems with multiple hashes (Nick Craig-Wood) • rcd: Fix permissions problems on cache directory with web gui download (Nick Craig- Wood) • Mount • Default --deamon-timout to 15 minutes on macOS and FreeBSD (Nick Craig-Wood) • Update docs to show mounting from root OK for bucket based (Nick Craig-Wood) • Remove nonseekable flag from write files (Nick Craig-Wood) • VFS • Make write without cache more efficient (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix --vfs-cache-mode minimal and writes ignoring cached files (Nick Craig-Wood) • Local • Add --local-case-sensitive and --local-case-insensitive (Nick Craig-Wood) • Avoid polluting page cache when uploading local files to remote backends (Michał Matczuk) • Don’t calculate any hashes by default (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fadvise run syscall on a dedicated go routine (Michał Matczuk) • Azure Blob • Azure Storage Emulator support (Sandeep) • Updated config help details to remove connection string references (Sandeep) • Make all operations work from the root (Nick Craig-Wood) • B2 • Implement link sharing (yparitcher) • Enable server side copy to copy between buckets (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make all operations work from the root (Nick Craig-Wood) • Drive • Fix server side copy of big files (Nick Craig-Wood) • Update API for teamdrive use (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add error for purge with --drive-trashed-only (ginvine) • Fichier • Make FolderID int and adjust related code (buengese) • Google Cloud Storage • Reduce oauth scope requested as suggested by Google (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make all operations work from the root (Nick Craig-Wood) • HTTP • Add --http-headers flag for setting arbitrary headers (Nick Craig-Wood) • Jottacloud • Use new api for retrieving internal username (buengese) • Refactor configuration and minor cleanup (buengese) • Koofr • Support setting modification times on Koofr backend. (jaKa) • Opendrive • Refactor to use existing lib/rest facilities for uploads (Nick Craig-Wood) • Qingstor • Upgrade to v3 SDK and fix listing loop (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make all operations work from the root (Nick Craig-Wood) • S3 • Add INTELLIGENT_TIERING storage class (Matti Niemenmaa) • Make all operations work from the root (Nick Craig-Wood) • SFTP • Add missing interface check and fix About (Nick Craig-Wood) • Completely ignore all modtime checks if SetModTime=false (Jon Fautley) • Support md5/sha1 with rsync.net (Nick Craig-Wood) • Save the md5/sha1 command in use to the config file for efficiency (Nick Craig-Wood) • Opt-in support for diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha256 diffie-hellman-group-exchange- sha1 (Yi FU) • Swift • Use FixRangeOption to fix 0 length files via the VFS (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix upload when using no_chunk to return the correct size (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make all operations work from the root (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix segments leak during failed large file uploads. (nguyenhuuluan434) • WebDAV • Add --webdav-bearer-token-command (Nick Craig-Wood) • Refresh token when it expires with --webdav-bearer-token-command (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add docs for using bearer_token_command with oidc-agent (Paul Millar) v1.48.0 - 2019-06-15 • New commands • serve sftp: Serve an rclone remote over SFTP (Nick Craig-Wood) • New Features • Multi threaded downloads to local storage (Nick Craig-Wood) • controlled with --multi-thread-cutoff and --multi-thread-streams • Use rclone.conf from rclone executable directory to enable portable use (albertony) • Allow sync of a file and a directory with the same name (forgems) • this is common on bucket based remotes, eg s3, gcs • Add --ignore-case-sync for forced case insensitivity (garry415) • Implement --stats-one-line-date and --stats-one-line-date-format (Peter Berbec) • Log an ERROR for all commands which exit with non-zero status (Nick Craig-Wood) • Use go-homedir to read the home directory more reliably (Nick Craig-Wood) • Enable creating encrypted config through external script invocation (Wojciech Smigielski) • build: Drop support for go1.8 (Nick Craig-Wood) • config: Make config create/update encrypt passwords where necessary (Nick Craig-Wood) • copyurl: Honor --no-check-certificate (Stefan Breunig) • install: Linux skip man pages if no mandb (didil) • lsf: Support showing the Tier of the object (Nick Craig-Wood) • lsjson • Added EncryptedPath to output (calisro) • Support showing the Tier of the object (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add IsBucket field for bucket based remote listing of the root (Nick Craig-Wood) • rc • Add --loopback flag to run commands directly without a server (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add operations/fsinfo: Return information about the remote (Nick Craig-Wood) • Skip auth for OPTIONS request (Nick Craig-Wood) • cmd/providers: Add DefaultStr, ValueStr and Type fields (Nick Craig-Wood) • jobs: Make job expiry timeouts configurable (Aleksandar Jankovic) • serve dlna reworked and improved (Dan Walters) • serve ftp: add --ftp-public-ip flag to specify public IP (calistri) • serve restic: Add support for --private-repos in serve restic (Florian Apolloner) • serve webdav: Combine serve webdav and serve http (Gary Kim) • size: Ignore negative sizes when calculating total (Garry McNulty) • Bug Fixes • Make move and copy individual files obey --backup-dir (Nick Craig-Wood) • If --ignore-checksum is in effect, don’t calculate checksum (Nick Craig-Wood) • moveto: Fix case-insensitive same remote move (Gary Kim) • rc: Fix serving bucket based objects with --rc-serve (Nick Craig-Wood) • serve webdav: Fix serveDir not being updated with changes from webdav (Gary Kim) • Mount • Fix poll interval documentation (Animosity022) • VFS • Make WriteAt for non cached files work with non-sequential writes (Nick Craig-Wood) • Local • Only calculate the required hashes for big speedup (Nick Craig-Wood) • Log errors when listing instead of returning an error (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix preallocate warning on Linux with ZFS (Nick Craig-Wood) • Crypt • Make rclone dedupe work through crypt (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix wrapping of ChangeNotify to decrypt directories properly (Nick Craig-Wood) • Support PublicLink (rclone link) of underlying backend (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement Optional methods SetTier, GetTier (Nick Craig-Wood) • B2 • Implement server side copy (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement SetModTime (Nick Craig-Wood) • Drive • Fix move and copy from TeamDrive to GDrive (Fionera) • Add notes that cleanup works in the background on drive (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --drive-server-side-across-configs to default back to old server side copy semantics by default (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --drive-size-as-quota to show storage quota usage for file size (Garry McNulty) • FTP • Add FTP List timeout (Jeff Quinn) • Add FTP over TLS support (Gary Kim) • Add --ftp-no-check-certificate option for FTPS (Gary Kim) • Google Cloud Storage • Fix upload errors when uploading pre 1970 files (Nick Craig-Wood) • Jottacloud • Add support for selecting device and mountpoint. (buengese) • Mega • Add cleanup support (Gary Kim) • Onedrive • More accurately check if root is found (Cnly) • S3 • Support S3 Accelerated endpoints with --s3-use-accelerate-endpoint (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add config info for Wasabi’s EU Central endpoint (Robert Marko) • Make SetModTime work for GLACIER while syncing (Philip Harvey) • SFTP • Add About support (Gary Kim) • Fix about parsing of df results so it can cope with -ve results (Nick Craig-Wood) • Send custom client version and debug server version (Nick Craig-Wood) • WebDAV • Retry on 423 Locked errors (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.47.0 - 2019-04-13 • New backends • Backend for Koofr cloud storage service. (jaKa) • New Features • Resume downloads if the reader fails in copy (Nick Craig-Wood) • this means rclone will restart transfers if the source has an error • this is most useful for downloads or cloud to cloud copies • Use --fast-list for listing operations where it won’t use more memory (Nick Craig- Wood) • this should speed up the following operations on remotes which support ListR • dedupe, serve restic lsf, ls, lsl, lsjson, lsd, md5sum, sha1sum, hashsum, size, delete, cat, settier • use --disable ListR to get old behaviour if required • Make --files-from traverse the destination unless --no-traverse is set (Nick Craig- Wood) • this fixes --files-from with Google drive and excessive API use in general. • Make server side copy account bytes and obey --max-transfer (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --create-empty-src-dirs flag and default to not creating empty dirs (ishuah) • Add client side TLS/SSL flags --ca-cert/--client-cert/--client-key (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement --suffix-keep-extension for use with --suffix (Nick Craig-Wood) • build: • Switch to semvar compliant version tags to be go modules compliant (Nick Craig-Wood) • Update to use go1.12.x for the build (Nick Craig-Wood) • serve dlna: Add connection manager service description to improve compatibility (Dan Walters) • lsf: Add `e' format to show encrypted names and `o' for original IDs (Nick Craig-Wood) • lsjson: Added --files-only and --dirs-only flags (calistri) • rc: Implement operations/publiclink the equivalent of rclone link (Nick Craig-Wood) • Bug Fixes • accounting: Fix total ETA when --stats-unit bits is in effect (Nick Craig-Wood) • Bash TAB completion • Use private custom func to fix clash between rclone and kubectl (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix for remotes with underscores in their names (Six) • Fix completion of remotes (Florian Gamböck) • Fix autocompletion of remote paths with spaces (Danil Semelenov) • serve dlna: Fix root XML service descriptor (Dan Walters) • ncdu: Fix display corruption with Chinese characters (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add SIGTERM to signals which run the exit handlers on unix (Nick Craig-Wood) • rc: Reload filter when the options are set via the rc (Nick Craig-Wood) • VFS / Mount • Fix FreeBSD: Ignore Truncate if called with no readers and already the correct size (Nick Craig-Wood) • Read directory and check for a file before mkdir (Nick Craig-Wood) • Shorten the locking window for vfs/refresh (Nick Craig-Wood) • Azure Blob • Enable MD5 checksums when uploading files bigger than the “Cutoff” (Dr.Rx) • Fix SAS URL support (Nick Craig-Wood) • B2 • Allow manual configuration of backblaze downloadUrl (Vince) • Ignore already_hidden error on remove (Nick Craig-Wood) • Ignore malformed src_last_modified_millis (Nick Craig-Wood) • Drive • Add --skip-checksum-gphotos to ignore incorrect checksums on Google Photos (Nick Craig-Wood) • Allow server side move/copy between different remotes. (Fionera) • Add docs on team drives and --fast-list eventual consistency (Nestar47) • Fix imports of text files (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix range requests on 0 length files (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix creation of duplicates with server side copy (Nick Craig-Wood) • Dropbox • Retry blank errors to fix long listings (Nick Craig-Wood) • FTP • Add --ftp-concurrency to limit maximum number of connections (Nick Craig-Wood) • Google Cloud Storage • Fall back to default application credentials (marcintustin) • Allow bucket policy only buckets (Nick Craig-Wood) • HTTP • Add --http-no-slash for websites with directories with no slashes (Nick Craig-Wood) • Remove duplicates from listings (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix socket leak on 404 errors (Nick Craig-Wood) • Jottacloud • Fix token refresh (Sebastian Bünger) • Add device registration (Oliver Heyme) • Onedrive • Implement graceful cancel of multipart uploads if rclone is interrupted (Cnly) • Always add trailing colon to path when addressing items, (Cnly) • Return errors instead of panic for invalid uploads (Fabian Möller) • S3 • Add support for “Glacier Deep Archive” storage class (Manu) • Update Dreamhost endpoint (Nick Craig-Wood) • Note incompatibility with CEPH Jewel (Nick Craig-Wood) • SFTP • Allow custom ssh client config (Alexandru Bumbacea) • Swift • Obey Retry-After to enable OVH restore from cold storage (Nick Craig-Wood) • Work around token expiry on CEPH (Nick Craig-Wood) • WebDAV • Allow IsCollection property to be integer or boolean (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix race when creating directories (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix About/df when reading the available/total returns 0 (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.46 - 2019-02-09 • New backends • Support Alibaba Cloud (Aliyun) OSS via the s3 backend (Nick Craig-Wood) • New commands • serve dlna: serves a remove via DLNA for the local network (nicolov) • New Features • copy, move: Restore deprecated --no-traverse flag (Nick Craig-Wood) • This is useful for when transferring a small number of files into a large destination • genautocomplete: Add remote path completion for bash completion (Christopher Peterson & Danil Semelenov) • Buffer memory handling reworked to return memory to the OS better (Nick Craig-Wood) • Buffer recycling library to replace sync.Pool • Optionally use memory mapped memory for better memory shrinking • Enable with --use-mmap if having memory problems - not default yet • Parallelise reading of files specified by --files-from (Nick Craig-Wood) • check: Add stats showing total files matched. (Dario Guzik) • Allow rename/delete open files under Windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • lsjson: Use exactly the correct number of decimal places in the seconds (Nick Craig- Wood) • Add cookie support with cmdline switch --use-cookies for all HTTP based remotes (qip) • Warn if --checksum is set but there are no hashes available (Nick Craig-Wood) • Rework rate limiting (pacer) to be more accurate and allow bursting (Nick Craig-Wood) • Improve error reporting for too many/few arguments in commands (Nick Craig-Wood) • listremotes: Remove -l short flag as it conflicts with the new global flag (weetmuts) • Make http serving with auth generate INFO messages on auth fail (Nick Craig-Wood) • Bug Fixes • Fix layout of stats (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix --progress crash under Windows Jenkins (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix transfer of google/onedrive docs by calling Rcat in Copy when size is -1 (Cnly) • copyurl: Fix checking of --dry-run (Denis Skovpen) • Mount • Check that mountpoint and local directory to mount don’t overlap (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix mount size under 32 bit Windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • VFS • Implement renaming of directories for backends without DirMove (Nick Craig-Wood) • now all backends except b2 support renaming directories • Implement --vfs-cache-max-size to limit the total size of the cache (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --dir-perms and --file-perms flags to set default permissions (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix deadlock on concurrent operations on a directory (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix deadlock between RWFileHandle.close and File.Remove (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix renaming/deleting open files with cache mode “writes” under Windows (Nick Craig- Wood) • Fix panic on rename with --dry-run set (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix vfs/refresh with recurse=true needing the --fast-list flag • Local • Add support for -l/--links (symbolic link translation) (yair@unicorn) • this works by showing links as link.rclonelink - see local backend docs for more info • this errors if used with -L/--copy-links • Fix renaming/deleting open files on Windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • Crypt • Check for maximum length before decrypting filename to fix panic (Garry McNulty) • Azure Blob • Allow building azureblob backend on *BSD (themylogin) • Use the rclone HTTP client to support --dump headers, --tpslimit etc (Nick Craig-Wood) • Use the s3 pacer for 0 delay in non error conditions (Nick Craig-Wood) • Ignore directory markers (Nick Craig-Wood) • Stop Mkdir attempting to create existing containers (Nick Craig-Wood) • B2 • cleanup: will remove unfinished large files >24hrs old (Garry McNulty) • For a bucket limited application key check the bucket name (Nick Craig-Wood) • before this, rclone would use the authorised bucket regardless of what you put on the command line • Added --b2-disable-checksum flag (Wojciech Smigielski) • this enables large files to be uploaded without a SHA-1 hash for speed reasons • Drive • Set default pacer to 100ms for 10 tps (Nick Craig-Wood) • This fits the Google defaults much better and reduces the 403 errors massively • Add --drive-pacer-min-sleep and --drive-pacer-burst to control the pacer • Improve ChangeNotify support for items with multiple parents (Fabian Möller) • Fix ListR for items with multiple parents - this fixes oddities with vfs/refresh (Fabian Möller) • Fix using --drive-impersonate and appfolders (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix google docs in rclone mount for some (not all) applications (Nick Craig-Wood) • Dropbox • Retry-After support for Dropbox backend (Mathieu Carbou) • FTP • Wait for 60 seconds for a connection to Close then declare it dead (Nick Craig-Wood) • helps with indefinite hangs on some FTP servers • Google Cloud Storage • Update google cloud storage endpoints (weetmuts) • HTTP • Add an example with username and password which is supported but wasn’t documented (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix backend with --files-from and non-existent files (Nick Craig-Wood) • Hubic • Make error message more informative if authentication fails (Nick Craig-Wood) • Jottacloud • Resume and deduplication support (Oliver Heyme) • Use token auth for all API requests Don’t store password anymore (Sebastian Bünger) • Add support for 2-factor authentication (Sebastian Bünger) • Mega • Implement v2 account login which fixes logins for newer Mega accounts (Nick Craig- Wood) • Return error if an unknown length file is attempted to be uploaded (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add new error codes for better error reporting (Nick Craig-Wood) • Onedrive • Fix broken support for “shared with me” folders (Alex Chen) • Fix root ID not normalised (Cnly) • Return err instead of panic on unknown-sized uploads (Cnly) • Qingstor • Fix go routine leak on multipart upload errors (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add upload chunk size/concurrency/cutoff control (Nick Craig-Wood) • Default --qingstor-upload-concurrency to 1 to work around bug (Nick Craig-Wood) • S3 • Implement --s3-upload-cutoff for single part uploads below this (Nick Craig-Wood) • Change --s3-upload-concurrency default to 4 to increase performance (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --s3-bucket-acl to control bucket ACL (Nick Craig-Wood) • Auto detect region for buckets on operation failure (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add GLACIER storage class (William Cocker) • Add Scaleway to s3 documentation (Rémy Léone) • Add AWS endpoint eu-north-1 (weetmuts) • SFTP • Add support for PEM encrypted private keys (Fabian Möller) • Add option to force the usage of an ssh-agent (Fabian Möller) • Perform environment variable expansion on key-file (Fabian Möller) • Fix rmdir on Windows based servers (eg CrushFTP) (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix rmdir deleting directory contents on some SFTP servers (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix error on dangling symlinks (Nick Craig-Wood) • Swift • Add --swift-no-chunk to disable segmented uploads in rcat/mount (Nick Craig-Wood) • Introduce application credential auth support (kayrus) • Fix memory usage by slimming Object (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix extra requests on upload (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix reauth on big files (Nick Craig-Wood) • Union • Fix poll-interval not working (Nick Craig-Wood) • WebDAV • Support About which means rclone mount will show the correct disk size (Nick Craig- Wood) • Support MD5 and SHA1 hashes with Owncloud and Nextcloud (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fail soft on time parsing errors (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix infinite loop on failed directory creation (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix identification of directories for Bitrix Site Manager (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix upload of 0 length files on some servers (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix if MKCOL fails with 423 Locked assume the directory exists (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.45 - 2018-11-24 • New backends • The Yandex backend was re-written - see below for details (Sebastian Bünger) • New commands • rcd: New command just to serve the remote control API (Nick Craig-Wood) • New Features • The remote control API (rc) was greatly expanded to allow full control over rclone (Nick Craig-Wood) • sensitive operations require authorization or the --rc-no-auth flag • config/* operations to configure rclone • options/* for reading/setting command line flags • operations/* for all low level operations, eg copy file, list directory • sync/* for sync, copy and move • --rc-files flag to serve files on the rc http server • this is for building web native GUIs for rclone • Optionally serving objects on the rc http server • Ensure rclone fails to start up if the --rc port is in use already • See the rc docs (https://rclone.org/rc/) for more info • sync/copy/move • Make --files-from only read the objects specified and don’t scan directories (Nick Craig-Wood) • This is a huge speed improvement for destinations with lots of files • filter: Add --ignore-case flag (Nick Craig-Wood) • ncdu: Add remove function (`d' key) (Henning Surmeier) • rc command • Add --json flag for structured JSON input (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --user and --pass flags and interpret --rc-user, --rc-pass, --rc-addr (Nick Craig-Wood) • build • Require go1.8 or later for compilation (Nick Craig-Wood) • Enable softfloat on MIPS arch (Scott Edlund) • Integration test framework revamped with a better report and better retries (Nick Craig-Wood) • Bug Fixes • cmd: Make --progress update the stats correctly at the end (Nick Craig-Wood) • config: Create config directory on save if it is missing (Nick Craig-Wood) • dedupe: Check for existing filename before renaming a dupe file (ssaqua) • move: Don’t create directories with --dry-run (Nick Craig-Wood) • operations: Fix Purge and Rmdirs when dir is not the root (Nick Craig-Wood) • serve http/webdav/restic: Ensure rclone exits if the port is in use (Nick Craig-Wood) • Mount • Make --volname work for Windows and macOS (Nick Craig-Wood) • Azure Blob • Avoid context deadline exceeded error by setting a large TryTimeout value (brused27) • Fix erroneous Rmdir error “directory not empty” (Nick Craig-Wood) • Wait for up to 60s to create a just deleted container (Nick Craig-Wood) • Dropbox • Add dropbox impersonate support (Jake Coggiano) • Jottacloud • Fix bug in --fast-list handing of empty folders (albertony) • Opendrive • Fix transfer of files with + and & in (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix retries of upload chunks (Nick Craig-Wood) • S3 • Set ACL for server side copies to that provided by the user (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix role_arn, credential_source, ... (Erik Swanson) • Add config info for Wasabi’s US-West endpoint (Henry Ptasinski) • SFTP • Ensure file hash checking is really disabled (Jon Fautley) • Swift • Add pacer for retries to make swift more reliable (Nick Craig-Wood) • WebDAV • Add Content-Type to PUT requests (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix config parsing so --webdav-user and --webdav-pass flags work (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add RFC3339 date format (Ralf Hemberger) • Yandex • The yandex backend was re-written (Sebastian Bünger) • This implements low level retries (Sebastian Bünger) • Copy, Move, DirMove, PublicLink and About optional interfaces (Sebastian Bünger) • Improved general error handling (Sebastian Bünger) • Removed ListR for now due to inconsistent behaviour (Sebastian Bünger) v1.44 - 2018-10-15 • New commands • serve ftp: Add ftp server (Antoine GIRARD) • settier: perform storage tier changes on supported remotes (sandeepkru) • New Features • Reworked command line help • Make default help less verbose (Nick Craig-Wood) • Split flags up into global and backend flags (Nick Craig-Wood) • Implement specialised help for flags and backends (Nick Craig-Wood) • Show URL of backend help page when starting config (Nick Craig-Wood) • stats: Long names now split in center (Joanna Marek) • Add --log-format flag for more control over log output (dcpu) • rc: Add support for OPTIONS and basic CORS (frenos) • stats: show FatalErrors and NoRetryErrors in stats (Cédric Connes) • Bug Fixes • Fix -P not ending with a new line (Nick Craig-Wood) • config: don’t create default config dir when user supplies --config (albertony) • Don’t print non-ASCII characters with --progress on windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • Correct logs for excluded items (ssaqua) • Mount • Remove EXPERIMENTAL tags (Nick Craig-Wood) • VFS • Fix race condition detected by serve ftp tests (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add vfs/poll-interval rc command (Fabian Möller) • Enable rename for nearly all remotes using server side Move or Copy (Nick Craig-Wood) • Reduce directory cache cleared by poll-interval (Fabian Möller) • Remove EXPERIMENTAL tags (Nick Craig-Wood) • Local • Skip bad symlinks in dir listing with -L enabled (Cédric Connes) • Preallocate files on Windows to reduce fragmentation (Nick Craig-Wood) • Preallocate files on linux with fallocate(2) (Nick Craig-Wood) • Cache • Add cache/fetch rc function (Fabian Möller) • Fix worker scale down (Fabian Möller) • Improve performance by not sending info requests for cached chunks (dcpu) • Fix error return value of cache/fetch rc method (Fabian Möller) • Documentation fix for cache-chunk-total-size (Anagh Kumar Baranwal) • Preserve leading / in wrapped remote path (Fabian Möller) • Add plex_insecure option to skip certificate validation (Fabian Möller) • Remove entries that no longer exist in the source (dcpu) • Crypt • Preserve leading / in wrapped remote path (Fabian Möller) • Alias • Fix handling of Windows network paths (Nick Craig-Wood) • Azure Blob • Add --azureblob-list-chunk parameter (Santiago Rodríguez) • Implemented settier command support on azureblob remote. (sandeepkru) • Work around SDK bug which causes errors for chunk-sized files (Nick Craig-Wood) • Box • Implement link sharing. (Sebastian Bünger) • Drive • Add --drive-import-formats - google docs can now be imported (Fabian Möller) • Rewrite mime type and extension handling (Fabian Möller) • Add document links (Fabian Möller) • Add support for multipart document extensions (Fabian Möller) • Add support for apps-script to json export (Fabian Möller) • Fix escaped chars in documents during list (Fabian Möller) • Add --drive-v2-download-min-size a workaround for slow downloads (Fabian Möller) • Improve directory notifications in ChangeNotify (Fabian Möller) • When listing team drives in config, continue on failure (Nick Craig-Wood) • FTP • Add a small pause after failed upload before deleting file (Nick Craig-Wood) • Google Cloud Storage • Fix service_account_file being ignored (Fabian Möller) • Jottacloud • Minor improvement in quota info (omit if unlimited) (albertony) • Add --fast-list support (albertony) • Add permanent delete support: --jottacloud-hard-delete (albertony) • Add link sharing support (albertony) • Fix handling of reserved characters. (Sebastian Bünger) • Fix socket leak on Object.Remove (Nick Craig-Wood) • Onedrive • Rework to support Microsoft Graph (Cnly) • NB this will require re-authenticating the remote • Removed upload cutoff and always do session uploads (Oliver Heyme) • Use single-part upload for empty files (Cnly) • Fix new fields not saved when editing old config (Alex Chen) • Fix sometimes special chars in filenames not replaced (Alex Chen) • Ignore OneNote files by default (Alex Chen) • Add link sharing support (jackyzy823) • S3 • Use custom pacer, to retry operations when reasonable (Craig Miskell) • Use configured server-side-encryption and storage class options when calling CopyObject() (Paul Kohout) • Make --s3-v2-auth flag (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix v2 auth on files with spaces (Nick Craig-Wood) • Union • Implement union backend which reads from multiple backends (Felix Brucker) • Implement optional interfaces (Move, DirMove, Copy etc) (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix ChangeNotify to support multiple remotes (Fabian Möller) • Fix --backup-dir on union backend (Nick Craig-Wood) • WebDAV • Add another time format (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add a small pause after failed upload before deleting file (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add workaround for missing mtime (buergi) • Sharepoint: Renew cookies after 12hrs (Henning Surmeier) • Yandex • Remove redundant nil checks (teresy) v1.43.1 - 2018-09-07 Point release to fix hubic and azureblob backends. • Bug Fixes • ncdu: Return error instead of log.Fatal in Show (Fabian Möller) • cmd: Fix crash with --progress and --stats 0 (Nick Craig-Wood) • docs: Tidy website display (Anagh Kumar Baranwal) • Azure Blob: • Fix multi-part uploads. (sandeepkru) • Hubic • Fix uploads (Nick Craig-Wood) • Retry auth fetching if it fails to make hubic more reliable (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.43 - 2018-09-01 • New backends • Jottacloud (Sebastian Bünger) • New commands • copyurl: copies a URL to a remote (Denis) • New Features • Reworked config for backends (Nick Craig-Wood) • All backend config can now be supplied by command line, env var or config file • Advanced section in the config wizard for the optional items • A large step towards rclone backends being usable in other go software • Allow on the fly remotes with :backend: syntax • Stats revamp • Add --progress/-P flag to show interactive progress (Nick Craig-Wood) • Show the total progress of the sync in the stats (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --stats-one-line flag for single line stats (Nick Craig-Wood) • Added weekday schedule into --bwlimit (Mateusz) • lsjson: Add option to show the original object IDs (Fabian Möller) • serve webdav: Make Content-Type without reading the file and add --etag-hash (Nick Craig-Wood) • build • Build macOS with native compiler (Nick Craig-Wood) • Update to use go1.11 for the build (Nick Craig-Wood) • rc • Added core/stats to return the stats (reddi1) • version --check: Prints the current release and beta versions (Nick Craig-Wood) • Bug Fixes • accounting • Fix time to completion estimates (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix moving average speed for file stats (Nick Craig-Wood) • config: Fix error reading password from piped input (Nick Craig-Wood) • move: Fix --delete-empty-src-dirs flag to delete all empty dirs on move (ishuah) • Mount • Implement --daemon-timeout flag for OSXFUSE (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix mount --daemon not working with encrypted config (Alex Chen) • Clip the number of blocks to 2^32-1 on macOS - fixes borg backup (Nick Craig-Wood) • VFS • Enable vfs-read-chunk-size by default (Fabian Möller) • Add the vfs/refresh rc command (Fabian Möller) • Add non recursive mode to vfs/refresh rc command (Fabian Möller) • Try to seek buffer on read only files (Fabian Möller) • Local • Fix crash when deprecated --local-no-unicode-normalization is supplied (Nick Craig- Wood) • Fix mkdir error when trying to copy files to the root of a drive on windows (Nick Craig-Wood) • Cache • Fix nil pointer deref when using lsjson on cached directory (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix nil pointer deref for occasional crash on playback (Nick Craig-Wood) • Crypt • Fix accounting when checking hashes on upload (Nick Craig-Wood) • Amazon Cloud Drive • Make very clear in the docs that rclone has no ACD keys (Nick Craig-Wood) • Azure Blob • Add connection string and SAS URL auth (Nick Craig-Wood) • List the container to see if it exists (Nick Craig-Wood) • Port new Azure Blob Storage SDK (sandeepkru) • Added blob tier, tier between Hot, Cool and Archive. (sandeepkru) • Remove leading / from paths (Nick Craig-Wood) • B2 • Support Application Keys (Nick Craig-Wood) • Remove leading / from paths (Nick Craig-Wood) • Box • Fix upload of > 2GB files on 32 bit platforms (Nick Craig-Wood) • Make --box-commit-retries flag defaulting to 100 to fix large uploads (Nick Craig- Wood) • Drive • Add --drive-keep-revision-forever flag (lewapm) • Handle gdocs when filtering file names in list (Fabian Möller) • Support using --fast-list for large speedups (Fabian Möller) • FTP • Fix Put mkParentDir failed: 521 for BunnyCDN (Nick Craig-Wood) • Google Cloud Storage • Fix index out of range error with --fast-list (Nick Craig-Wood) • Jottacloud • Fix MD5 error check (Oliver Heyme) • Handle empty time values (Martin Polden) • Calculate missing MD5s (Oliver Heyme) • Docs, fixes and tests for MD5 calculation (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add optional MimeTyper interface. (Sebastian Bünger) • Implement optional About interface (for df support). (Sebastian Bünger) • Mega • Wait for events instead of arbitrary sleeping (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --mega-hard-delete flag (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix failed logins with upper case chars in email (Nick Craig-Wood) • Onedrive • Shared folder support (Yoni Jah) • Implement DirMove (Cnly) • Fix rmdir sometimes deleting directories with contents (Nick Craig-Wood) • Pcloud • Delete half uploaded files on upload error (Nick Craig-Wood) • Qingstor • Remove leading / from paths (Nick Craig-Wood) • S3 • Fix index out of range error with --fast-list (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add --s3-force-path-style (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add support for KMS Key ID (bsteiss) • Remove leading / from paths (Nick Craig-Wood) • Swift • Add storage_policy (Ruben Vandamme) • Make it so just storage_url or auth_token can be overridden (Nick Craig-Wood) • Fix server side copy bug for unusual file names (Nick Craig-Wood) • Remove leading / from paths (Nick Craig-Wood) • WebDAV • Ensure we call MKCOL with a URL with a trailing / for QNAP interop (Nick Craig-Wood) • If root ends with / then don’t check if it is a file (Nick Craig-Wood) • Don’t accept redirects when reading metadata (Nick Craig-Wood) • Add bearer token (Macaroon) support for dCache (Nick Craig-Wood) • Document dCache and Macaroons (Onno Zweers) • Sharepoint recursion with different depth (Henning) • Attempt to remove failed uploads (Nick Craig-Wood) • Yandex • Fix listing/deleting files in the root (Nick Craig-Wood) v1.42 - 2018-06-16 • New backends • OpenDrive (Oliver Heyme, Jakub Karlicek, ncw) • New commands • deletefile command (Filip Bartodziej) • New Features • copy, move: Copy single files directly, don’t use --files-from work-around • this makes them much more efficient • Implement --max-transfer flag to quit transferring at a limit • make exit code 8 for --max-transfer exceeded • copy: copy empty source directories to destination (Ishuah Kariuki) • check: Add --one-way flag (Kasper Byrdal Nielsen) • Add siginfo handler for macOS for ctrl-T stats (kubatasiemski) • rc • add core/gc to run a garbage collection on demand • enable go profiling by default on the --rc port • return error from remote on failure • lsf • Add --absolute flag to add a leading / onto path names • Add --csv flag for compliant CSV output • Add `m' format specifier to show the MimeType • Implement `i' format for showing object ID • lsjson • Add MimeType to the output • Add ID field to output to show Object ID • Add --retries-sleep flag (Benjamin Joseph Dag) • Oauth tidy up web page and error handling (Henning Surmeier) • Bug Fixes • Password prompt output with --log-file fixed for unix (Filip Bartodziej) • Calculate ModifyWindow each time on the fly to fix various problems (Stefan Breunig) • Mount • Only print “File.rename error” if there actually is an error (Stefan Breunig) • Delay rename if file has open writers instead of failing outright (Stefan Breunig) • Ensure atexit gets run on interrupt • macOS enhancements • Make --noappledouble --noapplexattr • Add --volname flag and remove special chars from it • Make Get/List/Set/Remove xattr return ENOSYS for efficiency • Make --daemon work for macOS without CGO • VFS • Add --vfs-read-chunk-size and --vfs-read-chunk-size-limit (Fabian Möller) • Fix ChangeNotify for new or changed folders (Fabian Möller) • Local • Fix symlink/junction point directory handling under Windows • NB you will need to add -L to your command line to copy files with reparse points • Cache • Add non cached dirs on notifications (Remus Bunduc) • Allow root to be expired from rc (Remus Bunduc) • Clean remaining empty folders from temp upload path (Remus Bunduc) • Cache lists using batch writes (Remus Bunduc) • Use secure websockets for HTTPS Plex addresses (John Clayton) • Reconnect plex websocket on failures (Remus Bunduc) • Fix panic when running without plex configs (Remus Bunduc) • Fix root folder caching (Remus Bunduc) • Crypt • Check the crypted hash of files when uploading for extra data security • Dropbox • Make Dropbox for business folders accessible using an initial / in the path • Google Cloud Storage • Low level retry all operations if necessary • Google Drive • Add --drive-acknowledge-abuse to download flagged files • Add --drive-alternate-export to fix large doc export • Don’t attempt to choose Team Drives when using rclone config create • Fix change list polling with team drives • Fix ChangeNotify for folders (Fabian Möller) • Fix about (and df on a mount) for team drives • Onedrive • Errorhandler for onedrive for business requests (Henning Surmeier) • S3 • Adjust upload concurrency with --s3-upload-concurrency (themylogin) • Fix --s3-chunk-size which was always using the minimum • SFTP • Add --ssh-path-override flag (Piotr Oleszczyk) • Fix slow downloads for long latency connections • Webdav • Add workarounds for biz.mail.ru • Ignore Reason-Phrase in status line to fix 4shared (Rodrigo) • Better error message generation v1.41 - 2018-04-28 • New backends • Mega support added • Webdav now supports SharePoint cookie authentication (hensur) • New commands • link: create public link to files and folders (Stefan Breunig) • about: gets quota info from a remote (a-roussos, ncw) • hashsum: a generic tool for any hash to produce md5sum like output • New Features • lsd: Add -R flag and fix and update docs for all ls commands • ncdu: added a “refresh” key - CTRL-L (Keith Goldfarb) • serve restic: Add append-only mode (Steve Kriss) • serve restic: Disallow overwriting files in append-only mode (Alexander Neumann) • serve restic: Print actual listener address (Matt Holt) • size: Add –json flag (Matthew Holt) • sync: implement –ignore-errors (Mateusz Pabian) • dedupe: Add dedupe largest functionality (Richard Yang) • fs: Extend SizeSuffix to include TB and PB for rclone about • fs: add –dump goroutines and –dump openfiles for debugging • rc: implement core/memstats to print internal memory usage info • rc: new call rc/pid (Michael P. Dubner) • Compile • Drop support for go1.6 • Release • Fix make tarball (Chih-Hsuan Yen) • Bug Fixes • filter: fix –min-age and –max-age together check • fs: limit MaxIdleConns and MaxIdleConnsPerHost in transport • lsd,lsf: make sure all times we output are in local time • rc: fix setting bwlimit to unlimited • rc: take note of the –rc-addr flag too as per the docs • Mount • Use About to return the correct disk total/used/free (eg in df) • Set --attr-timeout default to 1s - fixes: • rclone using too much memory • rclone not serving files to samba • excessive time listing directories • Fix df -i (upstream fix) • VFS • Filter files . and .. from directory listing • Only make the VFS cache if –vfs-cache-mode > Off • Local • Add –local-no-check-updated to disable updated file checks • Retry remove on Windows sharing violation error • Cache • Flush the memory cache after close • Purge file data on notification • Always forget parent dir for notifications • Integrate with Plex websocket • Add rc cache/stats (seuffert) • Add info log on notification • Box • Fix failure reading large directories - parse file/directory size as float • Dropbox • Fix crypt+obfuscate on dropbox • Fix repeatedly uploading the same files • FTP • Work around strange response from box FTP server • More workarounds for FTP servers to fix mkParentDir error • Fix no error on listing non-existent directory • Google Cloud Storage • Add service_account_credentials (Matt Holt) • Detect bucket presence by listing it - minimises permissions needed • Ignore zero length directory markers • Google Drive • Add service_account_credentials (Matt Holt) • Fix directory move leaving a hardlinked directory behind • Return proper google errors when Opening files • When initialized with a filepath, optional features used incorrect root path (Stefan Breunig) • HTTP • Fix sync for servers which don’t return Content-Length in HEAD • Onedrive • Add QuickXorHash support for OneDrive for business • Fix socket leak in multipart session upload • S3 • Look in S3 named profile files for credentials • Add --s3-disable-checksum to disable checksum uploading (Chris Redekop) • Hierarchical configuration support (Giri Badanahatti) • Add in config for all the supported S3 providers • Add One Zone Infrequent Access storage class (Craig Rachel) • Add –use-server-modtime support (Peter Baumgartner) • Add –s3-chunk-size option to control multipart uploads • Ignore zero length directory markers • SFTP • Update docs to match code, fix typos and clarify disable_hashcheck prompt (Michael G. Noll) • Update docs with Synology quirks • Fail soft with a debug on hash failure • Swift • Add –use-server-modtime support (Peter Baumgartner) • Webdav • Support SharePoint cookie authentication (hensur) • Strip leading and trailing / off root v1.40 - 2018-03-19 • New backends • Alias backend to create aliases for existing remote names (Fabian Möller) • New commands • lsf: list for parsing purposes (Jakub Tasiemski) • by default this is a simple non recursive list of files and directories • it can be configured to add more info in an easy to parse way • serve restic: for serving a remote as a Restic REST endpoint • This enables restic to use any backends that rclone can access • Thanks Alexander Neumann for help, patches and review • rc: enable the remote control of a running rclone • The running rclone must be started with –rc and related flags. • Currently there is support for bwlimit, and flushing for mount and cache. • New Features • --max-delete flag to add a delete threshold (Bjørn Erik Pedersen) • All backends now support RangeOption for ranged Open • cat: Use RangeOption for limited fetches to make more efficient • cryptcheck: make reading of nonce more efficient with RangeOption • serve http/webdav/restic • support SSL/TLS • add --user --pass and --htpasswd for authentication • copy/move: detect file size change during copy/move and abort transfer (ishuah) • cryptdecode: added option to return encrypted file names. (ishuah) • lsjson: add --encrypted to show encrypted name (Jakub Tasiemski) • Add --stats-file-name-length to specify the printed file name length for stats (Will Gunn) • Compile • Code base was shuffled and factored • backends moved into a backend directory • large packages split up • See the CONTRIBUTING.md doc for info as to what lives where now • Update to using go1.10 as the default go version • Implement daily full integration tests (https://pub.rclone.org/integration-tests/) • Release • Include a source tarball and sign it and the binaries • Sign the git tags as part of the release process • Add .deb and .rpm packages as part of the build • Make a beta release for all branches on the main repo (but not pull requests) • Bug Fixes • config: fixes errors on non existing config by loading config file only on first access • config: retry saving the config after failure (Mateusz) • sync: when using --backup-dir don’t delete files if we can’t set their modtime • this fixes odd behaviour with Dropbox and --backup-dir • fshttp: fix idle timeouts for HTTP connections • serve http: fix serving files with : in - fixes • Fix --exclude-if-present to ignore directories which it doesn’t have permission for (Iakov Davydov) • Make accounting work properly with crypt and b2 • remove --no-traverse flag because it is obsolete • Mount • Add --attr-timeout flag to control attribute caching in kernel • this now defaults to 0 which is correct but less efficient • see the mount docs (https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_mount/#attribute-caching) for more info • Add --daemon flag to allow mount to run in the background (ishuah) • Fix: Return ENOSYS rather than EIO on attempted link • This fixes FileZilla accessing an rclone mount served over sftp. • Fix setting modtime twice • Mount tests now run on CI for Linux (mount & cmount)/Mac/Windows • Many bugs fixed in the VFS layer - see below • VFS • Many fixes for --vfs-cache-mode writes and above • Update cached copy if we know it has changed (fixes stale data) • Clean path names before using them in the cache • Disable cache cleaner if --vfs-cache-poll-interval=0 • Fill and clean the cache immediately on startup • Fix Windows opening every file when it stats the file • Fix applying modtime for an open Write Handle • Fix creation of files when truncating • Write 0 bytes when flushing unwritten handles to avoid race conditions in FUSE • Downgrade “poll-interval is not supported” message to Info • Make OpenFile and friends return EINVAL if O_RDONLY and O_TRUNC • Local • Downgrade “invalid cross-device link: trying copy” to debug • Make DirMove return fs.ErrorCantDirMove to allow fallback to Copy for cross device • Fix race conditions updating the hashes • Cache • Add support for polling - cache will update when remote changes on supported backends • Reduce log level for Plex api • Fix dir cache issue • Implement --cache-db-wait-time flag • Improve efficiency with RangeOption and RangeSeek • Fix dirmove with temp fs enabled • Notify vfs when using temp fs • Offline uploading • Remote control support for path flushing • Amazon cloud drive • Rclone no longer has any working keys - disable integration tests • Implement DirChangeNotify to notify cache/vfs/mount of changes • Azureblob • Don’t check for bucket/container presence if listing was OK • this makes rclone do one less request per invocation • Improve accounting for chunked uploads • Backblaze B2 • Don’t check for bucket/container presence if listing was OK • this makes rclone do one less request per invocation • Box • Improve accounting for chunked uploads • Dropbox • Fix custom oauth client parameters • Google Cloud Storage • Don’t check for bucket/container presence if listing was OK • this makes rclone do one less request per invocation • Google Drive • Migrate to api v3 (Fabian Möller) • Add scope configuration and root folder selection • Add --drive-impersonate for service accounts • thanks to everyone who tested, explored and contributed docs • Add --drive-use-created-date to use created date as modified date (nbuchanan) • Request the export formats only when required • This makes rclone quicker when there are no google docs • Fix finding paths with latin1 chars (a workaround for a drive bug) • Fix copying of a single Google doc file • Fix --drive-auth-owner-only to look in all directories • HTTP • Fix handling of directories with & in • Onedrive • Removed upload cutoff and always do session uploads • this stops the creation of multiple versions on business onedrive • Overwrite object size value with real size when reading file. (Victor) • this fixes oddities when onedrive misreports the size of images • Pcloud • Remove unused chunked upload flag and code • Qingstor • Don’t check for bucket/container presence if listing was OK • this makes rclone do one less request per invocation • S3 • Support hashes for multipart files (Chris Redekop) • Initial support for IBM COS (S3) (Giri Badanahatti) • Update docs to discourage use of v2 auth with CEPH and others • Don’t check for bucket/container presence if listing was OK • this makes rclone do one less request per invocation • Fix server side copy and set modtime on files with + in • SFTP • Add option to disable remote hash check command execution (Jon Fautley) • Add --sftp-ask-password flag to prompt for password when needed (Leo R. Lundgren) • Add set_modtime configuration option • Fix following of symlinks • Fix reading config file outside of Fs setup • Fix reading $USER in username fallback not $HOME • Fix running under crontab - Use correct OS way of reading username • Swift • Fix refresh of authentication token • in v1.39 a bug was introduced which ignored new tokens - this fixes it • Fix extra HEAD transaction when uploading a new file • Don’t check for bucket/container presence if listing was OK • this makes rclone do one less request per invocation • Webdav • Add new time formats to support mydrive.ch and others v1.39 - 2017-12-23 • New backends • WebDAV • tested with nextcloud, owncloud, put.io and others! • Pcloud • cache - wraps a cache around other backends (Remus Bunduc) • useful in combination with mount • NB this feature is in beta so use with care • New commands • serve command with subcommands: • serve webdav: this implements a webdav server for any rclone remote. • serve http: command to serve a remote over HTTP • config: add sub commands for full config file management • create/delete/dump/edit/file/password/providers/show/update • touch: to create or update the timestamp of a file (Jakub Tasiemski) • New Features • curl install for rclone (Filip Bartodziej) • –stats now shows percentage, size, rate and ETA in condensed form (Ishuah Kariuki) • –exclude-if-present to exclude a directory if a file is present (Iakov Davydov) • rmdirs: add –leave-root flag (lewapm) • move: add –delete-empty-src-dirs flag to remove dirs after move (Ishuah Kariuki) • Add –dump flag, introduce –dump requests, responses and remove –dump-auth, –dump- filters • Obscure X-Auth-Token: from headers when dumping too • Document and implement exit codes for different failure modes (Ishuah Kariuki) • Compile • Bug Fixes • Retry lots more different types of errors to make multipart transfers more reliable • Save the config before asking for a token, fixes disappearing oauth config • Warn the user if –include and –exclude are used together (Ernest Borowski) • Fix duplicate files (eg on Google drive) causing spurious copies • Allow trailing and leading whitespace for passwords (Jason Rose) • ncdu: fix crashes on empty directories • rcat: fix goroutine leak • moveto/copyto: Fix to allow copying to the same name • Mount • –vfs-cache mode to make writes into mounts more reliable. • this requires caching files on the disk (see –cache-dir) • As this is a new feature, use with care • Use sdnotify to signal systemd the mount is ready (Fabian Möller) • Check if directory is not empty before mounting (Ernest Borowski) • Local • Add error message for cross file system moves • Fix equality check for times • Dropbox • Rework multipart upload • buffer the chunks when uploading large files so they can be retried • change default chunk size to 48MB now we are buffering them in memory • retry every error after the first chunk is done successfully • Fix error when renaming directories • Swift • Fix crash on bad authentication • Google Drive • Add service account support (Tim Cooijmans) • S3 • Make it work properly with Digital Ocean Spaces (Andrew Starr-Bochicchio) • Fix crash if a bad listing is received • Add support for ECS task IAM roles (David Minor) • Backblaze B2 • Fix multipart upload retries • Fix –hard-delete to make it work 100% of the time • Swift • Allow authentication with storage URL and auth key (Giovanni Pizzi) • Add new fields for swift configuration to support IBM Bluemix Swift (Pierre Carlson) • Add OS_TENANT_ID and OS_USER_ID to config • Allow configs with user id instead of user name • Check if swift segments container exists before creating (John Leach) • Fix memory leak in swift transfers (upstream fix) • SFTP • Add option to enable the use of aes128-cbc cipher (Jon Fautley) • Amazon cloud drive • Fix download of large files failing with “Only one auth mechanism allowed” • crypt • Option to encrypt directory names or leave them intact • Implement DirChangeNotify (Fabian Möller) • onedrive • Add option to choose resourceURL during setup of OneDrive Business account if more than one is available for user v1.38 - 2017-09-30 • New backends • Azure Blob Storage (thanks Andrei Dragomir) • Box • Onedrive for Business (thanks Oliver Heyme) • QingStor from QingCloud (thanks wuyu) • New commands • rcat - read from standard input and stream upload • tree - shows a nicely formatted recursive listing • cryptdecode - decode crypted file names (thanks ishuah) • config show - print the config file • config file - print the config file location • New Features • Empty directories are deleted on sync • dedupe - implement merging of duplicate directories • check and cryptcheck made more consistent and use less memory • cleanup for remaining remotes (thanks ishuah) • --immutable for ensuring that files don’t change (thanks Jacob McNamee) • --user-agent option (thanks Alex McGrath Kraak) • --disable flag to disable optional features • --bind flag for choosing the local addr on outgoing connections • Support for zsh auto-completion (thanks bpicode) • Stop normalizing file names but do a normalized compare in sync • Compile • Update to using go1.9 as the default go version • Remove snapd build due to maintenance problems • Bug Fixes • Improve retriable error detection which makes multipart uploads better • Make check obey --ignore-size • Fix bwlimit toggle in conjunction with schedules (thanks cbruegg) • config ensures newly written config is on the same mount • Local • Revert to copy when moving file across file system boundaries • --skip-links to suppress symlink warnings (thanks Zhiming Wang) • Mount • Re-use rcat internals to support uploads from all remotes • Dropbox • Fix “entry doesn’t belong in directory” error • Stop using deprecated API methods • Swift • Fix server side copy to empty container with --fast-list • Google Drive • Change the default for --drive-use-trash to true • S3 • Set session token when using STS (thanks Girish Ramakrishnan) • Glacier docs and error messages (thanks Jan Varho) • Read 1000 (not 1024) items in dir listings to fix Wasabi • Backblaze B2 • Fix SHA1 mismatch when downloading files with no SHA1 • Calculate missing hashes on the fly instead of spooling • --b2-hard-delete to permanently delete (not hide) files (thanks John Papandriopoulos) • Hubic • Fix creating containers - no longer have to use the default container • Swift • Optionally configure from a standard set of OpenStack environment vars • Add endpoint_type config • Google Cloud Storage • Fix bucket creation to work with limited permission users • SFTP • Implement connection pooling for multiple ssh connections • Limit new connections per second • Add support for MD5 and SHA1 hashes where available (thanks Christian Brüggemann) • HTTP • Fix URL encoding issues • Fix directories with : in • Fix panic with URL encoded content v1.37 - 2017-07-22 • New backends • FTP - thanks to Antonio Messina • HTTP - thanks to Vasiliy Tolstov • New commands • rclone ncdu - for exploring a remote with a text based user interface. • rclone lsjson - for listing with a machine readable output • rclone dbhashsum - to show Dropbox style hashes of files (local or Dropbox) • New Features • Implement –fast-list flag • This allows remotes to list recursively if they can • This uses less transactions (important if you pay for them) • This may or may not be quicker • This will use more memory as it has to hold the listing in memory • –old-sync-method deprecated - the remaining uses are covered by –fast-list • This involved a major re-write of all the listing code • Add –tpslimit and –tpslimit-burst to limit transactions per second • this is useful in conjunction with rclone mount to limit external apps • Add –stats-log-level so can see –stats without -v • Print password prompts to stderr - Hraban Luyat • Warn about duplicate files when syncing • Oauth improvements • allow auth_url and token_url to be set in the config file • Print redirection URI if using own credentials. • Don’t Mkdir at the start of sync to save transactions • Compile • Update build to go1.8.3 • Require go1.6 for building rclone • Compile 386 builds with “GO386=387” for maximum compatibility • Bug Fixes • Fix menu selection when no remotes • Config saving reworked to not kill the file if disk gets full • Don’t delete remote if name does not change while renaming • moveto, copyto: report transfers and checks as per move and copy • Local • Add –local-no-unicode-normalization flag - Bob Potter • Mount • Now supported on Windows using cgofuse and WinFsp - thanks to Bill Zissimopoulos for much help • Compare checksums on upload/download via FUSE • Unmount when program ends with SIGINT (Ctrl+C) or SIGTERM - Jérôme Vizcaino • On read only open of file, make open pending until first read • Make –read-only reject modify operations • Implement ModTime via FUSE for remotes that support it • Allow modTime to be changed even before all writers are closed • Fix panic on renames • Fix hang on errored upload • Crypt • Report the name:root as specified by the user • Add an “obfuscate” option for filename encryption - Stephen Harris • Amazon Drive • Fix initialization order for token renewer • Remove revoked credentials, allow oauth proxy config and update docs • B2 • Reduce minimum chunk size to 5MB • Drive • Add team drive support • Reduce bandwidth by adding fields for partial responses - Martin Kristensen • Implement –drive-shared-with-me flag to view shared with me files - Danny Tsai • Add –drive-trashed-only to read only the files in the trash • Remove obsolete –drive-full-list • Add missing seek to start on retries of chunked uploads • Fix stats accounting for upload • Convert / in names to a unicode equivalent (/) • Poll for Google Drive changes when mounted • OneDrive • Fix the uploading of files with spaces • Fix initialization order for token renewer • Display speeds accurately when uploading - Yoni Jah • Swap to using http://localhost:53682/ as redirect URL - Michael Ledin • Retry on token expired error, reset upload body on retry - Yoni Jah • Google Cloud Storage • Add ability to specify location and storage class via config and command line - thanks gdm85 • Create container if necessary on server side copy • Increase directory listing chunk to 1000 to increase performance • Obtain a refresh token for GCS - Steven Lu • Yandex • Fix the name reported in log messages (was empty) • Correct error return for listing empty directory • Dropbox • Rewritten to use the v2 API • Now supports ModTime • Can only set by uploading the file again • If you uploaded with an old rclone, rclone may upload everything again • Use --size-only or --checksum to avoid this • Now supports the Dropbox content hashing scheme • Now supports low level retries • S3 • Work around eventual consistency in bucket creation • Create container if necessary on server side copy • Add us-east-2 (Ohio) and eu-west-2 (London) S3 regions - Zahiar Ahmed • Swift, Hubic • Fix zero length directory markers showing in the subdirectory listing • this caused lots of duplicate transfers • Fix paged directory listings • this caused duplicate directory errors • Create container if necessary on server side copy • Increase directory listing chunk to 1000 to increase performance • Make sensible error if the user forgets the container • SFTP • Add support for using ssh key files • Fix under Windows • Fix ssh agent on Windows • Adapt to latest version of library - Igor Kharin v1.36 - 2017-03-18 • New Features • SFTP remote (Jack Schmidt) • Re-implement sync routine to work a directory at a time reducing memory usage • Logging revamped to be more inline with rsync - now much quieter * -v only shows transfers * -vv is for full debug * –syslog to log to syslog on capable platforms • Implement –backup-dir and –suffix • Implement –track-renames (initial implementation by Bjørn Erik Pedersen) • Add time-based bandwidth limits (Lukas Loesche) • rclone cryptcheck: checks integrity of crypt remotes • Allow all config file variables and options to be set from environment variables • Add –buffer-size parameter to control buffer size for copy • Make –delete-after the default • Add –ignore-checksum flag (fixed by Hisham Zarka) • rclone check: Add –download flag to check all the data, not just hashes • rclone cat: add –head, –tail, –offset, –count and –discard • rclone config: when choosing from a list, allow the value to be entered too • rclone config: allow rename and copy of remotes • rclone obscure: for generating encrypted passwords for rclone’s config (T.C. Ferguson) • Comply with XDG Base Directory specification (Dario Giovannetti) • this moves the default location of the config file in a backwards compatible way • Release changes • Ubuntu snap support (Dedsec1) • Compile with go 1.8 • MIPS/Linux big and little endian support • Bug Fixes • Fix copyto copying things to the wrong place if the destination dir didn’t exist • Fix parsing of remotes in moveto and copyto • Fix –delete-before deleting files on copy • Fix –files-from with an empty file copying everything • Fix sync: don’t update mod times if –dry-run set • Fix MimeType propagation • Fix filters to add ** rules to directory rules • Local • Implement -L, –copy-links flag to allow rclone to follow symlinks • Open files in write only mode so rclone can write to an rclone mount • Fix unnormalised unicode causing problems reading directories • Fix interaction between -x flag and –max-depth • Mount • Implement proper directory handling (mkdir, rmdir, renaming) • Make include and exclude filters apply to mount • Implement read and write async buffers - control with –buffer-size • Fix fsync on for directories • Fix retry on network failure when reading off crypt • Crypt • Add –crypt-show-mapping to show encrypted file mapping • Fix crypt writer getting stuck in a loop • IMPORTANT this bug had the potential to cause data corruption when • reading data from a network based remote and • writing to a crypt on Google Drive • Use the cryptcheck command to validate your data if you are concerned • If syncing two crypt remotes, sync the unencrypted remote • Amazon Drive • Fix panics on Move (rename) • Fix panic on token expiry • B2 • Fix inconsistent listings and rclone check • Fix uploading empty files with go1.8 • Constrain memory usage when doing multipart uploads • Fix upload url not being refreshed properly • Drive • Fix Rmdir on directories with trashed files • Fix “Ignoring unknown object” when downloading • Add –drive-list-chunk • Add –drive-skip-gdocs (Károly Oláh) • OneDrive • Implement Move • Fix Copy • Fix overwrite detection in Copy • Fix waitForJob to parse errors correctly • Use token renewer to stop auth errors on long uploads • Fix uploading empty files with go1.8 • Google Cloud Storage • Fix depth 1 directory listings • Yandex • Fix single level directory listing • Dropbox • Normalise the case for single level directory listings • Fix depth 1 listing • S3 • Added ca-central-1 region (Jon Yergatian) v1.35 - 2017-01-02 • New Features • moveto and copyto commands for choosing a destination name on copy/move • rmdirs command to recursively delete empty directories • Allow repeated –include/–exclude/–filter options • Only show transfer stats on commands which transfer stuff • show stats on any command using the --stats flag • Allow overlapping directories in move when server side dir move is supported • Add –stats-unit option - thanks Scott McGillivray • Bug Fixes • Fix the config file being overwritten when two rclone instances are running • Make rclone lsd obey the filters properly • Fix compilation on mips • Fix not transferring files that don’t differ in size • Fix panic on nil retry/fatal error • Mount • Retry reads on error - should help with reliability a lot • Report the modification times for directories from the remote • Add bandwidth accounting and limiting (fixes –bwlimit) • If –stats provided will show stats and which files are transferring • Support R/W files if truncate is set. • Implement statfs interface so df works • Note that write is now supported on Amazon Drive • Report number of blocks in a file - thanks Stefan Breunig • Crypt • Prevent the user pointing crypt at itself • Fix failed to authenticate decrypted block errors • these will now return the underlying unexpected EOF instead • Amazon Drive • Add support for server side move and directory move - thanks Stefan Breunig • Fix nil pointer deref on size attribute • B2 • Use new prefix and delimiter parameters in directory listings • This makes –max-depth 1 dir listings as used in mount much faster • Reauth the account while doing uploads too - should help with token expiry • Drive • Make DirMove more efficient and complain about moving the root • Create destination directory on Move() v1.34 - 2016-11-06 • New Features • Stop single file and --files-from operations iterating through the source bucket. • Stop removing failed upload to cloud storage remotes • Make ContentType be preserved for cloud to cloud copies • Add support to toggle bandwidth limits via SIGUSR2 - thanks Marco Paganini • rclone check shows count of hashes that couldn’t be checked • rclone listremotes command • Support linux/arm64 build - thanks Fredrik Fornwall • Remove Authorization: lines from --dump-headers output • Bug Fixes • Ignore files with control characters in the names • Fix rclone move command • Delete src files which already existed in dst • Fix deletion of src file when dst file older • Fix rclone check on crypted file systems • Make failed uploads not count as “Transferred” • Make sure high level retries show with -q • Use a vendor directory with godep for repeatable builds • rclone mount - FUSE • Implement FUSE mount options • --no-modtime, --debug-fuse, --read-only, --allow-non-empty, --allow-root, --allow- other • --default-permissions, --write-back-cache, --max-read-ahead, --umask, --uid, --gid • Add --dir-cache-time to control caching of directory entries • Implement seek for files opened for read (useful for video players) • with -no-seek flag to disable • Fix crash on 32 bit ARM (alignment of 64 bit counter) • ...and many more internal fixes and improvements! • Crypt • Don’t show encrypted password in configurator to stop confusion • Amazon Drive • New wait for upload option --acd-upload-wait-per-gb • upload timeouts scale by file size and can be disabled • Add 502 Bad Gateway to list of errors we retry • Fix overwriting a file with a zero length file • Fix ACD file size warning limit - thanks Felix Bünemann • Local • Unix: implement -x/--one-file-system to stay on a single file system • thanks Durval Menezes and Luiz Carlos Rumbelsperger Viana • Windows: ignore the symlink bit on files • Windows: Ignore directory based junction points • B2 • Make sure each upload has at least one upload slot - fixes strange upload stats • Fix uploads when using crypt • Fix download of large files (sha1 mismatch) • Return error when we try to create a bucket which someone else owns • Update B2 docs with Data usage, and Crypt section - thanks Tomasz Mazur • S3 • Command line and config file support for • Setting/overriding ACL - thanks Radek Senfeld • Setting storage class - thanks Asko Tamm • Drive • Make exponential backoff work exactly as per Google specification • add .epub, .odp and .tsv as export formats. • Swift • Don’t read metadata for directory marker objects v1.33 - 2016-08-24 • New Features • Implement encryption • data encrypted in NACL secretbox format • with optional file name encryption • New commands • rclone mount - implements FUSE mounting of remotes (EXPERIMENTAL) • works on Linux, FreeBSD and OS X (need testers for the last 2!) • rclone cat - outputs remote file or files to the terminal • rclone genautocomplete - command to make a bash completion script for rclone • Editing a remote using rclone config now goes through the wizard • Compile with go 1.7 - this fixes rclone on macOS Sierra and on 386 processors • Use cobra for sub commands and docs generation • drive • Document how to make your own client_id • s3 • User-configurable Amazon S3 ACL (thanks Radek Šenfeld) • b2 • Fix stats accounting for upload - no more jumping to 100% done • On cleanup delete hide marker if it is the current file • New B2 API endpoint (thanks Per Cederberg) • Set maximum backoff to 5 Minutes • onedrive • Fix URL escaping in file names - eg uploading files with + in them. • amazon cloud drive • Fix token expiry during large uploads • Work around 408 REQUEST_TIMEOUT and 504 GATEWAY_TIMEOUT errors • local • Fix filenames with invalid UTF-8 not being uploaded • Fix problem with some UTF-8 characters on OS X v1.32 - 2016-07-13 • Backblaze B2 • Fix upload of files large files not in root v1.31 - 2016-07-13 • New Features • Reduce memory on sync by about 50% • Implement –no-traverse flag to stop copy traversing the destination remote. • This can be used to reduce memory usage down to the smallest possible. • Useful to copy a small number of files into a large destination folder. • Implement cleanup command for emptying trash / removing old versions of files • Currently B2 only • Single file handling improved • Now copied with –files-from • Automatically sets –no-traverse when copying a single file • Info on using installing with ansible - thanks Stefan Weichinger • Implement –no-update-modtime flag to stop rclone fixing the remote modified times. • Bug Fixes • Fix move command - stop it running for overlapping Fses - this was causing data loss. • Local • Fix incomplete hashes - this was causing problems for B2. • Amazon Drive • Rename Amazon Cloud Drive to Amazon Drive - no changes to config file needed. • Swift • Add support for non-default project domain - thanks Antonio Messina. • S3 • Add instructions on how to use rclone with minio. • Add ap-northeast-2 (Seoul) and ap-south-1 (Mumbai) regions. • Skip setting the modified time for objects > 5GB as it isn’t possible. • Backblaze B2 • Add –b2-versions flag so old versions can be listed and retrieved. • Treat 403 errors (eg cap exceeded) as fatal. • Implement cleanup command for deleting old file versions. • Make error handling compliant with B2 integrations notes. • Fix handling of token expiry. • Implement –b2-test-mode to set X-Bz-Test-Mode header. • Set cutoff for chunked upload to 200MB as per B2 guidelines. • Make upload multi-threaded. • Dropbox • Don’t retry 461 errors. v1.30 - 2016-06-18 • New Features • Directory listing code reworked for more features and better error reporting (thanks to Klaus Post for help). This enables • Directory include filtering for efficiency • –max-depth parameter • Better error reporting • More to come • Retry more errors • Add –ignore-size flag - for uploading images to onedrive • Log -v output to stdout by default • Display the transfer stats in more human readable form • Make 0 size files specifiable with --max-size 0b • Add b suffix so we can specify bytes in –bwlimit, –min-size etc • Use “password:” instead of “password>” prompt - thanks Klaus Post and Leigh Klotz • Bug Fixes • Fix retry doing one too many retries • Local • Fix problems with OS X and UTF-8 characters • Amazon Drive • Check a file exists before uploading to help with 408 Conflict errors • Reauth on 401 errors - this has been causing a lot of problems • Work around spurious 403 errors • Restart directory listings on error • Google Drive • Check a file exists before uploading to help with duplicates • Fix retry of multipart uploads • Backblaze B2 • Implement large file uploading • S3 • Add AES256 server-side encryption for - thanks Justin R. Wilson • Google Cloud Storage • Make sure we don’t use conflicting content types on upload • Add service account support - thanks Michal Witkowski • Swift • Add auth version parameter • Add domain option for openstack (v3 auth) - thanks Fabian Ruff v1.29 - 2016-04-18 • New Features • Implement -I, --ignore-times for unconditional upload • Improve dedupecommand • Now removes identical copies without asking • Now obeys --dry-run • Implement --dedupe-mode for non interactive running • --dedupe-mode interactive - interactive the default. • --dedupe-mode skip - removes identical files then skips anything left. • --dedupe-mode first - removes identical files then keeps the first one. • --dedupe-mode newest - removes identical files then keeps the newest one. • --dedupe-mode oldest - removes identical files then keeps the oldest one. • --dedupe-mode rename - removes identical files then renames the rest to be different. • Bug fixes • Make rclone check obey the --size-only flag. • Use “application/octet-stream” if discovered mime type is invalid. • Fix missing “quit” option when there are no remotes. • Google Drive • Increase default chunk size to 8 MB - increases upload speed of big files • Speed up directory listings and make more reliable • Add missing retries for Move and DirMove - increases reliability • Preserve mime type on file update • Backblaze B2 • Enable mod time syncing • This means that B2 will now check modification times • It will upload new files to update the modification times • (there isn’t an API to just set the mod time.) • If you want the old behaviour use --size-only. • Update API to new version • Fix parsing of mod time when not in metadata • Swift/Hubic • Don’t return an MD5SUM for static large objects • S3 • Fix uploading files bigger than 50GB v1.28 - 2016-03-01 • New Features • Configuration file encryption - thanks Klaus Post • Improve rclone config adding more help and making it easier to understand • Implement -u/--update so creation times can be used on all remotes • Implement --low-level-retries flag • Optionally disable gzip compression on downloads with --no-gzip-encoding • Bug fixes • Don’t make directories if --dry-run set • Fix and document the move command • Fix redirecting stderr on unix-like OSes when using --log-file • Fix delete command to wait until all finished - fixes missing deletes. • Backblaze B2 • Use one upload URL per go routine fixes more than one upload using auth token • Add pacing, retries and reauthentication - fixes token expiry problems • Upload without using a temporary file from local (and remotes which support SHA1) • Fix reading metadata for all files when it shouldn’t have been • Drive • Fix listing drive documents at root • Disable copy and move for Google docs • Swift • Fix uploading of chunked files with non ASCII characters • Allow setting of storage_url in the config - thanks Xavier Lucas • S3 • Allow IAM role and credentials from environment variables - thanks Brian Stengaard • Allow low privilege users to use S3 (check if directory exists during Mkdir) - thanks Jakub Gedeon • Amazon Drive • Retry on more things to make directory listings more reliable v1.27 - 2016-01-31 • New Features • Easier headless configuration with rclone authorize • Add support for multiple hash types - we now check SHA1 as well as MD5 hashes. • delete command which does obey the filters (unlike purge) • dedupe command to deduplicate a remote. Useful with Google Drive. • Add --ignore-existing flag to skip all files that exist on destination. • Add --delete-before, --delete-during, --delete-after flags. • Add --memprofile flag to debug memory use. • Warn the user about files with same name but different case • Make --include rules add their implicit exclude * at the end of the filter list • Deprecate compiling with go1.3 • Amazon Drive • Fix download of files > 10 GB • Fix directory traversal (“Next token is expired”) for large directory listings • Remove 409 conflict from error codes we will retry - stops very long pauses • Backblaze B2 • SHA1 hashes now checked by rclone core • Drive • Add --drive-auth-owner-only to only consider files owned by the user - thanks Björn Harrtell • Export Google documents • Dropbox • Make file exclusion error controllable with -q • Swift • Fix upload from unprivileged user. • S3 • Fix updating of mod times of files with + in. • Local • Add local file system option to disable UNC on Windows. v1.26 - 2016-01-02 • New Features • Yandex storage backend - thank you Dmitry Burdeev (“dibu”) • Implement Backblaze B2 storage backend • Add –min-age and –max-age flags - thank you Adriano Aurélio Meirelles • Make ls/lsl/md5sum/size/check obey includes and excludes • Fixes • Fix crash in http logging • Upload releases to github too • Swift • Fix sync for chunked files • OneDrive • Re-enable server side copy • Don’t mask HTTP error codes with JSON decode error • S3 • Fix corrupting Content-Type on mod time update (thanks Joseph Spurrier) v1.25 - 2015-11-14 • New features • Implement Hubic storage system • Fixes • Fix deletion of some excluded files without –delete-excluded • This could have deleted files unexpectedly on sync • Always check first with --dry-run! • Swift • Stop SetModTime losing metadata (eg X-Object-Manifest) • This could have caused data loss for files > 5GB in size • Use ContentType from Object to avoid lookups in listings • OneDrive • disable server side copy as it seems to be broken at Microsoft v1.24 - 2015-11-07 • New features • Add support for Microsoft OneDrive • Add --no-check-certificate option to disable server certificate verification • Add async readahead buffer for faster transfer of big files • Fixes • Allow spaces in remotes and check remote names for validity at creation time • Allow `&' and disallow `:' in Windows filenames. • Swift • Ignore directory marker objects where appropriate - allows working with Hubic • Don’t delete the container if fs wasn’t at root • S3 • Don’t delete the bucket if fs wasn’t at root • Google Cloud Storage • Don’t delete the bucket if fs wasn’t at root v1.23 - 2015-10-03 • New features • Implement rclone size for measuring remotes • Fixes • Fix headless config for drive and gcs • Tell the user they should try again if the webserver method failed • Improve output of --dump-headers • S3 • Allow anonymous access to public buckets • Swift • Stop chunked operations logging “Failed to read info: Object Not Found” • Use Content-Length on uploads for extra reliability v1.22 - 2015-09-28 • Implement rsync like include and exclude flags • swift • Support files > 5GB - thanks Sergey Tolmachev v1.21 - 2015-09-22 • New features • Display individual transfer progress • Make lsl output times in localtime • Fixes • Fix allowing user to override credentials again in Drive, GCS and ACD • Amazon Drive • Implement compliant pacing scheme • Google Drive • Make directory reads concurrent for increased speed. v1.20 - 2015-09-15 • New features • Amazon Drive support • Oauth support redone - fix many bugs and improve usability • Use “golang.org/x/oauth2” as oauth library of choice • Improve oauth usability for smoother initial signup • drive, googlecloudstorage: optionally use auto config for the oauth token • Implement –dump-headers and –dump-bodies debug flags • Show multiple matched commands if abbreviation too short • Implement server side move where possible • local • Always use UNC paths internally on Windows - fixes a lot of bugs • dropbox • force use of our custom transport which makes timeouts work • Thanks to Klaus Post for lots of help with this release v1.19 - 2015-08-28 • New features • Server side copies for s3/swift/drive/dropbox/gcs • Move command - uses server side copies if it can • Implement –retries flag - tries 3 times by default • Build for plan9/amd64 and solaris/amd64 too • Fixes • Make a current version download with a fixed URL for scripting • Ignore rmdir in limited fs rather than throwing error • dropbox • Increase chunk size to improve upload speeds massively • Issue an error message when trying to upload bad file name v1.18 - 2015-08-17 • drive • Add --drive-use-trash flag so rclone trashes instead of deletes • Add “Forbidden to download” message for files with no downloadURL • dropbox • Remove datastore • This was deprecated and it caused a lot of problems • Modification times and MD5SUMs no longer stored • Fix uploading files > 2GB • s3 • use official AWS SDK from github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go • NB will most likely require you to delete and recreate remote • enable multipart upload which enables files > 5GB • tested with Ceph / RadosGW / S3 emulation • many thanks to Sam Liston and Brian Haymore at the Utah Center for High Performance Computing (https://www.chpc.utah.edu/) for a Ceph test account • misc • Show errors when reading the config file • Do not print stats in quiet mode - thanks Leonid Shalupov • Add FAQ • Fix created directories not obeying umask • Linux installation instructions - thanks Shimon Doodkin v1.17 - 2015-06-14 • dropbox: fix case insensitivity issues - thanks Leonid Shalupov v1.16 - 2015-06-09 • Fix uploading big files which was causing timeouts or panics • Don’t check md5sum after download with –size-only v1.15 - 2015-06-06 • Add –checksum flag to only discard transfers by MD5SUM - thanks Alex Couper • Implement –size-only flag to sync on size not checksum & modtime • Expand docs and remove duplicated information • Document rclone’s limitations with directories • dropbox: update docs about case insensitivity v1.14 - 2015-05-21 • local: fix encoding of non utf-8 file names - fixes a duplicate file problem • drive: docs about rate limiting • google cloud storage: Fix compile after API change in “google.golang.org/api/storage/v1” v1.13 - 2015-05-10 • Revise documentation (especially sync) • Implement –timeout and –conntimeout • s3: ignore etags from multipart uploads which aren’t md5sums v1.12 - 2015-03-15 • drive: Use chunked upload for files above a certain size • drive: add –drive-chunk-size and –drive-upload-cutoff parameters • drive: switch to insert from update when a failed copy deletes the upload • core: Log duplicate files if they are detected v1.11 - 2015-03-04 • swift: add region parameter • drive: fix crash on failed to update remote mtime • In remote paths, change native directory separators to / • Add synchronization to ls/lsl/lsd output to stop corruptions • Ensure all stats/log messages to go stderr • Add –log-file flag to log everything (including panics) to file • Make it possible to disable stats printing with –stats=0 • Implement –bwlimit to limit data transfer bandwidth v1.10 - 2015-02-12 • s3: list an unlimited number of items • Fix getting stuck in the configurator v1.09 - 2015-02-07 • windows: Stop drive letters (eg C:) getting mixed up with remotes (eg drive:) • local: Fix directory separators on Windows • drive: fix rate limit exceeded errors v1.08 - 2015-02-04 • drive: fix subdirectory listing to not list entire drive • drive: Fix SetModTime • dropbox: adapt code to recent library changes v1.07 - 2014-12-23 • google cloud storage: fix memory leak v1.06 - 2014-12-12 • Fix “Couldn’t find home directory” on OSX • swift: Add tenant parameter • Use new location of Google API packages v1.05 - 2014-08-09 • Improved tests and consequently lots of minor fixes • core: Fix race detected by go race detector • core: Fixes after running errcheck • drive: reset root directory on Rmdir and Purge • fs: Document that Purger returns error on empty directory, test and fix • google cloud storage: fix ListDir on subdirectory • google cloud storage: re-read metadata in SetModTime • s3: make reading metadata more reliable to work around eventual consistency problems • s3: strip trailing / from ListDir() • swift: return directories without / in ListDir v1.04 - 2014-07-21 • google cloud storage: Fix crash on Update v1.03 - 2014-07-20 • swift, s3, dropbox: fix updated files being marked as corrupted • Make compile with go 1.1 again v1.02 - 2014-07-19 • Implement Dropbox remote • Implement Google Cloud Storage remote • Verify Md5sums and Sizes after copies • Remove times from “ls” command - lists sizes only • Add add “lsl” - lists times and sizes • Add “md5sum” command v1.01 - 2014-07-04 • drive: fix transfer of big files using up lots of memory v1.00 - 2014-07-03 • drive: fix whole second dates v0.99 - 2014-06-26 • Fix –dry-run not working • Make compatible with go 1.1 v0.98 - 2014-05-30 • s3: Treat missing Content-Length as 0 for some ceph installations • rclonetest: add file with a space in v0.97 - 2014-05-05 • Implement copying of single files • s3 & swift: support paths inside containers/buckets v0.96 - 2014-04-24 • drive: Fix multiple files of same name being created • drive: Use o.Update and fs.Put to optimise transfers • Add version number, -V and –version v0.95 - 2014-03-28 • rclone.org: website, docs and graphics • drive: fix path parsing v0.94 - 2014-03-27 • Change remote format one last time • GNU style flags v0.93 - 2014-03-16 • drive: store token in config file • cross compile other versions • set strict permissions on config file v0.92 - 2014-03-15 • Config fixes and –config option v0.91 - 2014-03-15 • Make config file v0.90 - 2013-06-27 • Project named rclone v0.00 - 2012-11-18 • Project started
Bugs and Limitations
Limitations Directory timestamps aren’t preserved Rclone doesn’t currently preserve the timestamps of directories. This is because rclone only really considers objects when syncing. Rclone struggles with millions of files in a directory/bucket Currently rclone loads each directory/bucket entirely into memory before using it. Since each rclone object takes 0.5k-1k of memory this can take a very long time and use a large amount of memory. Millions of files in a directory tends to occur on bucket-based remotes (e.g. S3 buckets) since those remotes do not segregate subdirectories within the bucket. Bucket based remotes and folders Bucket based remotes (e.g. S3/GCS/Swift/B2) do not have a concept of directories. Rclone therefore cannot create directories in them which means that empty directories on a bucket based remote will tend to disappear. Some software creates empty keys ending in / as directory markers. Rclone doesn’t do this as it potentially creates more objects and costs more. This ability may be added in the future (probably via a flag/option). Bugs Bugs are stored in rclone’s GitHub project: • Reported bugs (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Abug) • Known issues (https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+milestone%3A%22Known+Problem%22) Frequently Asked Questions Do all cloud storage systems support all rclone commands Yes they do. All the rclone commands (eg sync, copy etc) will work on all the remote storage systems. Can I copy the config from one machine to another Sure! Rclone stores all of its config in a single file. If you want to find this file, run rclone config file which will tell you where it is. See the remote setup docs (https://rclone.org/remote_setup/) for more info. How do I configure rclone on a remote / headless box with no browser? This has now been documented in its own remote setup page (https://rclone.org/remote_setup/). Can rclone sync directly from drive to s3 Rclone can sync between two remote cloud storage systems just fine. Note that it effectively downloads the file and uploads it again, so the node running rclone would need to have lots of bandwidth. The syncs would be incremental (on a file by file basis). Eg rclone sync -i drive:Folder s3:bucket Using rclone from multiple locations at the same time You can use rclone from multiple places at the same time if you choose different subdirectory for the output, eg Server A> rclone sync -i /tmp/whatever remote:ServerA Server B> rclone sync -i /tmp/whatever remote:ServerB If you sync to the same directory then you should use rclone copy otherwise the two instances of rclone may delete each other’s files, eg Server A> rclone copy /tmp/whatever remote:Backup Server B> rclone copy /tmp/whatever remote:Backup The file names you upload from Server A and Server B should be different in this case, otherwise some file systems (eg Drive) may make duplicates. Why doesn’t rclone support partial transfers / binary diffs like rsync? Rclone stores each file you transfer as a native object on the remote cloud storage system. This means that you can see the files you upload as expected using alternative access methods (eg using the Google Drive web interface). There is a 1:1 mapping between files on your hard disk and objects created in the cloud storage system. Cloud storage systems (at least none I’ve come across yet) don’t support partially uploading an object. You can’t take an existing object, and change some bytes in the middle of it. It would be possible to make a sync system which stored binary diffs instead of whole objects like rclone does, but that would break the 1:1 mapping of files on your hard disk to objects in the remote cloud storage system. All the cloud storage systems support partial downloads of content, so it would be possible to make partial downloads work. However to make this work efficiently this would require storing a significant amount of metadata, which breaks the desired 1:1 mapping of files to objects. Can rclone do bi-directional sync? No, not at present. rclone only does uni-directional sync from A -> B. It may do in the future though since it has all the primitives - it just requires writing the algorithm to do it. Can I use rclone with an HTTP proxy? Yes. rclone will follow the standard environment variables for proxies, similar to cURL and other programs. In general the variables are called http_proxy (for services reached over http) and https_proxy (for services reached over https). Most public services will be using https, but you may wish to set both. The content of the variable is protocol://server:port. The protocol value is the one used to talk to the proxy server, itself, and is commonly either http or socks5. Slightly annoyingly, there is no standard for the name; some applications may use http_proxy but another one HTTP_PROXY. The Go libraries used by rclone will try both variations, but you may wish to set all possibilities. So, on Linux, you may end up with code similar to export http_proxy=http://proxyserver:12345 export https_proxy=$http_proxy export HTTP_PROXY=$http_proxy export HTTPS_PROXY=$http_proxy The NO_PROXY allows you to disable the proxy for specific hosts. Hosts must be comma separated, and can contain domains or parts. For instance “foo.com” also matches “bar.foo.com”. e.g. export no_proxy=localhost,127.0.0.0/8,my.host.name export NO_PROXY=$no_proxy Note that the ftp backend does not support ftp_proxy yet. Rclone gives x509: failed to load system roots and no roots provided error This means that rclone can’t file the SSL root certificates. Likely you are running rclone on a NAS with a cut-down Linux OS, or possibly on Solaris. Rclone (via the Go runtime) tries to load the root certificates from these places on Linux. "/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt", // Debian/Ubuntu/Gentoo etc. "/etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt", // Fedora/RHEL "/etc/ssl/ca-bundle.pem", // OpenSUSE "/etc/pki/tls/cacert.pem", // OpenELEC So doing something like this should fix the problem. It also sets the time which is important for SSL to work properly. mkdir -p /etc/ssl/certs/ curl -o /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bagder/ca-bundle/master/ca-bundle.crt ntpclient -s -h pool.ntp.org The two environment variables SSL_CERT_FILE and SSL_CERT_DIR, mentioned in the x509 package (https://godoc.org/crypto/x509), provide an additional way to provide the SSL root certificates. Note that you may need to add the --insecure option to the curl command line if it doesn’t work without. curl --insecure -o /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bagder/ca-bundle/master/ca-bundle.crt Rclone gives Failed to load config file: function not implemented error Likely this means that you are running rclone on Linux version not supported by the go runtime, ie earlier than version 2.6.23. See the system requirements section in the go install docs (https://golang.org/doc/install) for full details. All my uploaded docx/xlsx/pptx files appear as archive/zip This is caused by uploading these files from a Windows computer which hasn’t got the Microsoft Office suite installed. The easiest way to fix is to install the Word viewer and the Microsoft Office Compatibility Pack for Word, Excel, and PowerPoint 2007 and later versions’ file formats tcp lookup some.domain.com no such host This happens when rclone cannot resolve a domain. Please check that your DNS setup is generally working, e.g. # both should print a long list of possible IP addresses dig www.googleapis.com # resolve using your default DNS dig www.googleapis.com @8.8.8.8 # resolve with Google's DNS server If you are using systemd-resolved (default on Arch Linux), ensure it is at version 233 or higher. Previous releases contain a bug which causes not all domains to be resolved properly. Additionally with the GODEBUG=netdns= environment variable the Go resolver decision can be influenced. This also allows to resolve certain issues with DNS resolution. See the name resolution section in the go docs (https://golang.org/pkg/net/#hdr-Name_Resolution). The total size reported in the stats for a sync is wrong and keeps changing It is likely you have more than 10,000 files that need to be synced. By default rclone only gets 10,000 files ahead in a sync so as not to use up too much memory. You can change this default with the –max-backlog (https://rclone.org/docs/#max-backlog-n) flag. Rclone is using too much memory or appears to have a memory leak Rclone is written in Go which uses a garbage collector. The default settings for the garbage collector mean that it runs when the heap size has doubled. However it is possible to tune the garbage collector to use less memory by setting GOGC (https://dave.cheney.net/tag/gogc) to a lower value, say export GOGC=20. This will make the garbage collector work harder, reducing memory size at the expense of CPU usage. The most common cause of rclone using lots of memory is a single directory with thousands or millions of files in. Rclone has to load this entirely into memory as rclone objects. Each rclone object takes 0.5k-1k of memory. License This is free software under the terms of MIT the license (check the COPYING file included with the source code). Copyright (C) 2019 by Nick Craig-Wood https://www.craig-wood.com/nick/ Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. Authors • Nick Craig-Wood <nick@craig-wood.com> Contributors {{< rem email addresses removed from here need to be addeed to bin/.ignore-emails to make sure update-authors.py doesn't immediately put them back in again. >}} • Alex Couper <amcouper@gmail.com> • Leonid Shalupov <leonid@shalupov.com> <shalupov@diverse.org.ru> • Shimon Doodkin <helpmepro1@gmail.com> • Colin Nicholson <colin@colinn.com> • Klaus Post <klauspost@gmail.com> • Sergey Tolmachev <tolsi.ru@gmail.com> • Adriano Aurélio Meirelles <adriano@atinge.com> • C. Bess <cbess@users.noreply.github.com> • Dmitry Burdeev <dibu28@gmail.com> • Joseph Spurrier <github@josephspurrier.com> • Björn Harrtell <bjorn@wololo.org> • Xavier Lucas <xavier.lucas@corp.ovh.com> • Werner Beroux <werner@beroux.com> • Brian Stengaard <brian@stengaard.eu> • Jakub Gedeon <jgedeon@sofi.com> • Jim Tittsler <jwt@onjapan.net> • Michal Witkowski <michal@improbable.io> • Fabian Ruff <fabian.ruff@sap.com> • Leigh Klotz <klotz@quixey.com> • Romain Lapray <lapray.romain@gmail.com> • Justin R. Wilson <jrw972@gmail.com> • Antonio Messina <antonio.s.messina@gmail.com> • Stefan G. Weichinger <office@oops.co.at> • Per Cederberg <cederberg@gmail.com> • Radek Šenfeld <rush@logic.cz> • Fredrik Fornwall <fredrik@fornwall.net> • Asko Tamm <asko@deekit.net> • xor-zz <xor@gstocco.com> • Tomasz Mazur <tmazur90@gmail.com> • Marco Paganini <paganini@paganini.net> • Felix Bünemann <buenemann@louis.info> • Durval Menezes <jmrclone@durval.com> • Luiz Carlos Rumbelsperger Viana <maxd13_luiz_carlos@hotmail.com> • Stefan Breunig <stefan-github@yrden.de> • Alishan Ladhani <ali-l@users.noreply.github.com> • 0xJAKE <0xJAKE@users.noreply.github.com> • Thibault Molleman <thibaultmol@users.noreply.github.com> • Scott McGillivray <scott.mcgillivray@gmail.com> • Bjørn Erik Pedersen <bjorn.erik.pedersen@gmail.com> • Lukas Loesche <lukas@mesosphere.io> • emyarod <allllaboutyou@gmail.com> • T.C. Ferguson <tcf909@gmail.com> • Brandur <brandur@mutelight.org> • Dario Giovannetti <dev@dariogiovannetti.net> • Károly Oláh <okaresz@aol.com> • Jon Yergatian <jon@macfanatic.ca> • Jack Schmidt <github@mowsey.org> • Dedsec1 <Dedsec1@users.noreply.github.com> • Hisham Zarka <hzarka@gmail.com> • Jérôme Vizcaino <jerome.vizcaino@gmail.com> • Mike Tesch <mjt6129@rit.edu> • Marvin Watson <marvwatson@users.noreply.github.com> • Danny Tsai <danny8376@gmail.com> • Yoni Jah <yonjah+git@gmail.com> <yonjah+github@gmail.com> • Stephen Harris <github@spuddy.org> <sweharris@users.noreply.github.com> • Ihor Dvoretskyi <ihor.dvoretskyi@gmail.com> • Jon Craton <jncraton@gmail.com> • Hraban Luyat <hraban@0brg.net> • Michael Ledin <mledin89@gmail.com> • Martin Kristensen <me@azgul.com> • Too Much IO <toomuchio@users.noreply.github.com> • Anisse Astier <anisse@astier.eu> • Zahiar Ahmed <zahiar@live.com> • Igor Kharin <igorkharin@gmail.com> • Bill Zissimopoulos <billziss@navimatics.com> • Bob Potter <bobby.potter@gmail.com> • Steven Lu <tacticalazn@gmail.com> • Sjur Fredriksen <sjurtf@ifi.uio.no> • Ruwbin <hubus12345@gmail.com> • Fabian Möller <fabianm88@gmail.com> <f.moeller@nynex.de> • Edward Q. Bridges <github@eqbridges.com> • Vasiliy Tolstov <v.tolstov@selfip.ru> • Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io> • sainaen <sainaen@gmail.com> • gdm85 <gdm85@users.noreply.github.com> • Yaroslav Halchenko <debian@onerussian.com> • John Papandriopoulos <jpap@users.noreply.github.com> • Zhiming Wang <zmwangx@gmail.com> • Andy Pilate <cubox@cubox.me> • Oliver Heyme <olihey@googlemail.com> <olihey@users.noreply.github.com> <de8olihe@lego.com> • wuyu <wuyu@yunify.com> • Andrei Dragomir <adragomi@adobe.com> • Christian Brüggemann <mail@cbruegg.com> • Alex McGrath Kraak <amkdude@gmail.com> • bpicode <bjoern.pirnay@googlemail.com> • Daniel Jagszent <daniel@jagszent.de> • Josiah White <thegenius2009@gmail.com> • Ishuah Kariuki <kariuki@ishuah.com> <ishuah91@gmail.com> • Jan Varho <jan@varho.org> • Girish Ramakrishnan <girish@cloudron.io> • LingMan <LingMan@users.noreply.github.com> • Jacob McNamee <jacobmcnamee@gmail.com> • jersou <jertux@gmail.com> • thierry <thierry@substantiel.fr> • Simon Leinen <simon.leinen@gmail.com> <ubuntu@s3-test.novalocal> • Dan Dascalescu <ddascalescu+github@gmail.com> • Jason Rose <jason@jro.io> • Andrew Starr-Bochicchio <a.starr.b@gmail.com> • John Leach <john@johnleach.co.uk> • Corban Raun <craun@instructure.com> • Pierre Carlson <mpcarl@us.ibm.com> • Ernest Borowski <er.borowski@gmail.com> • Remus Bunduc <remus.bunduc@gmail.com> • Iakov Davydov <iakov.davydov@unil.ch> <dav05.gith@myths.ru> • Jakub Tasiemski <tasiemski@gmail.com> • David Minor <dminor@saymedia.com> • Tim Cooijmans <cooijmans.tim@gmail.com> • Laurence <liuxy6@gmail.com> • Giovanni Pizzi <gio.piz@gmail.com> • Filip Bartodziej <filipbartodziej@gmail.com> • Jon Fautley <jon@dead.li> • lewapm <32110057+lewapm@users.noreply.github.com> • Yassine Imounachen <yassine256@gmail.com> • Chris Redekop <chris-redekop@users.noreply.github.com> <chris.redekop@gmail.com> • Jon Fautley <jon@adenoid.appstal.co.uk> • Will Gunn <WillGunn@users.noreply.github.com> • Lucas Bremgartner <lucas@bremis.ch> • Jody Frankowski <jody.frankowski@gmail.com> • Andreas Roussos <arouss1980@gmail.com> • nbuchanan <nbuchanan@utah.gov> • Durval Menezes <rclone@durval.com> • Victor <vb-github@viblo.se> • Mateusz <pabian.mateusz@gmail.com> • Daniel Loader <spicypixel@gmail.com> • David0rk <davidork@gmail.com> • Alexander Neumann <alexander@bumpern.de> • Giri Badanahatti <gbadanahatti@us.ibm.com@Giris-MacBook-Pro.local> • Leo R. Lundgren <leo@finalresort.org> • wolfv <wolfv6@users.noreply.github.com> • Dave Pedu <dave@davepedu.com> • Stefan Lindblom <lindblom@spotify.com> • seuffert <oliver@seuffert.biz> • gbadanahatti <37121690+gbadanahatti@users.noreply.github.com> • Keith Goldfarb <barkofdelight@gmail.com> • Steve Kriss <steve@heptio.com> • Chih-Hsuan Yen <yan12125@gmail.com> • Alexander Neumann <fd0@users.noreply.github.com> • Matt Holt <mholt@users.noreply.github.com> • Eri Bastos <bastos.eri@gmail.com> • Michael P. Dubner <pywebmail@list.ru> • Antoine GIRARD <sapk@users.noreply.github.com> • Mateusz Piotrowski <mpp302@gmail.com> • Animosity022 <animosity22@users.noreply.github.com> <earl.texter@gmail.com> • Peter Baumgartner <pete@lincolnloop.com> • Craig Rachel <craig@craigrachel.com> • Michael G. Noll <miguno@users.noreply.github.com> • hensur <me@hensur.de> • Oliver Heyme <de8olihe@lego.com> • Richard Yang <richard@yenforyang.com> • Piotr Oleszczyk <piotr.oleszczyk@gmail.com> • Rodrigo <rodarima@gmail.com> • NoLooseEnds <NoLooseEnds@users.noreply.github.com> • Jakub Karlicek <jakub@karlicek.me> • John Clayton <john@codemonkeylabs.com> • Kasper Byrdal Nielsen <byrdal76@gmail.com> • Benjamin Joseph Dag <bjdag1234@users.noreply.github.com> • themylogin <themylogin@gmail.com> • Onno Zweers <onno.zweers@surfsara.nl> • Jasper Lievisse Adriaanse <jasper@humppa.nl> • sandeepkru <sandeep.ummadi@gmail.com> <sandeepkru@users.noreply.github.com> • HerrH <atomtigerzoo@users.noreply.github.com> • Andrew <4030760+sparkyman215@users.noreply.github.com> • dan smith <XX1011@gmail.com> • Oleg Kovalov <iamolegkovalov@gmail.com> • Ruben Vandamme <github-com-00ff86@vandamme.email> • Cnly <minecnly@gmail.com> • Andres Alvarez <1671935+kir4h@users.noreply.github.com> • reddi1 <xreddi@gmail.com> • Matt Tucker <matthewtckr@gmail.com> • Sebastian Bünger <buengese@gmail.com> • Martin Polden <mpolden@mpolden.no> • Alex Chen <Cnly@users.noreply.github.com> • Denis <deniskovpen@gmail.com> • bsteiss <35940619+bsteiss@users.noreply.github.com> • Cédric Connes <cedric.connes@gmail.com> • Dr. Tobias Quathamer <toddy15@users.noreply.github.com> • dcpu <42736967+dcpu@users.noreply.github.com> • Sheldon Rupp <me@shel.io> • albertony <12441419+albertony@users.noreply.github.com> • cron410 <cron410@gmail.com> • Anagh Kumar Baranwal <6824881+darthShadow@users.noreply.github.com> • Felix Brucker <felix@felixbrucker.com> • Santiago Rodríguez <scollazo@users.noreply.github.com> • Craig Miskell <craig.miskell@fluxfederation.com> • Antoine GIRARD <sapk@sapk.fr> • Joanna Marek <joanna.marek@u2i.com> • frenos <frenos@users.noreply.github.com> • ssaqua <ssaqua@users.noreply.github.com> • xnaas <me@xnaas.info> • Frantisek Fuka <fuka@fuxoft.cz> • Paul Kohout <pauljkohout@yahoo.com> • dcpu <43330287+dcpu@users.noreply.github.com> • jackyzy823 <jackyzy823@gmail.com> • David Haguenauer <ml@kurokatta.org> • teresy <hi.teresy@gmail.com> • buergi <patbuergi@gmx.de> • Florian Gamboeck <mail@floga.de> • Ralf Hemberger <10364191+rhemberger@users.noreply.github.com> • Scott Edlund <sedlund@users.noreply.github.com> • Erik Swanson <erik@retailnext.net> • Jake Coggiano <jake@stripe.com> • brused27 <brused27@noemailaddress> • Peter Kaminski <kaminski@istori.com> • Henry Ptasinski <henry@logout.com> • Alexander <kharkovalexander@gmail.com> • Garry McNulty <garrmcnu@gmail.com> • Mathieu Carbou <mathieu.carbou@gmail.com> • Mark Otway <mark@otway.com> • William Cocker <37018962+WilliamCocker@users.noreply.github.com> • François Leurent <131.js@cloudyks.org> • Arkadius Stefanski <arkste@gmail.com> • Jay <dev@jaygoel.com> • andrea rota <a@xelera.eu> • nicolov <nicolov@users.noreply.github.com> • Dario Guzik <dario@guzik.com.ar> • qip <qip@users.noreply.github.com> • yair@unicorn <yair@unicorn> • Matt Robinson <brimstone@the.narro.ws> • kayrus <kay.diam@gmail.com> • Rémy Léone <remy.leone@gmail.com> • Wojciech Smigielski <wojciech.hieronim.smigielski@gmail.com> • weetmuts <oehrstroem@gmail.com> • Jonathan <vanillajonathan@users.noreply.github.com> • James Carpenter <orbsmiv@users.noreply.github.com> • Vince <vince0villamora@gmail.com> • Nestar47 <47841759+Nestar47@users.noreply.github.com> • Six <brbsix@gmail.com> • Alexandru Bumbacea <alexandru.bumbacea@booking.com> • calisro <robert.calistri@gmail.com> • Dr.Rx <david.rey@nventive.com> • marcintustin <marcintustin@users.noreply.github.com> • jaKa Močnik <jaka@koofr.net> • Fionera <fionera@fionera.de> • Dan Walters <dan@walters.io> • Danil Semelenov <sgtpep@users.noreply.github.com> • xopez <28950736+xopez@users.noreply.github.com> • Ben Boeckel <mathstuf@gmail.com> • Manu <manu@snapdragon.cc> • Kyle E. Mitchell <kyle@kemitchell.com> • Gary Kim <gary@garykim.dev> • Jon <jonathn@github.com> • Jeff Quinn <jeffrey.quinn@bluevoyant.com> • Peter Berbec <peter@berbec.com> • didil <1284255+didil@users.noreply.github.com> • id01 <gaviniboom@gmail.com> • Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com> • Philip Harvey <32467456+pharveybattelle@users.noreply.github.com> • JorisE <JorisE@users.noreply.github.com> • garry415 <garry.415@gmail.com> • forgems <forgems@gmail.com> • Florian Apolloner <florian@apolloner.eu> • Aleksandar Janković <office@ajankovic.com> <ajankovic@users.noreply.github.com> • Maran <maran@protonmail.com> • nguyenhuuluan434 <nguyenhuuluan434@gmail.com> • Laura Hausmann <zotan@zotan.pw> <laura@hausmann.dev> • yparitcher <y@paritcher.com> • AbelThar <abela.tharen@gmail.com> • Matti Niemenmaa <matti.niemenmaa+git@iki.fi> • Russell Davis <russelldavis@users.noreply.github.com> • Yi FU <yi.fu@tink.se> • Paul Millar <paul.millar@desy.de> • justinalin <justinalin@qnap.com> • EliEron <subanimehd@gmail.com> • justina777 <chiahuei.lin@gmail.com> • Chaitanya Bankanhal <bchaitanya15@gmail.com> • Michał Matczuk <michal@scylladb.com> • Macavirus <macavirus@zoho.com> • Abhinav Sharma <abhi18av@users.noreply.github.com> • ginvine <34869051+ginvine@users.noreply.github.com> • Patrick Wang <mail6543210@yahoo.com.tw> • Cenk Alti <cenkalti@gmail.com> • Andreas Chlupka <andy@chlupka.com> • Alfonso Montero <amontero@tinet.org> • Ivan Andreev <ivandeex@gmail.com> • David Baumgold <david@davidbaumgold.com> • Lars Lehtonen <lars.lehtonen@gmail.com> • Matei David <matei.david@gmail.com> • David <david.bramwell@endemolshine.com> • Anthony Rusdi <33247310+antrusd@users.noreply.github.com> • Richard Patel <me@terorie.dev> • 庄天翼 <zty0826@gmail.com> • SwitchJS <dev@switchjs.com> • Raphael <PowershellNinja@users.noreply.github.com> • Sezal Agrawal <sezalagrawal@gmail.com> • Tyler <TylerNakamura@users.noreply.github.com> • Brett Dutro <brett.dutro@gmail.com> • Vighnesh SK <booterror99@gmail.com> • Arijit Biswas <dibbyo456@gmail.com> • Michele Caci <michele.caci@gmail.com> • AlexandrBoltris <ua2fgb@gmail.com> • Bryce Larson <blarson@saltstack.com> • Carlos Ferreyra <crypticmind@gmail.com> • Saksham Khanna <sakshamkhanna@outlook.com> • dausruddin <5763466+dausruddin@users.noreply.github.com> • zero-24 <zero-24@users.noreply.github.com> • Xiaoxing Ye <ye@xiaoxing.us> • Barry Muldrey <barry@muldrey.net> • Sebastian Brandt <sebastian.brandt@friday.de> • Marco Molteni <marco.molteni@mailbox.org> • Ankur Gupta <ankur0493@gmail.com> <7876747+ankur0493@users.noreply.github.com> • Maciej Zimnoch <maciej@scylladb.com> • anuar45 <serdaliyev.anuar@gmail.com> • Fernando <ferferga@users.noreply.github.com> • David Cole <david.cole@sohonet.com> • Wei He <git@weispot.com> • Outvi V <19144373+outloudvi@users.noreply.github.com> • Thomas Kriechbaumer <thomas@kriechbaumer.name> • Tennix <tennix@users.noreply.github.com> • Ole Schütt <ole@schuett.name> • Kuang-che Wu <kcwu@csie.org> • Thomas Eales <wingsuit@users.noreply.github.com> • Paul Tinsley <paul.tinsley@vitalsource.com> • Felix Hungenberg <git@shiftgeist.com> • Benjamin Richter <github@dev.telepath.de> • landall <cst_zf@qq.com> • thestigma <thestigma@gmail.com> • jtagcat <38327267+jtagcat@users.noreply.github.com> • Damon Permezel <permezel@me.com> • boosh <boosh@users.noreply.github.com> • unbelauscht <58393353+unbelauscht@users.noreply.github.com> • Motonori IWAMURO <vmi@nifty.com> • Benjapol Worakan <benwrk@live.com> • Dave Koston <dave.koston@stackpath.com> • Durval Menezes <DurvalMenezes@users.noreply.github.com> • Tim Gallant <me@timgallant.us> • Frederick Zhang <frederick888@tsundere.moe> • valery1707 <valery1707@gmail.com> • Yves G <theYinYeti@yalis.fr> • Shing Kit Chan <chanshingkit@gmail.com> • Franklyn Tackitt <franklyn@tackitt.net> • Robert-André Mauchin <zebob.m@gmail.com> • evileye <48332831+ibiruai@users.noreply.github.com> • Joachim Brandon LeBlanc <brandon@leblanc.codes> • Patryk Jakuszew <patryk.jakuszew@gmail.com> • fishbullet <shindu666@gmail.com> • greatroar <@> • Bernd Schoolmann <mail@quexten.com> • Elan Ruusamäe <glen@pld-linux.org> • Max Sum <max@lolyculture.com> • Mark Spieth <mspieth@users.noreply.github.com> • harry <me@harry.plus> • Samantha McVey <samantham@posteo.net> • Jack Anderson <jack.anderson@metaswitch.com> • Michael G <draget@speciesm.net> • Brandon Philips <brandon@ifup.org> • Daven <dooven@users.noreply.github.com> • Martin Stone <martin@d7415.co.uk> • David Bramwell <13053834+dbramwell@users.noreply.github.com> • Sunil Patra <snl_su@live.com> • Adam Stroud <adam.stroud@gmail.com> • Kush <kushsharma@users.noreply.github.com> • Matan Rosenberg <matan129@gmail.com> • gitch1 <63495046+gitch1@users.noreply.github.com> • ElonH <elonhhuang@gmail.com> • Fred <fred@creativeprojects.tech> • Sébastien Gross <renard@users.noreply.github.com> • Maxime Suret <11944422+msuret@users.noreply.github.com> • Caleb Case <caleb@storj.io> • Ben Zenker <imbenzenker@gmail.com> • Martin Michlmayr <tbm@cyrius.com> • Brandon McNama <bmcnama@pagerduty.com> • Daniel Slyman <github@skylayer.eu> • Alex Guerrero <guerrero@users.noreply.github.com> • Matteo Pietro Dazzi <matteopietro.dazzi@gft.com> • edwardxml <56691903+edwardxml@users.noreply.github.com> • Roman Kredentser <shareed2k@gmail.com> • Kamil Trzciński <ayufan@ayufan.eu> • Zac Rubin <z-0@users.noreply.github.com> • Vincent Feltz <psycho@feltzv.fr> • Heiko Bornholdt <bornholdt@informatik.uni-hamburg.de> • Matteo Pietro Dazzi <matteopietro.dazzi@gmail.com> • jtagcat <gitlab@c7.ee> • Petri Salminen <petri@salminen.dev> • Tim Burke <tim.burke@gmail.com> • Kai Lüke <kai@kinvolk.io> • Garrett Squire <github@garrettsquire.com> • Evan Harris <eharris@puremagic.com> • Kevin <keyam@microsoft.com> • Morten Linderud <morten@linderud.pw> • Dmitry Ustalov <dmitry.ustalov@gmail.com> • Jack <196648+jdeng@users.noreply.github.com> • kcris <cristian.tarsoaga@gmail.com> • tyhuber1 <68970760+tyhuber1@users.noreply.github.com> • David Ibarra <david.ibarra@realty.com> • Tim Gallant <tim@lilt.com> • Kaloyan Raev <kaloyan@storj.io> • Jay McEntire <jay.mcentire@gmail.com> • Leo Luan <leoluan@us.ibm.com> • aus <549081+aus@users.noreply.github.com> • Aaron Gokaslan <agokaslan@fb.com> • Egor Margineanu <egmar@users.noreply.github.com> • Lucas Kanashiro <lucas.kanashiro@canonical.com> • WarpedPixel <WarpedPixel@users.noreply.github.com> • Sam Edwards <sam@samedwards.ca>
Contact the rclone project
Forum Forum for questions and general discussion: • https://forum.rclone.org GitHub repository The project’s repository is located at: • https://github.com/rclone/rclone There you can file bug reports or contribute with pull requests. Twitter You can also follow me on twitter for rclone announcements: • [@njcw](https://twitter.com/njcw) Email Or if all else fails or you want to ask something private or confidential email Nick Craig-Wood (mailto:nick@craig-wood.com). Please don’t email me requests for help - those are better directed to the forum. Thanks!
AUTHORS
Nick Craig-Wood.