Provided by: maildirsync_1.2-2.2_all bug

NAME

       maildirsync - Online synchronizer for Maildir-format mailboxes

SYNOPSIS

           maildirsync.pl [ --recursive ] [ --backup path ] [ --backup-tree ]     \
               [ --bzip2=bzip2 ] [ --gzip=gzip ] [ --maildirsync=maildirsync ] \
               [ --rsh=ssh ] [ --verbose ] [ --alg=md5 ] [ --delete-before ]      \
               [ --exclude=^/Folder1 ] [ --exclude=^/Fold.*er2 ]                  \
               [ --exclude-source=^/Folder3 ] [ --exclude-target=^/Folder4 ]      \
               [ --rename="s/SourceFolder/TargetFolder/" ]                        \
               [ --destination=win|lin ]                                          \
               [ -r ] [ -b path ] [ -B ] [ -R ssh ] [ -v ] [ -a ] [ -d ]          \
               source dest state_file.bz2

       A simple two-way synchronization:

           maildirsync.pl -rvv -a md5 desktop:Maildir Maildir lib/sync_desk_note.bz2
           maildirsync.pl -rvv -a md5 Maildir desktop:Maildir lib/sync_note_desk.bz2

DESCRIPTION

       maildirsync is a utility for online Maildir-synchronization. It is designed to be used on
       live maildir folders, be fail-safe and optimized for minimal bandwidth.

HOW IT WORKS

       If you call the program once, it will propagate the changes from the source side to the
       target side. Two-way synchronization requires two state-file and two call for the program.

       This propagation is basically two different operations from the source side:

       •   New file is created or an existing file is moved to a new location (e.g flags are
           changed).

       •   A file is deleted in the source side. (Will be deleted in the target side also).

       At the first phase, the source side reads the state file (which stores the state of the
       last synchronization) and compares it to the current state.  It collects the changes and
       sends them the target side.

       The target side checks every file, which is marked new in the source file, and decides if:

       •   The file needs to be downloaded fully

       •   Its header needs to be downloaded

       •   We have this file already, so we need no data.

       After it decides, it sends back the requests for new files.

       Then the source side will send the files to the target side, which stores them into the
       Maildir structure.

       After the send operation is completed, both operation agrees upon the commit operation.
       Then the source side saves the new state into the state file.

       Note if we forget saving the state, or the program exits before it, the operation can be
       restarted without data loss and inconsistency, because all operations can be redone
       without errors.

REMOTE OPERATION

       Maildir can be used in remote mode, so it can synchronize Maildir folders between
       computers. If you want to use it this way, you have to provide the host name before either
       the source or the target, like:

           maildirsync.pl ... desktop:Maildir Maildir lib/maildirsync.bz2

       or

           maildirsync.pl ... Maildir desktop:Maildir lib/maildirsync.bz2

       In remote mode, the target side must have maildirsync installed also. (See the
       --maildirsync command-line argument).

       The state-file must be in the same system as the source, so the source file in the first
       example is searched in the "desktop" computer, and in the local computer in the second
       example.

       At least source or the destination must be local, so you cannot sync maildirs on two
       different remote hosts.

COMMAND-LINE SWITCHES

       Some command line switches has two form: a short form and a longer form. In the short
       form, the switches can be grouped, like: -vvvr. Short options with parameters also can be
       grouped, but the parameter must be the following command-line argument, like:

           maildirsync.pl -rvvvbR Maildir/Trash/cur ssh ...

       It is the same as:

           maildirsync.pl --recursive --verbose --verbose --verbose --backup \
               Maildir/Trash/cur --rsh ssh ...

       Long options can use '=' for assigning the parameter, or they can use the syntax above.

       Let's see what switches we have:

       --recursive, -r
           Process the base folder as the recursive collection of Maildir folders.

       --backup dir, -b dir
           The deleted files are backed up to the specified directory (this directory does not
           needs to be a maildir folder). The directory is relative to the start-up directory,
           not the target base folder! The directory is created if it does not exists.

       --backup-tree, -B
           This option is only useful when used in conjunction with the --backup option.  If set,
           deleted messages are moved to a Maildir folders tree inside the backup directory with
           the same relative path. The resulting backup directory can be used with any Maildir-
           capable application (MUAs, MTAs, etc.).

       --bzip2 bzip2
           Path to the bzip2 utility (used only when the state file has .bz2 extension). Note
           that using bzip2 is turned out to be quite unstable, it sometimes leave the state file
           empty or corrupted.

       --gzip gzip
           Path to the gzip utility (used only when the state file has .gz extension).

       --maildirsync maildirsync.pl
           Path to the maildirsync utility on the remote machine (if we use maildirsync in remote
           mode).

       --rsh ssh
           Path to the utility, which can be used to connect to the remote side. It defaults to
           "ssh". Note that the protocol, which is used in remote mode, does not contain
           compression, but the data can be compressed well, so I suggest using the ssh
           compression for this purpose.

       --destination
           If it is provided, then it does transformation in the file names. The transformations
           are the following:

           •   win: Converts ":" to ":" (since windows don't allow colon in the filename).

           •   lin: Converts ":" to ":".

       --verbose, -v
           Adds more verbosity to the operation. There are currently 6 different verbosity level:

           0   No information at all.

           1   Main operations.

           2   Files sent, received, deleted, moved, md5 calculations.

           3   Directories read and created.

           4   Options + command echo.

           5   Misc info about file transfer.

       --alg md5, -a md5
           Selects the synchronization algorithm. Currently two algorithms are provided:

           id (default)
               The messages are synchronized only by the ID of a message (the ID can be
               determined by the message filename).

           md5 This method is recommended for low bandwidth operations. This mode can reduce the
               file transfers by checking the message moves on the target side. This mode
               requires an MD5 sum on the body of the message, so the first use of this mode can
               be quite time-consuming on both sides.

           For more information about the algorithms, read the chapter about that.

       --delete-before, -d
           Normally the delete operations on the target side is done after the transfers. Use
           this switch if you don't have too much space on your hard disk. Note that using this
           switch can reduce the chance of detecting the message moves.

       --exclude, -x
           Excludes a directory regexp from the transfer and removes it from the state file. This
           option can be used more than once to specify more than one directories. Note, that the
           directory, which is matched against these regexps are the relative path of the folders
           with a leading '/', so if you want to exclude your Trash folder in the root of your
           synchronization, then you have to use the following form:

               --exclude=^/Trash

           The excluded paths are used in either source or the target side also. So if you
           exclude a very large directory, you will notice speedup in the source and target side
           also.

           Note that this regexp is matched for every directory that is read from the filesystem,
           and every directory what is found in the state file. So if you provide the exclude
           pattern as ^/Trash$, then it will skip the Trash directory when traversing the
           directory structure, but it WON'T skip files from the Trash/cur directory when reading
           from the state file! So be careful if you use the exclude pattern with existing state
           file!

       --exclude-source, --exclude-target
           These parameters can be used to exclude files only from one side of the
           synchronization. Can be useful with the rename options (below).

       --rename
           Can be used to rename files when transferred from one side to another. A perl
           expression is the parameter for this.

           If you use this option, use it with care, because you have to provide exactly the
           opposite of the name-transformation if you sync to the other side, for example:

           In one side, you can use (A to B):

               --rename="s{^/Saved/}{/ToBeSaved/}" \
               --exclude-target="^/Saved/" \

           In the other side, you can use (B to A):

               --exclude-source="^/Saved/" \
               --rename="s{^/ToBeSaved/}{/Saved/}" \

           In this case, the Saved folder in the A side will be synchronized with the ToBeSaved
           folder in the B side, and the Saved folder in the B side will be excluded from the
           synchronization. This scenario can be used when you don't want to store your emails in
           the server, but you want to use the "Saved" folder in the server too. In this case,
           the emails will be downloaded from the server (A side) to your laptop (B side), then
           you can move them to the Saved folder in B with a script. If this is done, then you
           can resynchronize, then the saved files will disappear from the server also.

ALGORITHMS

       Currently the program has two algorithms, which can be used for synchronization.

       id (default)
           This algorithm is based on the message-id-s of the messages. It assumes that a
           message-id exists only once in both repositories with the same id.  The id can be
           determined form the filename.

           With this algorithm, you can trace the flag changes or the deletion of a message and
           these changes can be propagated to the other side also. It also handles if a message
           is copied from the "new" directory to the "cur" directory without retransmit the files
           over the network.

           This algorithm is recommended if you want a simple and quite fast operation, and if
           you have a not-so-slow internet connection.

       md5 This algorithm does further calculations. It stores the size of the header and the md5
           sum of the message body for each message besides the data that the "id" algorithm
           stores.

           By using this algorithm, you can track the copies and moves of a message, so you don't
           need to retransmit large files if you move them to a new folder.

           If you copy or move a message from one folder to another, the header is sometimes
           changed by the mail-reader program. This is why we cannot simply calculate the MD5 sum
           of the whole message. A new message in a folder will have a new identifier also, so it
           doesn't violate the law that a message-id is unique.

           When you copy or move a message from your INBOX to your "Save" folder (for example),
           the new message is analyzed in the source side, header-size and md5 sum is calculated
           on the new message, and from the md5-hash, the source side can tell the target side
           what messages has the same hash-value, so the target side can copy the body from the
           other message. If the target side has successfully copied the body from one of those
           provided messages, then only the header needs to be transmitted across the network. If
           the target-side did not find the messages, then it requests for the body also.

ONLINE OPERATION

       Online operation means that the software can be used in an online mailbox also. It assumes
       that the Maildir folder can be changed when the program is working, so it tries to be as
       fail-safe as can be.

       Every new file is opened in the "tmp" directory, and moved to the target place only when
       the file is fully downloaded.

       This mode of operation was the first priority, because this feature is missing from most
       synchronizer software, including my "drsync" utility also.

SPEED

       I am using this program to synchronize my Mailboxes. I have 9700 emails in my mailbox and
       the state file (bzipped) is 283K.

       The first time of a two-way synchronization between a P166 server and a PIII/1200 notebook
       over a Cable network, where the starting position is an already synchronized directory,
       tooks about 10 minutes. This time is used for md5-calculation and message-id propagation.

       The next two-way run tooks about 40 seconds.

       These things are measured in Debian GNU/Linux testing/unstable operating system (08 Oct
       2002).

       These are only the overhead of the software, not the real transfer. If you got a very big
       email, it needs to be transferred at least one time on the network. But if you have it in
       both sides, then it does not require any more transfer if you save it to different
       folders.

TODO

       I am currently happy with this feature set, but if I have time, I will implement these
       features into the software. Anyway if you have time and willingness, I accept patches
       also:

       •   Message-size limit. By limiting the maximum transmitted message, you can effectively
           use this software if you have very low bandwidth.

       •   Config-file and cron-safe operation.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2000-2010 Szabo, Balazs (dLux)

       All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
       it under the same terms as Perl itself.

AUTHOR

       dLux (Szabo, Balazs) <dlux@dlux.hu>