rdiff

rdiff(1) General Commands Manual rdiff(1)

NAME

   rdiff - compute and apply signature-based file differences

SYNOPSYS

   rdiff [options] signature old-file signature-file

   rdiff [options] delta signature-file new-file delta-file

   rdiff [options] patch old-file delta-file new-file

USAGE

   You can use rdiff to update files, much like rsync does.  However, unlike rsync, rdiff puts you in control.  There are three steps to updating a file: signature, delta, and patch. Use
   the signature subcommand to generate a small signature-file from the old-file. Use the delta subcommand to generate a small delta-file from the signature-file to the new-file. Use the
   patch subcommand to apply the delta-file to the old-file to regenerate the new-file.

DESCRIPTION

   In  every case where a filename must be specified, - may be used instead to mean either standard input or standard output as appropriate.  Be aware that if you do this, you'll need to
   terminate your options with -- or rdiff will think you are passing it an empty option.

RETURN VALUE

   0 for successful completion, 1 for environmental problems (file not found, invalid options, IO error, etc), 2 for a corrupt file and 3 for an internal error or unhandled situation  in
   librsync or rdiff.

SEE ALSO

   librsync(3)

AUTHOR

   Martin Pool <mbp@sourcefrog.net>

   The original rsync algorithm was discovered by Andrew Tridgell.

   rdiff development has been supported by Linuxcare, Inc and VA Linux Systems.

                                                                                        $Date$                                                                                    rdiff(1)