ref: fdd2cacb63b47d08b8bc518e51c7cad35d5a3f54
dir: /README/
CLONE(1) CLONE(1) NAME clone - copy files and directories SYNOPSYS clone [ -gux ] [ -b blocksize ] [ -p fileprocs:blockprocs ] from ... to DESCRIPTION Clone copies files and directories. Similar in spirit to fcp(1) it is a multi-process program which relies on pread(2) and pwrite(2) system calls to copy multiple blocks in parallel, speeding up the file transfer over high-latency links; in contrast to fcp(1) it can copy both single files and directories, which may be mixed on the command line. A single file is copied as expected. If to does not exist, it is created; otherwise, an existing file is overwritten; if to is a directory, from is copied into it. A single directory is copied into to if it exists; otherwise, a new directory to is created and the contents of from are copied into it. If multiple source files (directories) are given, they are copied into the to directory, which is created if neccessary. The -x option sets the mode and modified time of the desti- nation file (directory) to that of the source file (direc- tory); the -g and -u try to set the group and user id, respectively. The -b option determines the size of a block that will be transfered by a single block transfer process (defaults to 128k). The -p option determines the process parallelism configura- tion, with fileprocs being the number of processes that han- dle simultaneous file transfers, and blockprocs being the number of processes that do the input / output (defaults to 4:16). SOURCE https://bitbucket.org/k-vik/clone SEE ALSO fcp(1), dircp(1), pread(2), pwrite(2) BUGS Preserving the modification time of directories does not work. Attributes are cloned at directory creation time; meaning, if there's files to be copied in this directory, this will update the parent modification time. Furthermore, all directories get the forced write permission, since not having one would mean no new file creation.