ReBackup is a simple backup program that doesn't actually create backups but instead creates a list of files to backup from a source directory.
It uses a walker to traverse filesystem items, which can be customized through rules (see [WalkerRule
]).
Its main features are:
- Fast recursive directory traversing
- Powerful rules system to include, exclude or remap items
- Handling of symbolic links (requires to enable an option for the walker)
- Detection of already visited paths
- Command-line interface
ReBackup can be used either:
- As a library (see
walk
) - As a standalone binary with the
cli
feature
ReBackup only exports one single function which is the Walker: walk
.
It can be used like this:
use std::path::PathBuf;
use rebackup::{fail, walk, WalkerConfig};
let source = std::env::args().nth(1)
.unwrap_or_else(|| fail!(exit 1, "Please provide a source directory"));
// NOTE: This can be shortened to `WalkerConfig::new(vec![])`
// (expanded here for explanations purpose)
let config = WalkerConfig {
rules: vec![],
follow_symlinks: false,
drop_empty_dirs: false,
};
let files_list = walk(&PathBuf::from(source), &config)
.unwrap_or_else(|err| fail!(exit 2, "Failed to build the files list: {}", err));
let files_list_str: Vec<_> = files_list
.iter()
.map(|item| item.to_string_lossy())
.collect();
println!("{}", files_list_str.join("\n"));
You can use powerful rules to configure how the walker behaves.
A rule is defined using [WalkerRule
], and uses two callbacks:
- One to determine if the rule applies on a specific item
- One to run the rule itself
Here is a basic rule excluding all directories containing .nomedia
files:
use rebackup::config::*;
let rule = WalkerRule {
// Name of the rule
name: "nomedia",
// Optional description of the rule
description: None,
// The type of items the rule applies to (`None` for all)
only_for: Some(WalkerItemType::Directory),
// Check if the rule would match a specific item
matches: Box::new(|path, _, _| path.join(".nomedia").is_file()),
// Apply the rule to determine what to do
action: Box::new(|_, _, _| Ok(WalkerRuleResult::ExcludeItem)),
};
You can also build more powerful rules, like excluding files ignored by Git:
use std::env;
use std::process::Command;
use rebackup::config::*;
let rule = WalkerRule {
name: "gitignore",
description: None,
only_for: None,
matches: Box::new(|path, _, _| path.ancestors().any(|path| path.join(".git").is_dir())),
action: Box::new(|dir, _, _| {
let cwd = env::current_dir()?;
if dir.is_dir() {
env::set_current_dir(dir)?;
} else if let Some(parent) = dir.parent() {
env::set_current_dir(parent)?;
}
let is_excluded = Command::new("git")
.arg("check-ignore")
.arg(dir.to_string_lossy().to_string())
.output();
// Restore the current directory before returning eventual error from the command
env::set_current_dir(cwd)?;
if is_excluded?.status.success() {
Ok(WalkerRuleResult::ExcludeItem)
} else {
Ok(WalkerRuleResult::IncludeItem)
}
}),
};
You can check more examples of rules in examples/rules.rs
.
# Build the list of files to backup, and pipe it to 'tar'
# to create a compressed archive
# Be aware of not creating the archive inside the directory to backup, or the archive
# will be listed as well (you can still exclude it from the results afterwards)
rebackup path_to_backup/ | tar -czf output.tgz -T -
# If you are in another directory, ask for absolute paths instead
# Please note that the archive's content will have absolute paths as well
rebackup path_to_backup/ -a | tar -czf output.tgz -T -
# Using filters to exclude items based on patterns
# Here we're excluding all items ignored by the '.gitignore' file in Git repositories
rebackup path_to_backup/ -f 'git rev-parse --git-dir && ! git check-ignore "$REBACKUP_ITEM"'
# To also exclude the ".git" folder (using glob pattern):
rebackup path_to_backup/ -f 'git rev-parse --git-dir && ! git check-ignore "$REBACKUP_ITEM"' -e '**/.git'
# Use an alternate shell:
rebackup path_to_backup/ -f 'git rev-parse --git-dir && ! git check-ignore "$REBACKUP_ITEM"' --shell zsh --shell-head-args=-c
# To list all available arguments:
rebackup --help
You can see all changes through the version in the CHANGELOG.
This project is released under the Apache-2.0 license terms.