Fixes #1587
2.1 KiB
The ownCloud Client packages come with a command line client which
can be used to synchronize ownCloud files to client machines. The
command line client is called owncloudcmd
.
owncloudcmd performs a single sync run and then exits. That means that it processes the differences between client- and server directory and propagates the files to get both repositories on the same status. Contrary to the GUI based client, it does not repeat syncs on its own. It does also not monitor for file system changes.
To invoke the command line client, the user has to provide the local and the remote repository urls:
owncloudcmd [OPTIONS...] sourcedir owncloudurl
where sourcedir
is the local directory and
owncloudurl
is the server url.
Note
Prior to 1.6, the tool only accepted owncloud://
or
ownclouds://
in place of http://
and
https://
as a scheme. See Examples
for
details.
These are other comand line switches supported by owncloudcmd:
--silent
-
Don't give verbose log output
--confdir
PATH-
Fetch or store configuration in this custom config directory
--httpproxy http://[user@pass:]<server>:<port>
-
Use
server
as HTTP proxy
Credential Handling
By default, owncloudcmd reads the client configuration and uses the credentials of the GUI sync client. If no client was configured or to use a different user to sync, the user password setting can be specified with the usual URL pattern, for example:
https://user:secret@192.168.178.2/remote.php/webdav
Example
To sync the ownCloud directory Music
to the local
directory media/music
through a proxy listening on port
8080
on the gateway machine 192.168.178.1
, the
command line would be:
$ owncloudcmd --httpproxy http://192.168.178.1:8080 \
$HOME/media/music \
https://server/owncloud/remote.php/webdav/Music
Using the legacy scheme, it would look like this:
$ owncloudcmd --httpproxy http://192.168.178.1:8080 \
$HOME/media/music \
ownclouds://server/owncloud/remote.php/webdav/Music