![]() ![]() I've used this program for many years, and I highly recommend you try it before any of the others in this list. It also allows changing the file compression of a backup, limiting the backup speed and priority, preserving security settings during a backup, splitting an archive into a smaller section, password protecting a backup, and scheduling a backup on a one-time, daily, weekly, or monthly basis. You can restore whole folders and/or individual files to their original location or a custom one. A timeline of backups is shown so that it's easy to choose a particular time from which to restore files. More specifically, you can double-click the backup file to open it in the program, where it looks like File Explorer and is just as easy to use, but you have to have the program installed in order to open the backup. While scheduling a backup, or once one has completed, you can run an incremental, differential, or full backup on the same data.īackups are not readable from File Explorer, so you must use EaseUS Todo Backup to view the data. In addition to particular, custom content, the program can also back up an entire disk, partition, or system drive. ![]() There are no purple files in the screenshot, but those should be Orphan (only on one side), so the expected behavior would be to included in the sync/copy.EaseUS Todo Backup can back up individual files and/or whole folders to and from a location on a local drive or network folder, as well as save backups to a free cloud storage service (they even give you free online storage on their own servers, if you need it). This helps troubleshoot if the display is showing incorrect information from the device or correct-changing information, and when. It is also important to verify against Explorer, to see what properties it shows immediately after a transfer, and it's Properties dialog on a test file, to see if it matches BC4 behavior immediately after a transfer and BC4's column information Before and After a refresh. The file system wouldn't likely be a cause, but some NAS devices will do things like 'show the files as equal' and then after a refresh 'reveal that was cached false information, and it is actually different'. Determining what is causing the difference would help determine why the files need to be synchronized. Since both sides are red, either the Size column is revealing a difference when wider or the Session Settings have been configured to compare another non-visible criteria. A Sync Mirror will also *delete* any Orphans in the destination side, since the Mirror will make the destination a mirrored copy of the source (only leaving equal files alone). Purple files are "orpahn" and don't exist on the other side, so a Sync Update or Mirror will always bring them over. What are your current comparison settings, and what is different about these files? ![]() If you expand the Size column to show more detail by making it wider, are the sizes exactly the same? Sometimes, different protocols (FTP) will store files with a different size (usually, text files with a different line ending). A Sync Mirror always copies anything that isn't exactly equal, so it will copy them anyway. A Sync Update doesn't copy these, since a file that is different but with equal timestamps may require human review (how could it be updated or different but with an equal last edit date). ![]() When files are 'different' but timestamps are equal, both are red. By default, 'differences' are determined by "size", but if you've updated any of the options in the Session Settings, Comparison tab, these would apply. The screenshot resolution is a bit low, but it appears you have a collection of files reporting with equal timestamps but 'different'. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |