this post was submitted on 23 Jun 2024
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Deduplication tool (lemmy.world)
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I'm in the process of starting a proper backup solution however over the years I've had a few copy-paste home directory from different systems as a quick and dirty solution. Now I have to pay my technical debt and remove the duplicates. I'm looking for a deduplication tool.

  • accept a destination directory
  • source locations should be deleted after the operation
  • if files content is the same then delete the redundant copy
  • if files content is different, move and change the name to avoid name collision I tried doing it in nautilus but it does not look at the files content, only the file name. Eg if two photos have the same content but different name then it will also create a redundant copy.

Edit: Some comments suggested using btrfs' feature duperemove. This will replace the same file content with points to the same location. This is not what I intend, I intend to remove the redundant files completely.

Edit 2: Another quite cool solution is to use hardlinks. It will replace all occurances of the same data with a hardlink. Then the redundant directories can be traversed and whatever is a link can be deleted. The remaining files will be unique. I'm not going for this myself as I don't trust my self to write a bug free implementation.

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago (2 children)

I use rsync and ZFS snapshots

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

For backup or for file-level reduplication?

If the latter, how?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

1 rsync allows to sync hardlinks correctly

2 zfs has pretty fast (zfs set dedup=edonr,verify) block level duplication where block size is 1MB (zfs set blocksize=1M).

3 in reality I tried to achieve proper data structure but it was way too time consuming so I couldn't do any work other than that, thus I established zfs as a history backtrack where I can rollback to something very important what I accidentally can delete, thus using ZFS and all aforementioned its benefits