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BAckground Robust File transfer (BARF)

Latest release

BARF is a CLI tool written for doing robust file operations. Under the hood it uses rsync to do the heavy lifting.

Table of contents

Project status

This project is still in the early phases, try if you wish but not all of the features and operations are implemented yet.

TODO

  • Implement backup operation
  • Implement restore operation
  • Restart daemon if version mismatch
  • Option to output JSON when used in scripts
  • Possibility to output live logging from rsync, like tail
  • Create a better CI workflow
  • Write tests
  • Handle non-color terminals gracefully
  • Improve scp/rm stuff in move operation
  • Bash auto complete of CLI arguments
  • Remove EventBus dep, implement own for the limited functionality used
  • Find a good bytesize dep which supports parse and humanize as we need it
  • Improve daemon logging to output time etc, via the log.Logger
  • Improve daemon logging to print operation creation and statuses
  • Investigate if we should be a download tools as well... use curl or wget and present a nice progressbar?

Installation

# Using the install script, installing in /usr/local/bin
curl -sL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mattiasrunge/barf/main/scripts/install.sh | sudo -E bash -

# For manual installation

# Linux amd64
sudo bash -c 'curl -L https://github.com/mattiasrunge/barf/releases/latest/download/barf-linux-amd64.tar.gz | tar xvz -C /usr/local/bin'

# Linux ARMv5
sudo bash -c 'curl -L https://github.com/mattiasrunge/barf/releases/latest/download/barf-linux-arm5.tar.gz | tar xvz -C /usr/local/bin'

# Linux ARMv7
sudo bash -c 'curl -L https://github.com/mattiasrunge/barf/releases/latest/download/barf-linux-arm7.tar.gz | tar xvz -C /usr/local/bin'

Usage

Usage: barf [OPTIONS] COMMAND [arg...]

A tool for doing robust file operations.

Options:
  -v, --version   Show the version and exit
  -w, --width,    terminal width to use, if not set (or zero) it will be auto detected and failing that set to 132 (default 0)

Commands:
  list, l         list active operations
  monitor, m      monitors active operations
  abort, a        aborts an active operation
  copy, cp        copies files or directories
  move, mv        moves files or directories
  push            mirrors source directory in destination directory
  pull            mirrors dst directory in src directory
  stop, s         stop background process
  update, u       check for updates

Run 'barf COMMAND --help' for more information on a command.

Features

Background

barf starts a background process, if one is not already running, which runs all operations. This means that once the operation has been sent to the background process the CLI can be aborted and the operation will still continue.

Visibility

For longer running operations it is usually nice see what is happening. barf will present a nice progress visualization for each operation. If the CLI is terminated while an operation is still running it can be found again via the monitor flag.

Remote - SSH

Since rsync is used for the heavy lifting and rsync supports synchronizing with remote systems via SSH, barf supports that too.

Resumable

If for some reason the background process dies all operations are stored in a journal and will be restarted when the background process starts again. Since rsync does synchronization, all operations should be resumable. The output of all operations are stored in log files to enable debugging and verification.

Operations

barf supports different kinds of operations which are described here.

Operation Description
copy Short: Append files and directories from the source at the remote

Copies files and directories to the remote. Since rsync is used, what actually happens under the hood is a synchronization which might behave slightly different than an ordinary cp command. It can probably be seen more like appending; take everything at the source and put it at the remote, overwrite if necessary but remove nothing.
move Short: Append files and directories from the source at the remote and remove at source

Move is essentially the same as copy but it removes the source files and directories after the copy has completed successfully. Thus if copying locally there will be two copies of the files taking up space until the end when the source is removed.
push Short: Make the remote exactly like the source

Similar to copy but makes the remote exactly the same as the source. Files and directories found remote but not at the source will be deleted.
pull Short: Make the source exactly like the remote

Exactly like push but with source and remote inverted.
backup Short: Create a new copy of the source at the remote

Backup will create a new directory, named as the current date and time. It will then create hard links from the previous backup if there is one. After that it will do a push operation to the new directory.
restore Short: Will restore the specified remote backup at the source

Restore will take the specified backup at the remote and pull it to the source, overwriting everything at the source in the process.

Goals

Every project needs a reason for being.

  • Good progress visualization for file operations
  • Same syntax for local and remote operations
  • No need for screen to keep operations running if the shell is closed
  • Easy backup and restore functionality

Technical

  • Written in Go
  • Uses a domain socket for communication (CLI -> background process)
  • Stores state and logs under ~/.config/barf
  • Uses the installed version of rsync, make sure there is one
  • Well defined socket protocol, allowing for other types of clients
  • Only tested on Linux, but might work on other systems