Administration Reference
Purpose
Recursively copies the contents of a source directory to a destination
directory.
Synopsis
up [-v] [-1] [-f] [-r] [-x] <source directory> <destination directory>
This command does not use the syntax conventions of the AFS command
suites. Provide the command name and all option names in full.
Description
The up command recursively copies the files and subdirectories
in a specified source directory to a specified destination directory.
The command interpreter changes the destination directory and the files and
subdirectories in it in the following ways:
- It copies the source directory's access control list (ACL) to the
destination directory and its subdirectories, overwriting any existing
ACLs.
- If the issuer is logged on as the local superuser root and has
AFS tokens as a member of the group system:administrators,
then the source directory's owner (as reported by the ls -ld
command) becomes the owner of the destination directory and all files and
subdirectories in it. Otherwise, the issuer's user name is
recorded as the owner.
- If a file or directory exists in both the source and destination
directories, the source version overwrites the destination version. The
overwrite operation fails if the first (user) w (write)
mode bit is turned off on the version in the destination directory, unless the
-f flag is provided.
- The modification timestamp on a file (as displayed by the ls -l
command) in the source directory overwrites the timestamp on a file of the
same name in the destination directory, but the timestamp on an existing
subdirectory in the destination directory remains unchanged. If the
command creates a new subdirectory in the destination directory, the new
subdirectory's timestamp is set to the time of the copy operation, rather
than to the timestamp that the subdirectory has in the source
directory.
The up command is idempotent, meaning that if its execution is
interrupted by a network, server machine, or process outage, then a subsequent
reissue of the same command continues from the interruption point, rather than
starting over at the beginning. This saves time and reduces network
traffic in comparison to the UNIX commands that provide similar
functionality.
The up command returns a status code of 0 (zero) only
if it succeeds. Otherwise, it returns a status code of 1
(one).
Options
- -v
- Prints a detailed trace to the standard output stream as the command
runs.
- -1
- Copies only the files in the top level source directory to the destination
directory, rather than copying recursively through subdirectories. The
source directory's ACL still overwrites the destination
directory's. (This is the number one, not the letter
l.)
- -f
- Overwrites existing directories, subdirectories, and files even if the
first (user) w (write) mode bit is turned off on the
version in the destination directory.
- -r
- Creates a backup copy of all files overwritten in the destination
directory and its subdirectories, by adding a .old extension
to each filename.
- -x
- Sets the modification timestamp on each file to the time of the copying
operation.
- source directory
- Names the directory to copy recursively.
- destination directory
- Names the directory to which to copy. It does not have to exist
already.
Examples
The following command copies the contents of the directory dir1 to
directory dir2:
% up dir1 dir2
Privilege Required
The issuer must have the a (administer) permission on
the ACL of both the source and destination directories.
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