I have worked on a file in Directory A. There is a file with the same name in directory B which is an older version of that same file. I rsync everything from B to A.
What happens to my work in the file in directory A?
deleted by creator
Thanks - Looking at the man page, It looks like I would want --update in this case as it would cause the newer version to be present in both directories afterward.
deleted by creator
After a session or two where I have perhaps only worked in A or B alone. I can manually trigger the shell script. Thanks for confirming tho.
https://linux.die.net/man/1/rsync
Source overrides destination.
there are a gazillion switches to control the behavior. Like, --ignore-existing, to not overwrite any existing files …
A becomes B. But… you have a lot of options in case you want a different behavior.
The actual use case: I have an emulator that uses a directory as the ‘system disk’ of the computer being emulated, but I have one of these on each of two machines. As I make updates I want to have the proper files updated on the other directory so between changes on the two emulators the most recent is synced to the other directory.
It seems I will need to use 2 rsync commands, one in each direction. Update A from B, then update B from A.
I have no idea what types of files these are but it could turn out that you should rather use Git and push/pull from both sides which could works better.
Just a suggestion :)