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MANUAL.txt
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MANUAL.txt
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rclone(1) User Manual
Nick Craig-Wood
May 27, 2020
RCLONE SYNCS YOUR FILES TO CLOUD STORAGE
- About rclone
- What can rclone do for you
- What features does rclone have
- What providers does rclone support
- Download
- Install
- 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 can be
used at the command line, in scripts or via its API.
Users have called rclone _“The Swiss army knife of cloud storage”_ and
_“Technology indistinguishable from magic”_.
Rclone really looks after your data. It preserves timestamps and
verifies your data 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 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
your local disk.
Virtual backends wrap local and cloud file systems to apply encryption,
caching, chunking and joining.
Rclone can mount any local, cloud or virtual filesystem as a disk on
Windows, macOS, linux and FreeBSD, and also serve these over SFTP, HTTP,
WebDAV, FTP and DLNA.
Rclone is mature, open source software originally inspired by rsync and
written in Go. 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 is
recommended.
Rclone is widely used on Linux, Windows and Mac. Third party developers
have built innovative backup, restore, GUI and business process
solutions using the rclone command line or API.
Let rclone do the heavy lifting of communicating with cloud storage.
What can rclone do for you
Rclone can help 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, ljson,
size, ncdu
- 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 new or changed files to cloud storage
- Sync (one way) to make a directory identical
- Move files to cloud storage deleting the local after verification
- Check hashes and for missing/extra files
- Mount your cloud storage as a network disk
- Serve local or remote files over HTTP/WebDav/FTP/SFTP/dlna
- Experimental Web based GUI
Supported providers
(There are many other providers, 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
- Wasabi
- WebDAV
- Yandex Disk
- The local filesystem
Links
- Home page
- GitHub project page for source and bug tracker
- Rclone Forum
- Downloads
INSTALL
Rclone is a Go program and comes as a single binary file.
Quickstart
- Download the relevant binary.
- Extract the rclone or rclone.exe binary from the archive
- Run rclone config to setup. See rclone config docs for more details.
See below for some expanded Linux / macOS instructions.
See the Usage section of the docs for how to use rclone, or run
rclone -h.
Script installation
To install rclone on Linux/macOS/BSD systems, run:
curl https://rclone.org/install.sh | sudo bash
For beta installation, run:
curl https://rclone.org/install.sh | sudo bash -s beta
Note that this script checks the version of rclone installed first and
won’t re-download if not needed.
Linux installation from precompiled binary
Fetch and unpack
curl -O https://downloads.rclone.org/rclone-current-linux-amd64.zip
unzip rclone-current-linux-amd64.zip
cd rclone-*-linux-amd64
Copy binary file
sudo cp rclone /usr/bin/
sudo chown root:root /usr/bin/rclone
sudo chmod 755 /usr/bin/rclone
Install manpage
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/share/man/man1
sudo cp rclone.1 /usr/local/share/man/man1/
sudo mandb
Run rclone config to setup. See rclone config docs for more details.
rclone config
macOS installation with brew
brew install rclone
macOS installation from precompiled binary, using curl
To avoid problems with macOS gatekeeper enforcing the binary to be
signed and notarized it is enough to download with curl.
Download the latest version of rclone.
cd && curl -O https://downloads.rclone.org/rclone-current-osx-amd64.zip
Unzip the download and cd to the extracted folder.
unzip -a rclone-current-osx-amd64.zip && cd rclone-*-osx-amd64
Move rclone to your $PATH. You will be prompted for your password.
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/bin
sudo mv rclone /usr/local/bin/
(the mkdir command is safe to run, even if the directory already
exists).
Remove the leftover files.
cd .. && rm -rf rclone-*-osx-amd64 rclone-current-osx-amd64.zip
Run rclone config to setup. See rclone config docs for more details.
rclone config
macOS installation from precompiled binary, using a web browser
When downloading a binary with a web browser, the browser will set the
macOS gatekeeper quarantine attribute. Starting from Catalina, when
attempting to run rclone, a pop-up will appear saying:
“rclone” cannot be opened because the developer cannot be verified.
macOS cannot verify that this app is free from malware.
The simplest fix is to run
xattr -d com.apple.quarantine rclone
Install with docker
The rclone maintains a docker image for rclone. These images are
autobuilt by docker hub from the rclone source based on a minimal Alpine
linux image.
The :latest tag will always point to the latest stable release. You can
use the :beta tag to get the latest build from master. You can also use
version tags, eg :1.49.1, :1.49 or :1.
$ docker pull rclone/rclone:latest
latest: Pulling from rclone/rclone
Digest: sha256:0e0ced72671989bb837fea8e88578b3fc48371aa45d209663683e24cfdaa0e11
...
$ docker run --rm rclone/rclone:latest version
rclone v1.49.1
- os/arch: linux/amd64
- go version: go1.12.9
There are a few command line options to consider when starting an rclone
Docker container from the rclone image.
- You need to mount the host rclone config dir at /config/rclone into
the Docker container. Due to the fact that rclone updates tokens
inside its config file, and that the update process involves a file
rename, you need to mount the whole host rclone config dir, not just
the single host rclone config file.
- You need to mount a host data dir at /data into the Docker
container.
- By default, the rclone binary inside a Docker container runs with
UID=0 (root). As a result, all files created in a run will have
UID=0. If your config and data files reside on the host with a
non-root UID:GID, you need to pass these on the container start
command line.
- It is possible to use rclone mount inside a userspace Docker
container, and expose the resulting fuse mount to the host. The
exact docker run options to do that might vary slightly between
hosts. See, e.g. the discussion in this thread.
You also need to mount the host /etc/passwd and /etc/group for fuse
to work inside the container.
Here are some commands tested on an Ubuntu 18.04.3 host:
# config on host at ~/.config/rclone/rclone.conf
# data on host at ~/data
# make sure the config is ok by listing the remotes
docker run --rm \
--volume ~/.config/rclone:/config/rclone \
--volume ~/data:/data:shared \
--user $(id -u):$(id -g) \
rclone/rclone \
listremotes
# perform mount inside Docker container, expose result to host
mkdir -p ~/data/mount
docker run --rm \
--volume ~/.config/rclone:/config/rclone \
--volume ~/data:/data:shared \
--user $(id -u):$(id -g) \
--volume /etc/passwd:/etc/passwd:ro --volume /etc/group:/etc/group:ro \
--device /dev/fuse --cap-add SYS_ADMIN --security-opt apparmor:unconfined \
rclone/rclone \
mount dropbox:Photos /data/mount &
ls ~/data/mount
kill %1
Install from source
Make sure you have at least Go 1.7 installed. Download go if necessary.
The latest release is recommended. Then
git clone https://github.com/rclone/rclone.git
cd rclone
go build
./rclone version
You can also build and install rclone in the GOPATH (which defaults to
~/go) with:
go get -u -v github.com/rclone/rclone
and this will build the binary in $GOPATH/bin (~/go/bin/rclone by
default) after downloading the source to
$GOPATH/src/github.com/rclone/rclone (~/go/src/github.com/rclone/rclone
by default).
Installation with Ansible
This can be done with Stefan Weichinger’s ansible role.
Instructions
1. git clone https://github.com/stefangweichinger/ansible-rclone.git
into your local roles-directory
2. add the role to the hosts you want rclone installed to:
- hosts: rclone-hosts
roles:
- rclone
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
- Alias
- Amazon Drive
- Amazon S3
- Backblaze B2
- Box
- Cache
- Chunker - transparently splits large files for other remotes
- Citrix ShareFile
- Crypt - to encrypt other remotes
- DigitalOcean Spaces
- Dropbox
- FTP
- Google Cloud Storage
- Google Drive
- Google Photos
- HTTP
- Hubic
- Jottacloud / GetSky.no
- Koofr
- Mail.ru Cloud
- Mega
- Memory
- Microsoft Azure Blob Storage
- Microsoft OneDrive
- OpenStack Swift / Rackspace Cloudfiles / Memset Memstore
- OpenDrive
- Pcloud
- premiumize.me
- put.io
- QingStor
- Seafile
- SFTP
- SugarSync
- Tardigrade
- Union
- WebDAV
- Yandex Disk
- The local filesystem
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.
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 /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 for global options not listed here.
SEE ALSO
- rclone - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.
- rclone config create - Create a new remote with name, type and
options.
- rclone config delete - Delete an existing remote name.
- rclone config disconnect - Disconnects user from remote
- rclone config dump - Dump the config file as JSON.
- rclone config edit - Enter an interactive configuration session.
- rclone config file - Show path of configuration file in use.
- rclone config password - Update password in an existing remote.
- rclone config providers - List in JSON format all the providers and
options.
- rclone config reconnect - Re-authenticates user with remote.
- rclone config show - Print (decrypted) config file, or the config
for a single remote.
- rclone config update - Update options in an existing remote.
- 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 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
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 for global options not listed here.
SEE ALSO
- 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
flag to see exactly what would be copied and deleted.
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 for global options not listed here.
SEE ALSO
- 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 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
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 for global options not listed here.
SEE ALSO
- 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.
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 for global options not listed here.
SEE ALSO
- 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.
rclone purge remote:path [flags]
Options
-h, --help help for purge
See the global flags page for global options not listed here.
SEE ALSO
- 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 for global options not listed here.
SEE ALSO
- 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 for global options not listed here.
SEE ALSO
- 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 source
match the files in destination, not the other way around. Meaning extra
files in destination that are not in the source will not trigger an
error.
rclone check source:path dest:path [flags]
Options
--download Check by downloading rather than with hash.
-h, --help help for check
--one-way Check one way only, source files must exist on remote
See the global flags page for global options not listed here.
SEE ALSO
- 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 for global options not listed here.
SEE ALSO
- 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 for global options not listed here.
SEE ALSO
- 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.