Verify with VRFY: Ensure the integrity of your file copies, hash by hash!
Project description
Verify with VRFY: Ensure the integrity of your file copies, hash by hash!
When beginning to explore cloud storage (or other methods of remotely storing files), one may become concerned about file integrity at some point. When dealing with a large number of individual files, how can one be certain that no file becomes corrupted during the storage process, and that downloaded files remain identical to their uploaded versions? This concern is particularly relevant after undergoing multiple segmentation and encryption/decryption processes. It's impractical to manually verify all files, making file corruption a common worry, especially for those using smaller cloud providers.
Those concerns are mitigated by using a small console application called vrfy. vrfy handles the heavy lifting and verifies the integrity of your backups for you! With a single, easy command, you can:
- Verify that copies are identical (i.e., all files are included in both locations, and -by using sha256 hash checksums- that not even a single bit was changed).
- Create and store a file with sha256 hash checksums beside your data. This file can be backed up with your data and used for verification later.
- Verify that your data is unchanged using the checksum file.
Installation
PIP:
Install vrfy using pip:
pip install vrfy --user
System package:
Download the latest release from github and run the appropriate command:
DNF (Fedora, RHEL, CentOS):
sudo dnf install vrfy-0.1.1-1.noarch.rpm
Zypper (openSUSE):
sudo zypper install vrfy-0.1.1-1.noarch.rpm
Usage
1. Verifing that two directories are identical
Verifing that the contents of '/path/of/clone' are identical to those of '/path/of/master'. For example, '/path/of/master' might be a local backup, whereas '/path/of/clone' might be loaded from cloud storage.
vrfy /path/of/master /path/of/clone
2. Storing checksums for future verification
Creating a file that lists checksums for all files within a directory:
vrfy -c /path/of/data
Using -r (recursive) all in sub-directories as well:
vrfy -r -c /path/of/data
3. Verifing files against stored checksums
Verifying that all files within a directory haven't been changed (i.e., their checksums still match):
vrfy -v /path/of/data
Using -r (recursive) all sub-directories are verified as well:
vrfy -r -v /path/of/data
Verifying the current working directory and all its sub-directories can be done when no parameters are provided.:
vrfy
Project details
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