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keepuptodate command

Watches for changes in local directory and reflects them on remote one.

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Syntax

keepuptodate [ <local directory> [ <remote directory> ] ]

Remarks

When directories are not specified, current working directories are synchronized. To stop watching for changes press Ctrl+C.

If you do not want the synchronization to be aborted or interrupted by errors, use command option batch continue before starting.

Note: Overwrite confirmations are always off for the command.

Switches:

Switch Description
-delete Delete obsolete files.
-permissions=<mode> Set permissions (SFTP and SCP protocols only).
-nopermissions Keep default permissions.
-speed=<kbps> Limit transfer speed (in KB/s).
-transfer=<mode> binary|ascii|automatic
Transfer mode: binary, ascii (text), automatic (by extension).
-filemask=<mask> <mask>[;<mask2>...]
Sets file mask.
-resumesupport=<state> on|off|<threshold>
Configures automatic resume/transfer to temporary filename.
-rawtransfersettings setting1=value1 setting2=value2 Allows configuring any transfer settings using raw format as in an INI file. E.g. to enable preserving of directory timestamps, use -rawtransfersettings PreserveTimeDirs=1. The switch should come only after other parameters.

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Effective options: reconnecttime

XML log elements: upload, touch, mkdir, chmod (with -permissions), rm (with -delete)

Examples

keepuptodate -delete
keepuptodate d:\www /home/martin/public_html
keepuptodate -filemask="|*.bak; *.tmp"

Converting to .NET Assembly

There is no equivalent for keepuptodate command in .NET assembly.

You can make use of System.IO.FileSystemWatcher to run non-recursive synchronization using Session.SynchronizeDirectories, when change in local directory occurs.

Last modified: by martin