Hello, If I rename a directory full of files, or a bunch of files, and I use Rsync to update the directory tree, Rsync will upload all these files again and delete the old ones. This is suboptimal since all the data is already there. Rsync should be able to check for renamed files by scanning for files with the same MD5 hashes, checksums, or delta signatures (is that what you called them?). Rsync could then rename the files remotely and then do the normal update. Here is a shellscript implementation: #!/bin/sh TO_DO=' - Secure shell script - Find out how to secure shell scripts - Do filename escaping beforehand - Provide Tar-like "-C" command line option ' tmpfile=md5_rename_tmp find -type f -print0 | xargs -0 md5sum > "$tmpfile" for file in "$@" ; do old_IFS="$IFS" IFS=' ' for new_line in `cat "$file"` ; do IFS="$old_IFS" new_md5=`echo "$new_line" | cut -d' ' -f1` new_pathname=`echo "$new_line" | cut -d' ' -f3-` old_pathname=`grep -m1 "$new_md5" "$tmpfile" | \ cut -d' ' -f3-` if [ "$old_pathname" ] ; then mkdir -p `dirname "$new_pathname"` mv "$old_pathname" "$new_pathname" fi done done -- Tom Goulet, tomg@em.ca, D8BAD3BC, http://web.em.ca/~tomg/contact.html -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://lists.samba.org/archive/rsync/attachments/20030626/f1d5752a/attachment.bin