On 10/1/07, Suresh Govindachar <sgovindachar@yahoo.com>
wrote:> In regard to output, rsync has the following features:
> Where can I find an explanation of the format, content
> and interpretation of the outputs (a-e)?
> a) -v option with various levels of verbosity
Roughly, here is what is printed with each number of -v options.
Errors are printed regardless of -v.
0: messages indicating that rsync might not be doing everything the
user expected (e.g., "skipping directory foo/")
1: the name of each file as it is transferred; messages at various
"significant" stages of rsync's operation
2: the name of each file as it is transferred, or the reason why rsync
isn't transferring it; more detail about what rsync is doing and why
(e.g., what filter caused each file to be included or excluded)
3+: debugging information about both rsync's internal operation and
its interactions with the OS
> b) --stats
See the description of --stats in the rsync man page for a list of the
statistics printed and what they mean.
> c) --log-file=foo
This makes rsync write a line to "foo" describing what it did to each
file. You can control the format of the lines using
--log-file-format; see its description in the rsync man page.
> d) messages rsync prints to stdout
> e) messages rsync prints to stderr.
In general, errors go to stderr and information (governed by -v as
above) goes to stdout. The messages are meant to be self-explanatory,
so no one has bothered to make a list of all the messages and their
meanings. If you get a specific message you don't understand, first
search for it in the man page and Google; then if you don't find an
explanation or need additional clarification, feel free to ask on the
mailing list.
Matt