Provided by: digup_0.6.57-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       digup - Digest file updating program.

SYNOPSIS

       digup [OPTIONS]

DESCRIPTION

       digup  is  a  tool  to  update md5sum or shasum digest files. It will read existing digest
       files, check the current directory for new, updated, modified, renamed  or  deleted  files
       and  query  the  user  with a summary of changes. After reviewing the updates, they can be
       written back to the digest file.

       One of the envisioned applications of digup is to update and verify  incremental  archives
       like  chronological  data storages or music collections. By using digup possibly undesired
       changes or lost files can easily be detected while quickly adding new files.

       Another purpose could be to automatically verify the integrity  of  hard  disk  copies  of
       archives,  as  backups  to hard disks are becoming increasingly popular. Using a full file
       digest scan even slowly creeping bad blocks on old hard disks can be detected. By using  a
       crontab entry, this check can be performed unattended and routinely.

       In  normal  operation  only touched files with newer modification times are fully read and
       their digest compared. Optionally a full scan can be performed to test all  file  contents
       against their expected digests.

       Symbolic  links are supported by either following the link and reading the target's digest
       or by saving only the link target path and verifying it against the old one.

       The digest files written by digup are compatible with those generated and read  by  md5sum
       and similar programs from the coreutils package. Additional information like file size and
       modification time or symlink targets are stored on comment lines.

       Four digest algorithms are supported: MD5, SHA1, SHA256 and SHA512. The digest file itself
       is  also  checksummed  using  CRC32 against unintentional changes. A fast red-black binary
       tree is used for the internal file list, allowing fast operation  on  a  large  number  of
       files.

OPTIONS

       -b, --batch
              Enable  non-interactive  batch  processing  mode as needed when run unattended e.g.
              from cron. This option  also  decreases  verbosity  by  one  level  (--quiet).  The
              returned  error  code  is set to 1 if any changed, renamed, moved, deleted files or
              read errors occur.

       -c, --check
              Perform a full digest scan of all file contents, thus  ignoring  file  modification
              times. Without this option files with equal size and modification time are skipped.

       -d, --directory=<path>
              Change  into  this  directory  before  looking  for  digest  files  or performing a
              recursive scan.

       --exclude-marker=<file>
              Sets a marker file, often called ".nobackup" in other programs. If this marker file
              is  found in a directory, the directory itself and all sub-directories are excluded
              from the digest scan.

              This option is persistent. It is saved in the digest file and will  be  applied  to
              all future scans performed to check or update digests.

       -f, --file=<file>
              Check  this  file  for  existing  digests and write updates to it. Depending on the
              selected digest --type the following file names are used by default:  "md5sum.txt",
              "sha1sum.txt", "sha256sum.txt" or "sha512sum.txt".

       -l, --links
              When  this  flag  is  enabled,  symbolic  links  (if supported on the platform) are
              followed. Otherwise, by default, only the symbolic link's target path is saved  and
              verified.

       -m, --modified
              Print  only  modified,  changed,  copied, renamed or deleted files. Unchanged files
              lines are suppressed. If the whole digest file is clean, then no summary output  is
              printed at all. This option is useful for crontabs in combination with --batch.

       --modify-window=<integer>
              Consider  modification time deltas of up to this value to be unchanged (the default
              is zero). This option is very useful for checking backups on  FAT  filesystems,  as
              FAT stores modification times with a precision of only 2 seconds.

       -q, --quiet
              Reduces the level of verbosity by one.

       -r, --restrict=<substring>
              Restricts  the  digest  check  to filepaths containing the given substring pattern,
              other files are skipped. Does NOT imply -c / --check; specify  it  additionally  to
              run a full digest check of specific files.

       -t, --type=<digest-type>
              Select  the  digest  type  for  newly  created digest files. This is not needed for
              updating existing one, as the type can inferred from the digest length.

              digest-type must be md5, sha1, sha256 or sha512. The default digest type is sha1.

       -u, --update
              Automatically update the digest file in batch mode. Requires --batch, which is  not
              automatically activated by this option.

       -v, --verbose
              Increase the level of verbosity by one.

              At level 0 only read errors are printed.

              At level 1 the status of each processed file is printed.

              And  at  level  2  (the default) additionally a progress indicator is printed while
              reading each file (one dot per megabyte).

       -V, --version
              Print digup version and exit.

       -w, --windows
              Ignores modification  time  deltas  of  just  1  second  (equivalent  to  --modify-
              window=1). Useful for checking backups on FAT filesystems.

EXAMPLES

       To update or create a SHA1 digest file in current directory just run plain
              digup

       Alternatively update or create a SHA512 digest file in /mnt/disk1
              digup -t sha512 -d /mnt/disk1/archive

       A common call for a crontab line is
              digup -bmd /mnt/disk1/archive

       To run a full scan every midnight add a line similar to the following to your crontab
              0 * * * *       digup -bcmd /mnt/disk1/archive

AUTHORS

       Timo Bingmann (tb (at) panthema <dot> net)

SEE ALSO

       md5sum(1), sha1sum(1), sha256sum(1), sha512sum(1)

                                            2009-11-10                                   DIGUP(1)