As we all know, file copying on Linux has long relied on the classic cp command, which remains reliable but offers little feedback and limited control over long or complex operations.

To address this, a promising new Rust-based command-line tool called cpx emerge, designed as an alternative rather than a replacement, that approaches the same task with a focus on performance, visibility, and configurability.

It targets scenarios where large directory trees, interrupted transfers, or the need for detailed progress reporting make standard tools less convenient to use. The project is currently Linux-only and leverages modern kernel features to improve copy throughput and reliability.

  • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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    20 hours ago

    It’s a damn pain to remember all the flags. How many flags can a program friggin have? I’m always afraid that some flag I enter will reverse the sync and delete everything in the source folder because the target is empty.

    I use rsync only when all params have been reseasrched and tested. cpx presumably just requires cpx - r source target instead of 5 rsync flags.

      • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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        12 hours ago

        I just looked it up and - x means one filesystem. But does - v give you a progress bar or just a lost of stuff copied?

        IIRC rsync also treats the trailing slash in a special manner that I always have to look up.

        • frongt@lemmy.zip
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          5 hours ago

          Ha. I meant z. I guess I was getting mixed up with tar.

          No slash means the directory. Slash means the items in the directory.

        • cyrl@lemmy.world
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          9 hours ago

          The trailing slash is just following cp’s own special treatment

          
          # before
          dir/
              file1
          target/
              orig.txt
          
          
          
          # no trailing slash - copy *dir* to target
          cp -r /path/to/some/dir /my/target
          
          # after
          target/
              orig.txt
              dir/            # dir copied to target
                  file1
          
          
          
          # with trailing slash - copy *contents* of dir to target
          cp -r /path/to/some/dir/ /my/target
          
          # after
          target/
              orig.txt
              file1            # contents of dir
          
          
    • Victor@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      What 5 flags did rsync need? I always just do -av and go about my day. And the -v is kinda optional.