1HARDLINK(1)                      User Commands                     HARDLINK(1)
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NAME

6       hardlink - link multiple copies of a file
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SYNOPSIS

9       hardlink [options] [directory|file]...
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DESCRIPTION

12       hardlink is a tool that replaces copies of a file with either hardlinks
13       or copy-on-write clones, thus saving space.
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15       hardlink first creates a binary tree of file sizes and then compares
16       the content of files that have the same size. There are two basic
17       content comparison methods. The memcmp method directly reads data
18       blocks from files and compares them. The other method is based on
19       checksums (like SHA256); in this case for each data block a checksum is
20       calculated by the Linux kernel crypto API, and this checksum is stored
21       in userspace and used for file comparisons.
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23       For each file also an "intro" buffer (32 bytes) is cached. This buffer
24       is used independently from the comparison method and requested
25       cache-size and io-size. The "intro" buffer dramatically reduces
26       operations with data content as files are very often different from the
27       beginning.
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OPTIONS

30       -h, --help
31           Display help text and exit.
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33       -V, --version
34           Print version and exit. If specified once, every hardlinked file is
35           displayed, if specified twice, it also shows every comparison.
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37       -q, --quiet
38           Quiet mode, don’t print anything.
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40       -n, --dry-run
41           Do not act, just print what would happen.
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43       -y, --method name
44           Set the file content comparison method. The currently supported
45           methods are sha256, sha1, crc32c and memcmp. The default is sha256,
46           or memcmp if Linux Crypto API is not available. The methods based
47           on checksums are implemented in zero-copy way, in this case file
48           contents are not copied to the userspace and all calculation is
49           done in kernel.
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51       --reflink[=when]
52           Create copy-on-write clones (aka reflinks) rather than hardlinks.
53           The reflinked files share only on-disk data, but the file mode and
54           owner can be different. It’s recommended to use it with
55           --ignore-owner and --ignore-mode options. This option implies
56           --skip-reflinks to ignore already cloned files.
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58           The optional argument when can be never, always, or auto. If the
59           when argument is omitted, it defaults to auto, in this case,
60           hardlink checks filesystem type and uses reflinks on BTRFS and XFS
61           only, and fallback to hardlinks when creating reflink is
62           impossible. The argument always disables filesystem type detection
63           and fallback to hardlinks, in this case, only reflinks are allowed.
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65       --skip-reflinks
66           Ignore already cloned files. This option may be used without
67           --reflink when creating classic hardlinks.
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69       -f, --respect-name
70           Only try to link files with the same (base)name. It’s strongly
71           recommended to use long options rather than -f which is interpreted
72           in a different way by other hardlink implementations.
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74       -p, --ignore-mode
75           Link and compare files even if their mode is different. Results may
76           be slightly unpredictable.
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78       -o, --ignore-owner
79           Link and compare files even if their owner information (user and
80           group) differs. Results may be unpredictable.
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82       -t, --ignore-time
83           Link and compare files even if their time of modification is
84           different. This is usually a good choice.
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86       -X, --respect-xattrs
87           Only try to link files with the same extended attributes.
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89       -m, --maximize
90           Among equal files, keep the file with the highest link count.
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92       -M, --minimize
93           Among equal files, keep the file with the lowest link count.
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95       -O, --keep-oldest
96           Among equal files, keep the oldest file (least recent modification
97           time). By default, the newest file is kept. If --maximize or
98           --minimize is specified, the link count has a higher precedence
99           than the time of modification.
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101       -x, --exclude regex
102           A regular expression which excludes files from being compared and
103           linked.
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105       -i, --include regex
106           A regular expression to include files. If the option --exclude has
107           been given, this option re-includes files which would otherwise be
108           excluded. If the option is used without --exclude, only files
109           matched by the pattern are included.
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111       -s, --minimum-size size
112           The minimum size to consider. By default this is 1, so empty files
113           will not be linked. The size argument may be followed by the
114           multiplicative suffixes KiB (=1024), MiB (=1024*1024), and so on
115           for GiB, TiB, PiB, EiB, ZiB and YiB (the "iB" is optional, e.g.,
116           "K" has the same meaning as "KiB").
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118       -S, --maximum-size size
119           The maximum size to consider. By default this is 0 and 0 has the
120           special meaning of unlimited. The size argument may be followed by
121           the multiplicative suffixes KiB (=1024), MiB (=1024*1024), and so
122           on for GiB, TiB, PiB, EiB, ZiB and YiB (the "iB" is optional, e.g.,
123           "K" has the same meaning as "KiB").
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125       -b, --io-size size
126           The size of the read(2) or sendfile(2) buffer used when comparing
127           file contents. The size argument may be followed by the
128           multiplicative suffixes KiB, MiB, etc. The "iB" is optional, e.g.,
129           "K" has the same meaning as "KiB". The default is 8KiB for memcmp
130           method and 1MiB for the other methods. The only memcmp method uses
131           process memory for the buffer, other methods use zero-copy way and
132           I/O operation is done in the kernel. The size may be altered on the
133           fly to fit a number of cached content checksums.
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135       -r, --cache-size size
136           The size of the cache for content checksums. All non-memcmp methods
137           calculate checksum for each file content block (see --io-size),
138           these checksums are cached for the next comparison. The size is
139           important for large files or a large sets of files of the same
140           size. The default is 10MiB.
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ARGUMENTS

143       hardlink takes one or more directories which will be searched for files
144       to be linked.
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BUGS

147       The original hardlink implementation uses the option -f to force
148       hardlinks creation between filesystem. This very rarely usable feature
149       is no more supported by the current hardlink.
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151       hardlink assumes that the trees it operates on do not change during
152       operation. If a tree does change, the result is undefined and
153       potentially dangerous. For example, if a regular file is replaced by a
154       device, hardlink may start reading from the device. If a component of a
155       path is replaced by a symbolic link or file permissions change,
156       security may be compromised. Do not run hardlink on a changing tree or
157       on a tree controlled by another user.
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AUTHOR

160       There are multiple hardlink implementations. The very first
161       implementation is from Jakub Jelinek for Fedora distribution, this
162       implementation has been used in util-linux between versions v2.34 to
163       v2.36. The current implementations is based on Debian version from
164       Julian Andres Klode.
165

REPORTING BUGS

167       For bug reports, use the issue tracker at
168       https://github.com/util-linux/util-linux/issues.
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AVAILABILITY

171       The hardlink command is part of the util-linux package which can be
172       downloaded from Linux Kernel Archive
173       <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/>.
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177util-linux 2.38                   2022-03-25                       HARDLINK(1)
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