New in v0.12.2 (2003/08/??) --------------------------- Patch by Arkadiusz Patyk fixes building with Python 2.3c1. New in v0.12.1 (2003/07/22) --------------------------- Added --no-change-dir-inc-perms switch, to avoid some weird errors on FreeBSD, and possibly on Solaris. Thanks to Troels Arvin for report. Fixed bug when regressing destination directory made with --windows-mode. Reported by Tucker Sylvestro. The librsync blocksize is now chosen based on filesize. This should make operations on large files faster (in some cases, orders of magnitude faster). Thanks to Ty! Boyack for bringing this issue to my attention. New in v0.12.0 (2003/06/26) --------------------------- Fixed (?) bug that caused crash when file changes type from regular file in middle of download (reported by Ty! Boyack). Failure to construct regular file in regression/restoration only causes warning, not fatal error. Removed --exclude-mirror option. (Probably no one uses this, and it adds clutter.) --include and --exclude options should work now with restores, with some speed penalty. New in v0.11.5 (2003/06/20) --------------------------- Added EDEADLOCK to the list of skippable errors. (Thanks to Dave Kempe for report.) Added --list-at-time option at request of Farkas Levente. Various fixes for backing up onto windows directories. Thanks to Keith Edmunds for bug reports and testing. Fixed possible crash when a file would be deleted while being processed (reported by Robert Weber). Handle better cases when there are two files with the same name in the same directory. Added --windows-restore switch, for use when when restoring from a windows-style file system to a normal one. Use --windows-mode when backing up. Scott Bender's patch fixes backing up hard links when first linked file is quoted. New in v0.11.4 (2003/03/15) --------------------------- Fixed bug incrementing sockets whose filenames were pretty long, but not super long. Reported by Olivier Mueller. Added Albert Chin-A-Young's patch to add a few options to the setup.py install script. Apparently fixed rare utime type bug. Thanks to Christian Skarby for report and testing. Added detailed file_statistics (in addition to session_statistics) as requested by Dean Gaudet. Disable with --no-file-statistics option. Minor speed enhancements. New in v0.11.3 (2003/03/04) --------------------------- Fixed a number of bugs reported by Olivier Mueller: Brought some old parts of the man page up-to-date. Fixed bug if unrecoverable error on second backup to a directory. Fixed spurious error message that could appear after a successful backup. --print-statistics option works again (before it would silently ignored). Fixed cache pipeline overflow bug. This error could appear on large remote backups when many files have not changed. New in v0.11.2 (2003/03/01) --------------------------- Fixed seg fault bug reported by a couple sparc/openbsd users. Thanks to Dave Steinberg for giving me an account on his system for testing. Re-enabled --windows-mode and filename quoting. Fixed selection bug: In 0.11.1, files which were included in one backup would be automatically included in the next. Now you can include/exclude files session-by-session. Fixed ownership compare bug: In 0.11.1, backups where the destination side was not root would preserve ownership information by recording it in the metadata file. However, mere ownership changes would not trigger creation of new increments. This has been fixed. Added the --no-inode-compare switch. You probably don't need to use it though. If a special file cannot be created on the destination side, a 0 length regular file will be written instead as a placeholder. (Restores should work fine because of the metadata file.) Yet another error handling strategy (hopefully this is the last one for a while, because this stuff isn't very exciting, and takes a long time to write): All recoverable errors are classified into one of three groups: ListErrors, UpdateErrors, and SpecialFileErrors. rdiff-backup's reaction to each error is more formally defined (see the error policy page, currently at http://rdiff-backup.stanford.edu/error_policy.html). rdiff-backup makes no attempt to recover or clean up after unrecoverable errors. However, it now uses fsync() to increment the destination directory in a reversable way. If there is an error, the next backup will regress the destination directory into its state before the aborted backup. The above process can be done without a backup with the --check-destination-dir option. Improved error logging. Instead of the old haphazard reporting method, which sometimes didn't indicate the file an error occurred on, now all recoverable errors are reported in a standard format and also written to the error_log.