Contents
 
 Overview
Preface
          •People
          •Mailing Lists and Bug Reporting
          •Development Status
          •Copying
          •Acknowledgements
Installation
          •Downloading Unison
          •Running Unison
          •Upgrading
          •Building Unison from Scratch
                  Unix
                  Mac OS X
                  Windows
                  Installation Options
Tutorial
          •Preliminaries
          •Local Usage
          •Remote Usage
          •Remote Shell Method
          •Socket Method
          •Using Unison for All Your Files
          •Using Unison to Synchronize More Than Two Machines
          •Going Further
Basic Concepts
          •Roots
          •Paths
          •What is an Update?
          •What is a Conflict?
          •Reconciliation
          •Invariants
          •Caveats and Shortcomings
Reference Guide
          •Running Unison
          •The .unison Directory
          •Archive Files
          •Preferences
          •Profiles
          •Sample Profiles
                  A Minimal Profile
                  A Basic Profile
                  A Power-User Profile
          •Keeping Backups
          •Merging Conflicting Versions
          •The User Interface
          •Exit code
          •Path specification
          •Ignoring Paths
          •Symbolic Links
          •Permissions
          •Cross-Platform Synchronization
          •Slow Links
          •Making Unison Faster on Large Files
          •Fast Update Detection
          •Mount Points and Removable Media
          •Click-starting Unison
Installing Ssh
          •Unix
          •Windows
Changes in Version 2.40.61
 
 
Overview
Unison is a file-synchronization tool for Unix and Windows. It allows
two replicas of a collection of files and directories to be stored on
different hosts (or different disks on the same host), modified
separately, and then brought up to date by propagating the changes in
each replica to the other.
Unison 
shares a number of features with tools such as configuration
management packages (
CVS,
PRCS,
etc.),
distributed filesystems 
(
Coda, 
etc.),
uni-directional mirroring utilities 
(
rsync, 
etc.),
and other synchronizers 
(
Intellisync, 
Reconcile,
etc). 
However, there are several points where it differs:
- 
Unison runs on both Windows (95, 98, NT, 2k, and XP) and Unix (OSX, Solaris,
 Linux, etc.) systems. Moreover, Unison works across
 platforms, allowing you to synchronize a Windows laptop with a
 Unix server, for example.
- Unlike a distributed filesystem, Unison is a user-level program:
 there is no need to modify the kernel or to have
 superuser privileges on either host.
- Unlike simple mirroring or backup utilities, Unison can deal
 with updates to both replicas of a distributed directory structure.
 Updates that do not conflict are propagated automatically.
 Conflicting updates are detected and displayed.
- Unison works between any pair of machines connected to the
 internet, communicating over either a direct socket link or
 tunneling over an encrypted ssh connection.
 It is careful with network bandwidth, and runs well over slow links
 such as PPP connections. Transfers of small updates to large files are
 optimized using a compression protocol similar to rsync.
- Unison has a clear and precise specification, described
below. 
- Unison is resilient to failure. It is careful to leave the
 replicas and its own private structures in a sensible state at all
 times, even in case of abnormal termination or communication
 failures.
- Unison is free; full source code is available under the GNU
Public License.
Preface
People
Benjamin Pierce leads the
Unison project. 
The current version of Unison was designed and implemented by
 
Trevor Jim,
 
Benjamin Pierce,
and
 
Jérôme Vouillon,
with
 
Alan Schmitt,
 Malo Denielou,
 
Zhe Yang,
 Sylvain Gommier, and
 Matthieu Goulay.
The Mac user interface was started by Trevor Jim and enormously improved by
Ben Willmore. 
Our implementation of the
 
rsync
 protocol was built by
 
Norman Ramsey
 and Sylvain Gommier. It is based on
 
Andrew Tridgell's
 
thesis work
 and inspired by his
 
rsync
 utility.
The mirroring and merging functionality was implemented by
 Sylvain Roy, improved by Malo Denielou, and improved yet further by
 Stéphane Lescuyer.
Jacques Garrigue
 contributed the original Gtk version of the user
 interface; the Gtk2 version was built by Stephen Tse. 
Sundar Balasubramaniam helped build a prototype implementation of
an earlier synchronizer in Java.
Insik Shin
and
Insup Lee contributed design
ideas to this implementation.
Cedric Fournet
contributed to an even earlier prototype.
Mailing Lists and Bug Reporting
Mailing Lists:
Moderated mailing lists are available for bug reporting, announcements
of new versions, discussions among users, and discussions among
developers. See
http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/lists.html 
for more
information.
Development Status
Unison is no longer under active development as a research
project. (Our research efforts are now focused on a follow-on
project called Harmony, described at
http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/harmony.) 
At this point, there is no one whose job it is to maintain Unison,
fix bugs, or answer questions.
However, the original developers are all still using Unison daily. It
will continue to be maintained and supported for the foreseeable future,
and we will occasionally release new versions with bug fixes, small
improvements, and contributed patches.
Reports of bugs affecting correctness or safety are of interest to many
people and will generally get high priority. Other bug reports will be
looked at as time permits. Bugs should be reported to the users list at
unison-users@yahoogroups.com. 
Feature requests are welcome, but will probably just be added to the
ever-growing todo list. They should also be sent to 
unison-users@yahoogroups.com.
Patches are even more welcome. They should be sent to
unison-hackers@lists.seas.upenn.edu.
(Since safety and robustness are Unison's most important properties,
patches will be held to high standards of clear design and clean coding.)
If you want to contribute to Unison, start by downloading the developer
tarball from the download page. For some details on how the code is
organized, etc., see the file 
CONTRIB.
Copying
This file is part of Unison.
Unison is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
 (at your option) any later version.
Unison is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
 GNU General Public License for more details.
The GNU Public License can be found at
 
http://www.gnu.org/licenses. A copy is also included in the
 Unison source distribution in the file 
COPYING.
Acknowledgements
Work on Unison has been supported by the National Science Foundation
under grants CCR-9701826 and ITR-0113226, 
Principles and Practice of
 Synchronization, and by University of Pennsylvania's Institute for
Research in Cognitive Science (IRCS).
Installation
Unison is designed to be easy to install. The following sequence of
steps should get you a fully working installation in a few minutes. If
you run into trouble, you may find the suggestions on the 
Frequently Asked
Questions page helpful. Pre-built binaries are available for a
variety of platforms.
Unison can be used with either of two user interfaces: 
- 
a simple textual interface, suitable for dumb terminals (and
running from scripts), and 
- a more sophisticated grapical interface, based on Gtk2 (on
 Linux/Windows) or the native UI framework (on OSX). 
You will need to install a copy of Unison on every machine that you
want to synchronize. However, you only need the version with a
graphical user interface (if you want a GUI at all) on the machine
where you're actually going to display the interface (the 
client
machine). Other machines that you synchronize with can get along just
fine with the textual version.
Downloading Unison
The Unison download site lives under 
http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison.
If a pre-built binary of Unison is available for the client machine's
architecture, just download it and put it somewhere in your search
path (if you're going to invoke it from the command line) or on your
desktop (if you'll be click-starting it).
The executable file for the graphical version (with a name including
gtkui) actually provides 
both interfaces: the graphical one
appears by default, while the textual interface can be selected by including
-ui text on the command line. The 
textui executable
provides just the textual interface.
If you don't see a pre-built executable for your architecture, you'll
need to build it yourself. See the 
Building Unison section.
There are also a small number of contributed ports to other
architectures that are not maintained by us. See the
Contributed 
Ports page to check what's available.
Check to make sure that what you have downloaded is really executable.
Either click-start it, or type 
unison -version at the command
line. 
Unison can be used in three different modes: with different directories on a
single machine, with a remote machine over a direct socket connection, or
with a remote machine using 
ssh for authentication and secure
transfer. If you intend to use the last option, you may need to install
ssh; see the 
Installing Ssh section.
Running Unison
 
Once you've got Unison installed on at least one system, read 
the 
Tutorial section of the user manual (or type 
unison -doc
 tutorial) for instructions on how to get started.
Upgrading
Upgrading to a new version of Unison is as simple as throwing away the old
binary and installing the new one.
Before upgrading, it is a good idea to run the 
old version one last
time, to make sure all your replicas are completely synchronized. A new
version of Unison will sometimes introduce a different format for the
archive files used to remember information about the previous state of the
replicas. In this case, the old archive will be ignored (not deleted — if
you roll back to the previous version of Unison, you will find the old
archives intact), which means that any differences between the replicas will
show up as conflicts that need to be resolved manually.
Building Unison from Scratch
If a pre-built image is not available, you will need to compile it from
scratch; the sources are available from the same place as the binaries.
In principle, Unison should work on any platform to which OCaml has been
ported and on which the 
Unix module is fully implemented. It has
been tested on many flavors of Windows (98, NT, 2000, XP) and Unix (OS X,
Solaris, Linux, FreeBSD), and on both 32- and 64-bit architectures.
Unix
You'll need the Objective Caml compiler (version 3.11.2 or later), which is
available from 
http://caml.inria.fr. Building and installing OCaml
on Unix systems is very straightforward; just follow the instructions in the
distribution. You'll probably want to build the native-code compiler in
addition to the bytecode compiler, as Unison runs much faster when compiled
to native code, but this is not absolutely necessary.
(Quick start: on many systems, the following sequence of commands will
get you a working and installed compiler: first do 
make world opt,
then 
su to root and do 
make install.)
You'll also need the GNU 
make utility, standard on many Unix
systems. (Type 
make –version to check that you've got the
GNU version.)
Once you've got OCaml installed, grab a copy of the Unison sources,
unzip and untar them, change to the new 
unison directory, and
type “
make UISTYLE=text.”
The result should be an executable file called 
unison.
Type 
./unison to make sure the program is executable. You
should get back a usage message.
If you want to build the graphical user interface, you will need to install
two additional things:
Now build unison. If your search paths are set up correctly, simply typing
make
again should build a 
unison executable with a Gtk2 graphical
interface. (In previous releases of Unison, it was necessary to add 
UISTYLE=gtk2 to the 'make' command above. This requirement has been
removed: the makefile should detect automatically when lablgtk2 is
present and set this flag automatically.) 
Put the 
unison executable somewhere in your search path, either
by adding the Unison directory to your PATH variable or by copying the
executable to some standard directory where executables are stored.
Mac OS X
To build the text-only user interface, follow the instructions above for
building on Unix systems. You should do this first, even if you are also
planning on building the GUI, just to make sure it works.
To build the basic GUI version, you'll first need to download and install
the XCode developer tools from Apple. Once this is done, just type 
make UISTYLE=macnew in the 
src directory, and if things go well you
should get an application that you can move from 
uimacnew/build/Default/Unison.app to wherever you want it.
There is also an experimental GUI with a somewhat smoother look and feel.
To compile this one (once you've got the basic one working), proceed as
follows:
- 
Go to the uimacnew09 directory and double-click the file BWToolkit.ibplugin.
- Go back up to the src directory and type make
 UISTYLE=macnew09. 
- You should get an application built for you at uimacnew09/build/Default/Unison.app.
Windows
Although the binary distribution should work on any version of Windows,
some people may want to build Unison from scratch on those systems too.
Bytecode version:
 The simpler but slower compilation option
to build a Unison executable is to build a bytecode version. You need
first install Windows version of the OCaml compiler (version 3.07 or
later, available from 
http://caml.inria.fr). Then grab a copy
of Unison sources and type 
       make NATIVE=false
to compile the bytecode. The result should be an executable file called
unison.exe. 
Native version:
 Building a more efficient, native version of
Unison on Windows requires a little more work. See the file 
INSTALL.win32 in the source code distribution.
Installation Options
The 
Makefile in the distribution includes several switches that
can be used to control how Unison is built. Here are the most useful
ones:
- 
Building with NATIVE=trueuses the native-code OCaml
compiler, yielding an executable that will run quite a bit faster. We use
this for building distribution versions.
- Building with make DEBUGGING=truegenerates debugging
symbols.
- Building with make STATIC=truegenerates a (mostly)
statically linked executable. We use this for building distribution
versions, for portability.
Tutorial
Preliminaries
Unison can be used with either of two user interfaces: 
- 
a straightforward textual interface and 
- a more sophisticated graphical interface
The textual interface is more convenient for running from scripts and
works on dumb terminals; the graphical interface is better for most
interactive use. For this tutorial, you can use either. If you are running
Unison from the command line, just typing 
unison 
will select either the text or the graphical interface, depending on which
has been selected as default when the executable you are running was
built. You can force the text interface even if graphical is the default by
adding 
-ui text. 
The other command-line arguments to both versions are identical. 
The graphical version can also be run directly by clicking on its icon, but
this may require a little set-up (see the 
Click-starting
 Unison section). For this tutorial, we assume that you're starting it from the
command line.
Unison can synchronize files and directories on a single machine, or
between two machines on a network. (The same program runs on both
machines; the only difference is which one is responsible for
displaying the user interface.) If you're only interested in a
single-machine setup, then let's call that machine the 
client. If
you're synchronizing two machines, let's call them 
client and
server.
Local Usage
Let's get the client machine set up first and see how to synchronize
two directories on a single machine.
Follow the instructions in the 
Installation section to either
download or build an executable version of Unison, and install it
somewhere on your search path. (If you just want to use the textual user
interface, download the appropriate textui binary. If you just want to
the graphical interface—or if you will use both interfaces [the gtkui
binary actually has both compiled in]—then download the gtkui binary.)
Create a small test directory 
a.tmp containing a couple of files
and/or subdirectories, e.g.,
       mkdir a.tmp
       touch a.tmp/a a.tmp/b
       mkdir a.tmp/d
       touch a.tmp/d/f
Copy this directory to b.tmp:
       cp -r a.tmp b.tmp
Now try synchronizing 
a.tmp and 
b.tmp. (Since they are
identical, synchronizing them won't propagate any changes, but Unison
will remember the current state of both directories so that it will be
able to tell next time what has changed.) Type:
       unison a.tmp b.tmp
(You may need to add 
-ui text, depending how your unison binary was built.)
Textual Interface:- 
 
You should see a message notifying you that all the files are actually
equal and then get returned to the command line.
Graphical Interface:- 
 
You should get a big empty window with a message at the bottom
notifying you that all files are identical. Choose the Exit item from
the File menu to get back to the command line.
Next, make some changes in a.tmp and/or b.tmp. For example:
        rm a.tmp/a
        echo "Hello" > a.tmp/b
        echo "Hello" > b.tmp/b
        date > b.tmp/c
        echo "Hi there" > a.tmp/d/h
        echo "Hello there" > b.tmp/d/h
Run Unison again:
       unison a.tmp b.tmp
This time, the user interface will display only the files that have
changed. If a file has been modified in just one
replica, then it will be displayed with an arrow indicating the
direction that the change needs to be propagated. For example, 
                 <---  new file   c  [f]
indicates that the file 
c has been modified only in the second
replica, and that the default action is therefore to propagate the new
version to the first replica. To 
follow Unison's recommendation,
press the “f” at the prompt.
If both replicas are modified and their contents are different, then
the changes are in conflict: 
<-?-> is displayed to indicate
that Unison needs guidance on which replica should override the
other. 
     new file  <-?->  new file   d/h  []
By default, neither version will be propagated and both
replicas will remain as they are. 
If both replicas have been modified but their new contents are the same
(as with the file 
b), then no propagation is necessary and
nothing is shown. Unison simply notes that the file is up to date.
These display conventions are used by both versions of the user
interface. The only difference lies in the way in which Unison's
default actions are either accepted or overridden by the user.
Textual Interface:- 
 
The status of each modified file is displayed, in turn. 
When the copies of a file in the two replicas are not identical, the
user interface will ask for instructions as to how to propagate the
change. If some default action is indicated (by an arrow), you can
simply press Return to go on to the next changed file. If you want to
do something different with this file, press “<” or “>” to force
the change to be propagated from right to left or from left to right,
or else press “/” to skip this file and leave both replicas alone.
When it reaches the end of the list of modified files, Unison will ask
you one more time whether it should proceed with the updates that have
been selected.
 
 When Unison stops to wait for input from the user, pressing “?”
will always give a list of possible responses and their meanings.
Graphical Interface:- 
  
The main window shows all the files that have been modified in either
a.tmp or b.tmp. To override a default action (or to select
an action in the case when there is no default), first select the file, either
by clicking on its name or by using the up- and down-arrow keys. Then
press either the left-arrow or “<” key (to cause the version in b.tmp to
propagate to a.tmp) or the right-arrow or “>” key (which makes the a.tmp
version override b.tmp).
 
 Every keyboard command can also be invoked from the menus at the top
of the user interface. (Conversely, each menu item is annotated with
its keyboard equivalent, if it has one.)
 
 When you are satisfied with the directions for the propagation of changes
as shown in the main window, click the “Go” button to set them in
motion. A check sign will be displayed next to each filename
when the file has been dealt with.
Remote Usage
Next, we'll get Unison set up to synchronize replicas on two different
machines.
Follow the instructions in the Installation section to download or
build an executable version of Unison on the server machine, and
install it somewhere on your search path. (It doesn't matter whether
you install the textual or graphical version, since the copy of Unison on
the server doesn't need to display any user interface at all.) 
It is important that the version of Unison installed on the server
machine is the same as the version of Unison on the client machine.
But some flexibility on the version of Unison at the client side can
be achieved by using the 
-addversionno option; see 
the 
Preferences section.
Now there is a decision to be made. Unison provides two methods for
communicating between the client and the server:
- 
Remote shell method: To use this method, you must have
 some way of invoking remote commands on the server from the client's
 command line, using a facility such as ssh.
 This method is more convenient (since there is no need to manually
 start a “unison server” process on the server) and also more
 secure (especially if you usessh).
 
 
- Socket method: This method requires only that you can get
 TCP packets from the client to the server and back. A draconian 
 firewall can prevent this, but otherwise it should work anywhere.
Decide which of these you want to try, and continue with
the 
Remote Shell Method section or
the 
Socket Method section, as appropriate.
Remote Shell Method
The standard remote shell facility on Unix systems is 
ssh, which provides the
same functionality as the older 
rsh but much better security. Ssh is available from
ftp://ftp.cs.hut.fi/pub/ssh/; up-to-date binaries for some
architectures can also be found at
ftp://ftp.faqs.org/ssh/contrib. See section 
A.2
for installation instructions for the Windows version.
Running
ssh requires some coordination between the client and server
machines to establish that the client is allowed to invoke commands on
the server; please refer to the 
ssh documentation
for information on how to set this up. The examples in this section
use 
ssh, but you can substitute 
rsh for 
ssh if
you wish.
First, test that we can invoke Unison on the server from the client.
Typing
        ssh remotehostname unison -version
should print the same version information as running
        unison -version
locally on the client. If remote execution fails, then either
something is wrong with your ssh setup (e.g., “permission denied”)
or else the search path that's being used when executing commands on
the server doesn't contain the 
unison executable (e.g.,
“command not found”).
Create a test directory 
a.tmp in your home directory on the client
machine. 
Test that the local unison client can start and connect to the
remote server. Type
          unison -testServer a.tmp ssh://remotehostname/a.tmp
Now cd to your home directory and type:
          unison a.tmp ssh://remotehostname/a.tmp
The result should be that the entire directory 
a.tmp is propagated
from the client to your home directory on the server.
After finishing the first synchronization, change a few files and try
synchronizing again. You should see similar results as in the local
case.
If your user name on the server is not the same as on the client, you
need to specify it on the command line:
          unison a.tmp ssh://username@remotehostname/a.tmp
Notes:
Socket Method
 Warning: The socket method is 
 insecure: not only are the texts of your changes transmitted over
 the network in unprotected form, it is also possible for anyone in
 the world to connect to the server process and read out the contents
 of your filesystem! (Of course, to do this they must understand the
 protocol that Unison uses to communicate between client and server,
 but all they need for this is a copy of the Unison sources.) The socket
 method is provided only for expert users with specific needs; everyone
 else should use the ssh method.
To run Unison over a socket connection, you must start a Unison
daemon process on the server. This process runs continuously,
waiting for connections over a given socket from client machines
running Unison and processing their requests in turn.
To start the daemon, type
       unison -socket NNNN
on the server machine, where 
NNNN is the socket number that the
daemon should listen on for connections from clients. (
NNNN can
be any large number that is not being used by some other program; if
NNNN is already in use, Unison will exit with an error
message.) Note that paths specified by the client will be interpreted
relative to the directory in which you start the server process; this
behavior is different from the ssh case, where the path is relative to
your home directory on the server.
Create a test directory 
a.tmp in your home directory on the
client machine. Now type:
       unison a.tmp socket://remotehostname:NNNN/a.tmp
The result should be that the entire directory 
a.tmp is
propagated from the client to the server (
a.tmp will be
created on the server in the directory that the server was started
from).
After finishing the first synchronization, change a few files and try
synchronizing again. You should see similar results as in the local
case.
Since the socket method is not used by many people, its functionality is
rather limited. For example, the server can only deal with one client at a
time. 
Using Unison for All Your Files
Once you are comfortable with the basic operation of Unison, you may
find yourself wanting to use it regularly to synchronize your commonly
used files. There are several possible ways of going about this:
- 
Synchronize your whole home directory, using the Ignore facility
(see the Ignore section)
to avoid synchronizing temporary files and things that only belong on
one host.
- Create a subdirectory called shared (or current, or
whatever) in your home directory on each host, and put all the files
you want to synchronize into this directory. 
- Create a subdirectory called shared (or current, or
whatever) in your home directory on each host, and put links to
all the files you want to synchronize into this directory. Use the
follow preference (see the Symbolic Links section) to make
Unison treat these links as transparent.
- Make your home directory the root of the synchronization, but
tell Unison to synchronize only some of the files and subdirectories
within it on any given run. This can be accomplished by using the -path switch
on the command line:
       unison /home/username ssh://remotehost//home/username -path shared
The -path option can be used as many times as needed, to 
synchronize several files or subdirectories:
       unison /home/username ssh://remotehost//home/username \-path shared\-path pub\-path .netscape/bookmarks.html
These-patharguments can also be put in your preference file.
See the Preferences section for an example.
Most people find that they only need to maintain a profile (or
profiles) on one of the hosts that they synchronize, since Unison is
always initiated from this host. (For example, if you're
synchronizing a laptop with a fileserver, you'll probably always run
Unison on the laptop.) This is a bit different from the usual
situation with asymmetric mirroring programs like 
rdist, where
the mirroring operation typically needs to be initiated from the
machine with the most recent changes. the 
Profile section
covers the syntax of Unison profiles, together with some sample profiles.
Some tips on improving Unison's performance can be found on the
Frequently
 Asked Questions page.
Using Unison to Synchronize More Than Two Machines
Unison is designed for synchronizing pairs of replicas. However, it is
possible to use it to keep larger groups of machines in sync by performing
multiple pairwise synchronizations. 
If you need to do this, the most reliable way to set things up is to
organize the machines into a “star topology,” with one machine designated
as the “hub” and the rest as “spokes,” and with each spoke machine
synchronizing only with the hub. The big advantage of the star topology is
that it eliminates the possibility of confusing “spurious conflicts”
arising from the fact that a separate archive is maintained by Unison for
every pair of hosts that it synchronizes.
Going Further
On-line documentation for the various features of Unison
can be obtained either by typing
        unison -doc topics
at the command line, or by selecting the Help menu in the graphical
user interface. 
The on-line information and the printed manual are essentially identical.
If you use Unison regularly, you should subscribe to one of the mailing
lists, to receive announcements of new versions. See
the 
Mailing Lists section. 
Basic Concepts
To understand how Unison works, it is necessary to discuss a few
straightforward concepts.
These concepts are developed more rigorously and at more length in a number
of papers, available at 
http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/papers.
But the informal presentation here should be enough for most users.
Roots
A replica's 
root tells Unison where to find a set of files to be
synchronized, either on the local machine or on a remote host.
For example,
      relative/path/of/root
specifies a local root relative to the directory where Unison is
started, while
      /absolute/path/of/root
specifies a root relative to the top of the local filesystem,
independent of where Unison is running. Remote roots can begin with
ssh://,
rsh://
to indicate that the remote server should be started with rsh or ssh:
      ssh://remotehost//absolute/path/of/root
      rsh://user@remotehost/relative/path/of/root
If the remote server is already running (in the socket mode), then the syntax
      socket://remotehost:portnum//absolute/path/of/root
      socket://remotehost:portnum/relative/path/of/root
is used to specify the hostname and the port that the client Unison should
use to contact it.
The syntax for roots is based on that of URIs (described in RFC 2396).
The full grammar is: 
  replica ::= [protocol:]//[user@][host][:port][/path]
           |  path
  protocol ::= file
            |  socket
            |  ssh
            |  rsh
  user ::= [-_a-zA-Z0-9]+
  host ::= [-_a-zA-Z0-9.]+
  port ::= [0-9]+
When 
path is given without any protocol prefix, the protocol is
assumed to be 
file:. Under Windows, it is possible to
synchronize with a remote directory using the 
file: protocol over
the Windows Network Neighborhood. For example,
       unison foo //host/drive/bar
synchronizes the local directory 
foo with the directory
drive:\bar on the machine 
host, provided that 
host
is accessible via Network Neighborhood. When the 
file: protocol
is used in this way, there is no need for a Unison server to be running
on the remote host. However, running Unison this way is only a good
idea if the remote host is reached by a very fast network connection,
since the full contents of every file in the remote replica will have to
be transferred to the local machine to detect updates.
The names of roots are 
canonized by Unison before it uses them
to compute the names of the corresponding archive files, so 
//saul//home/bcpierce/common and 
//saul.cis.upenn.edu/common
will be recognized as the same replica under different names.
Paths
A 
path refers to a point 
within a set of files being
synchronized; it is specified relative to the root of the replica.
Formally, a path is just a sequence of names, separated by 
/.
Note that the path separator character is always a forward slash, no
matter what operating system Unison is running on. Forward slashes
are converted to backslashes as necessary when paths are converted to
filenames in the local filesystem on a particular host.
(For example, suppose that we run Unison on a Windows system, synchronizing
the local root 
c:\pierce with the root
ssh://saul.cis.upenn.edu/home/bcpierce on a Unix server. Then
the path 
current/todo.txt refers to the file
c:\pierce\current\todo.txt on the client and
/home/bcpierce/current/todo.txt on the server.)
The empty path (i.e., the empty sequence of names) denotes the whole
replica. Unison displays the empty path as “
[root].”
If 
p is a path and 
q is a path beginning with 
p, then
q is said to be a 
descendant of 
p. (Each path is also a
descendant of itself.)
What is an Update?
The 
contents of a path 
p in a particular replica could be a
file, a directory, a symbolic link, or absent (if 
p does not
refer to anything at all in that replica). More specifically:
- 
If prefers to an ordinary file, then the
contents ofpare the actual contents of this file (a string of bytes)
plus the current permission bits of the file.
- If prefers to a symbolic link, then the contents ofpare just the string specifying where the link points.
- If prefers to a directory, then the
contents ofpare just the token “DIRECTORY” plus the current
permission bits of the directory.
- If pdoes not refer to anything in this replica, then the
contents ofpare the token “ABSENT.”
Unison keeps a record of the contents of each path after each
successful synchronization of that path (i.e., it remembers the
contents at the last moment when they were the same in the two
replicas). 
We say that a path is 
updated (in some replica) if its current
contents are different from its contents the last time it was successfully
synchronized. Note that whether a path is updated has nothing to do with
its last modification time—Unison considers only the contents when
determining whether an update has occurred. This means that touching a file
without changing its contents will 
not be recognized as an update. A
file can even be changed several times and then changed back to its original
contents; as long as Unison is only run at the end of this process, no
update will be recognized.
What Unison actually calculates is a close approximation to this
definition; see the 
Caveats and Shortcomings section.
What is a Conflict?
A path is said to be 
conflicting if the following conditions all hold:
- 
it has been updated in one replica, 
- it or any of its descendants has been updated in the other
 replica, 
and
- its contents in the two replicas are not identical.
Reconciliation
Unison operates in several distinct stages:
- 
On each host, it compares its archive file (which records
the state of each path in the replica when it was last synchronized)
with the current contents of the replica, to determine which paths
have been updated.
- It checks for “false conflicts” — paths that have been
updated on both replicas, but whose current values are identical.
These paths are silently marked as synchronized in the archive files
in both replicas.
- It displays all the updated paths to the user. For updates that
do not conflict, it suggests a default action (propagating the new
contents from the updated replica to the other). Conflicting updates
are just displayed. The user is given an opportunity to examine the
current state of affairs, change the default actions for
nonconflicting updates, and choose actions for conflicting updates.
- It performs the selected actions, one at a time. Each action is
performed by first transferring the new contents to a temporary file
on the receiving host, then atomically moving them into place.
- It updates its archive files to reflect the new state of the
replicas. 
Invariants
Given the importance and delicacy of the job that it performs, it is
important to understand both what a synchronizer does under normal
conditions and what can happen under unusual conditions such as system
crashes and communication failures. 
Unison is careful to protect both its internal state and the state of
the replicas at every point in this process. Specifically, the
following guarantees are enforced:
- 
At every moment, each path in each replica has either (1) its original contents (i.e., no change at all has been made to this
path), or (2) its correct final contents (i.e., the value that the
user expected to be propagated from the other replica).
- At every moment, the information stored on disk about Unison's
private state can be either (1) unchanged, or (2) updated to reflect
those paths that have been successfully synchronized.
The upshot is that it is safe to interrupt Unison at any time, either
manually or accidentally. [Caveat: the above is 
almost true there
are occasionally brief periods where it is not (and, because of
shortcoming of the Posix filesystem API, cannot be); in particular, when
it is copying a file onto a directory or vice versa, it must first move
the original contents out of the way. If Unison gets
interrupted during one of these periods, some manual cleanup may be
required. In this case, a file called 
DANGER.README will be left
in your home directory, containing information about the operation that
was interrupted. The next time you try to run Unison, it will notice this
file and warn you about it.]
If an interruption happens while it is propagating updates, then there
may be some paths for which an update has been propagated but which
have not been marked as synchronized in Unison's archives. This is no
problem: the next time Unison runs, it will detect changes to these
paths in both replicas, notice that the contents are now equal, and
mark the paths as successfully updated when it writes back its private
state at the end of this run.
If Unison is interrupted, it may sometimes leave temporary working files
(with suffix 
.tmp) in the replicas. It is safe to delete these
files. Also, if the 
backups flag is set, Unison will
leave around old versions of files that it overwrites, with names like
file.0.unison.bak. These can be deleted safely when they are no
longer wanted.
Unison is not bothered by clock skew between the different hosts on
which it is running. It only performs comparisons between timestamps
obtained from the same host, and the only assumption it makes about
them is that the clock on each system always runs forward.
If Unison finds that its archive files have been deleted (or that the
archive format has changed and they cannot be read, or that they don't
exist because this is the first run of Unison on these particular
roots), it takes a conservative approach: it behaves as though the
replicas had both been completely empty at the point of the last
synchronization. The effect of this is that, on the first run, files
that exist in only one replica will be propagated to the other, while
files that exist in both replicas but are unequal will be marked as
conflicting. 
Touching a file without changing its contents should never affect whether or
not Unison does an update. (When running with the fastcheck preference set
to true—the default on Unix systems—Unison uses file modtimes for a
quick first pass to tell which files have definitely not changed; then, for
each file that might have changed, it computes a fingerprint of the file's
contents and compares it against the last-synchronized contents. Also, the
-times option allows you to synchronize file times, but it does not
cause identical files to be changed; Unison will only modify the file
times.)
It is safe to “brainwash” Unison by deleting its archive files
on both replicas. The next time it runs, it will assume that
all the files it sees in the replicas are new. 
It is safe to modify files while Unison is working. If Unison
discovers that it has propagated an out-of-date change, or that the
file it is updating has changed on the target replica, it will signal
a failure for that file. Run Unison again to propagate the latest
change.
Changes to the ignore patterns from the user interface (e.g., using
the `i' key) are immediately reflected in the current profile.
Caveats and Shortcomings
Here are some things to be careful of when using Unison. 
- 
In the interests of speed, the update detection algorithm may
 (depending on which OS architecture that you run Unison on)
 actually use an approximation to the definition given in
 the What is an Update? section. 
 
 In particular, the Unix
 implementation does not compare the actual contents of files to their
 previous contents, but simply looks at each file's inode number and
 modtime; if neither of these have changed, then it concludes that the
 file has not been changed.
 
 Under normal circumstances, this approximation is safe, in the sense
 that it may sometimes detect “false updates” but will never miss a real
 one. However, it is possible to fool it, for example by usingretouchto change a file's modtime back to a time in the past.
 
 
- If you synchronize between a single-user filesystem and a shared
Unix server, you should pay attention to your permission bits: by
default, Unison will synchronize permissions verbatim, which may leave
group-writable files on the server that could be written over by a lot of
people. 
 
 You can control this by setting yourumaskon both computers to
something like 022, masking out the “world write” and “group write”
permission bits.
 
 Unison does not synchronize thesetuidandsetgidbits, for
security.
 
 
- The graphical user interface is single-threaded. This
means that if Unison is performing some long-running operation, the
display will not be repainted until it finishes. We recommend not
trying to do anything with the user interface while Unison is in the
middle of detecting changes or propagating files.
 
 
- Unison does not understand hard links.
 
 
- It is important to be a little careful when renaming directories
containing ignored files. 
 
 For example, suppose Unison is synchronizing directory A between the two
machines called the “local” and the “remote” machine; suppose directory
A contains a subdirectory D; and suppose D on the local machine contains a
file or subdirectory P that matches an ignore directive in the profile used
to synchronize. Thus path A/D/P exists on the local machine but not on the
remote machine.
 
 If D is renamed to D' on the remote machine, and this change is 
 propagated to the local machine, all such files or subdirectories P 
 will be deleted. This is because Unison sees the rename as a delete and a
 separate create: it deletes the old directory (including the ignored files)
 and creates a new one (not including the ignored files, since they
 are completely invisible to it).
Reference Guide
This section covers the features of Unison in detail. 
Running Unison
There are several ways to start Unison.
- 
Typing “unison profile” on the command line. Unison
will look for a file profile.prf in the .unisondirectory. If this file does not specify a pair of roots, Unison will
prompt for them and add them to the information specified by the profile.
- Typing “unison profile root1 root2” on the command
line.
In this case, Unison will use profile, which should not contain
any root directives.
- Typing “unison root1 root2” on the command line. This
has the same effect as typing “unison default root1 root2.”
- Typing just “unison” (or invoking Unison by clicking on
a desktop icon). In this case, Unison will ask for the profile to use
for synchronization (or create a new one, if necessary). 
The .unison Directory
Unison stores a variety of information in a private directory on each
host. If the environment variable 
UNISON is defined, then its
value will be used as the name of this directory. If 
UNISON is
not defined, then the name of the directory depends on which
operating system you are using. In Unix, the default is to use
$HOME/.unison.
In Windows, if the environment variable
USERPROFILE is defined, then the directory will be
$USERPROFILE\.unison;
otherwise if 
HOME is defined, it will be
$HOME\.unison;
otherwise, it will be
c:\.unison.
The archive file for each replica is found in the 
.unison
directory on that replica's host. Profiles (described below) are
always taken from the 
.unison directory on the client host.
Note that Unison maintains a completely different set of archive files
for each pair of roots.
We do not recommend synchronizing the whole 
.unison directory, as this
will involve frequent propagation of large archive files. It should be safe
to do it, though, if you really want to. Synchronizing just the profile
files in the 
.unison directory is definitely OK.
Archive Files
The name of the archive file on each replica is calculated from 
- 
the canonical names of all the hosts (short names like
 saulare converted into full addresses likesaul.cis.upenn.edu),
- the paths to the replicas on all the hosts (again, relative
 pathnames, symbolic links, etc. are converted into full, absolute paths), and 
- an internal version number that is changed whenever a new Unison
 release changes the format of the information stored in the archive.
This method should work well for most users. However, it is occasionally
useful to change the way archive names are generated. Unison provides
two ways of doing this.
The function that finds the canonical hostname of the local host (which
is used, for example, in calculating the name of the archive file used to
remember which files have been synchronized) normally uses the
gethostname operating system call. However, if the environment
variable 
UNISONLOCALHOSTNAME is set, its value will be used
instead. This makes it easier to use Unison in situations where a
machine's name changes frequently (e.g., because it is a laptop and gets
moved around a lot).
A more powerful way of changing archive names is provided by the
rootalias preference. The preference file may contain any number of
lines of the form: 
    rootalias = //hostnameA//path-to-replicaA -> //hostnameB/path-to-replicaB
When calculating the name of the archive files for a given pair of roots,
Unison replaces any root that matches the left-hand side of any rootalias
rule by the corresponding right-hand side.
So, if you need to relocate a root on one of the hosts, you can add a
rule of the form:
    rootalias = //new-hostname//new-path -> //old-hostname/old-path
Note that root aliases are case-sensitive, even on case-insensitive file
systems.
Warning: The 
rootalias option is dangerous and should only
be used if you are sure you know what you're doing. In particular, it
should only be used if you are positive that either (1) both the original
root and the new alias refer to the same set of files, or (2) the files
have been relocated so that the original name is now invalid and will
never be used again. (If the original root and the alias refer to
different sets of files, Unison's update detector could get confused.)
After introducing a new 
rootalias, it is a good idea to run Unison
a few times interactively (with the 
batch flag off, etc.) and
carefully check that things look reasonable—in particular, that update
detection is working as expected.
Preferences
Many details of Unison's behavior are configurable by user-settable
“preferences.” 
Some preferences are boolean-valued; these are often called 
flags.
Others take numeric or string arguments, indicated in the preferences
list by 
n or 
xxx. Most of the string preferences can be
given several times; the arguments are accumulated into a list
internally.
There are two ways to set the values of preferences: temporarily, by
providing command-line arguments to a particular run of Unison, or
permanently, by adding commands to a 
profile in the 
.unison
directory on the client host. The order of preferences (either on the
command line or in preference files) is not significant. On the command
line, preferences and other arguments (the profile name and roots) can be
intermixed in any order.
To set the value of a preference 
p from the command line, add an
argument 
-p (for a boolean flag) or 
-p n or 
-p xxx (for
a numeric or string preference) anywhere on the command line. To set a
boolean flag to 
false on the command line, use 
-p=false.
Here are all the preferences supported by Unison. This list can be
 obtained by typing 
unison -help.
Usage: unison [options]
    or unison root1 root2 [options]
    or unison profilename [options]
Basic options: 
 -auto              automatically accept default (nonconflicting) actions
 -batch             batch mode: ask no questions at all
 -doc xxx           show documentation ('-doc topics' lists topics)
 -fat               use appropriate options for FAT filesystems
 -group             synchronize group attributes
 -ignore xxx        add a pattern to the ignore list
 -ignorenot xxx     add a pattern to the ignorenot list
 -nocreation xxx    prevent file creations on one replica
 -nodeletion xxx    prevent file deletions on one replica
 -noupdate xxx      prevent file updates and deletions on one replica
 -owner             synchronize owner
 -path xxx          path to synchronize
 -perms n           part of the permissions which is synchronized
 -root xxx          root of a replica (should be used exactly twice)
 -silent            print nothing except error messages
 -terse             suppress status messages
 -testserver        exit immediately after the connection to the server
 -times             synchronize modification times
 -version           print version and exit
Advanced options: 
 -addprefsto xxx    file to add new prefs to
 -addversionno      add version number to name of unison on server
 -backup xxx        add a pattern to the backup list
 -backupcurr xxx    add a pattern to the backupcurr list
 -backupcurrnot xxx add a pattern to the backupcurrnot list
 -backupdir xxx     directory for storing centralized backups
 -backuploc xxx     where backups are stored ('local' or 'central')
 -backupnot xxx     add a pattern to the backupnot list
 -backupprefix xxx  prefix for the names of backup files
 -backups           keep backup copies of all files (see also 'backup')
 -backupsuffix xxx  a suffix to be added to names of backup files
 -confirmbigdel     ask about whole-replica (or path) deletes (default true)
 -confirmmerge      ask for confirmation before commiting results of a merge
 -contactquietly    suppress the 'contacting server' message during startup
 -copymax n         maximum number of simultaneous copyprog transfers
 -copyprog xxx      external program for copying large files
 -copyprogrest xxx  variant of copyprog for resuming partial transfers
 -copyquoterem xxx  add quotes to remote file name for copyprog (true/false/default)
 -copythreshold n   use copyprog on files bigger than this (if >=0, in Kb)
 -debug xxx         debug module xxx ('all' -> everything, 'verbose' -> more)
 -diff xxx          set command for showing differences between files
 -dontchmod         when set, never use the chmod system call
 -dumbtty           do not change terminal settings in text UI (default true)
 -fastcheck xxx     do fast update detection (true/false/default)
 -follow xxx        add a pattern to the follow list
 -force xxx         force changes from this replica to the other
 -forcepartial xxx  add a pattern to the forcepartial list
 -halfduplex        force half-duplex communication with the server
 -height n          height (in lines) of main window in graphical interface
 -host xxx          bind the socket to this host name in server socket mode
 -ignorearchives    ignore existing archive files
 -ignorecase xxx    identify upper/lowercase filenames (true/false/default)
 -ignoreinodenumbers ignore inode number changes when detecting updates
 -ignorelocks       ignore locks left over from previous run (dangerous!)
 -immutable xxx     add a pattern to the immutable list
 -immutablenot xxx  add a pattern to the immutablenot list
 -key xxx           define a keyboard shortcut for this profile (in some UIs)
 -killserver        kill server when done (even when using sockets)
 -label xxx         provide a descriptive string label for this profile
 -links xxx         allow the synchronization of symbolic links (true/false/default)
 -log               record actions in logfile (default true)
 -logfile xxx       logfile name
 -maxbackups n      number of backed up versions of a file
 -maxerrors n       maximum number of errors before a directory transfer is aborted
 -maxthreads n      maximum number of simultaneous file transfers
 -merge xxx         add a pattern to the merge list
 -mountpoint xxx    abort if this path does not exist
 -nocreationpartial xxx add a pattern to the nocreationpartial list
 -nodeletionpartial xxx add a pattern to the nodeletionpartial list
 -noupdatepartial xxx add a pattern to the noupdatepartial list
 -numericids        don't map uid/gid values by user/group names
 -prefer xxx        choose this replica's version for conflicting changes
 -preferpartial xxx add a pattern to the preferpartial list
 -repeat xxx        synchronize repeatedly (text interface only)
 -retry n           re-try failed synchronizations N times (text ui only)
 -rootalias xxx     register alias for canonical root names
 -rsrc xxx          synchronize resource forks (true/false/default)
 -rsync             activate the rsync transfer mode (default true)
 -selftest          run internal tests and exit
 -servercmd xxx     name of unison executable on remote server
 -showarchive       show 'true names' (for rootalias) of roots and archive
 -socket xxx        act as a server on a socket
 -sortbysize        list changed files by size, not name
 -sortfirst xxx     add a pattern to the sortfirst list
 -sortlast xxx      add a pattern to the sortlast list
 -sortnewfirst      list new before changed files
 -sshargs xxx       other arguments (if any) for remote shell command
 -sshcmd xxx        path to the ssh executable
 -stream            use a streaming protocol for transferring file contents (default true)
 -ui xxx            select UI ('text' or 'graphic'); command-line only
 -unicode xxx       assume Unicode encoding in case insensitive mode
 -xferbycopying     optimize transfers using local copies (default true)
 
Here, in more detail, is what they do. Many are discussed in greater detail
in other sections of the manual.
- 
addprefsto xxx
- 
By default, new preferences added by Unison (e.g., new ignoreclauses) will be appended to whatever preference file Unison was told to load at the beginning of the run. Setting the preference addprefsto filename makes Unison add new preferences to the file named filename instead.
 
 
- addversionno 
- 
When this flag is set to true, Unison will use unison-currentversionnumber instead of just unisonas the remote server command. This allows multiple binaries for different versions of unison to coexist conveniently on the same server: whichever version is run on the client, the same version will be selected on the server.
 
 
- auto 
- 
When set to true, this flag causes the user interface to skip asking for confirmations on non-conflicting changes. (More precisely, when the user interface is done setting the propagation direction for one entry and is about to move to the next, it will skip over all non-conflicting entries and go directly to the next conflict.)
 
 
- backup xxx
- 
Including the preference -backup pathspec causes Unison to keep backup files for each path that matches pathspec. These backup files are kept in the directory specified by the backuplocationpreference. The backups are named according to thebackupprefixandbackupsuffixpreferences. The number of versions that are kept is determined by themaxbackupspreference.
 
 The syntax of pathspec is described in the Path Specification section.
 
 
- backupcurr xxx
- 
Including the preference -backupcurr pathspec causes Unison to keep a backup of the current version of every file matching pathspec. This file will be saved as a backup with version number 000. Such backups can be used as inputs to external merging programs, for instance. See the documentatation for the mergepreference. For more details, see the Merging Conflicting Versions section.
 
 The syntax of pathspec is described in the Path Specification section.
 
 
- backupcurrnot xxx
- 
Exceptions to backupcurr, like theignorenotpreference.
 
 
- backupdir xxx
- 
If this preference is set, Unison will use it as the name of the directory used to store backup files specified by the backup preference, when backuplocation is set to central. It is checked after the UNISONBACKUPDIR environment variable.
 
 
- backuploc xxx
- 
This preference determines whether backups should be kept locally, near the original files, or in a central directory specified by the backupdir preference. If set to local, backups will be kept in the same directory as the original files, and if set tocentral, backupdir will be used instead.
 
 
- backupnot xxx
- 
The values of this preference specify paths or individual files or regular expressions that should not be backed up, even if the backup preference selects them—i.e., it selectively overrides backup. The same caveats apply here as with ignore and ignorenot.
 
 
- backupprefix xxx
- 
When a backup for a file NAMEis created, it is stored in a directory specified by backuplocation, in a file called backupprefixNAMEbackupsuffix. backupprefix can include a directory name (causing Unison to keep all backup files for a given directory in a subdirectory with this name), and both backupprefix and backupsuffix can contain the string$VERSION, which will be replaced by the age of the backup (1 for the most recent, 2 for the second most recent, and so on...). This keyword is ignored if it appears in a directory name in the prefix; if it does not appear anywhere in the prefix or the suffix, it will be automatically placed at the beginning of the suffix.
 
 One thing to be careful of: If the backuploc preference is set to local, Unison will automatically ignore all files whose prefix and suffix match backupprefix and backupsuffix. So be careful to choose values for these preferences that are sufficiently different from the names of your real files.
 
 
- backups 
- 
Setting this flag to true is equivalent to setting backuplocation to local and backup to Name *.
 
 
- backupsuffix xxx
- 
See backupprefix for full documentation.
 
 
- batch 
- 
When this is set to true, the user interface will ask no questions at all. Non-conflicting changes will be propagated; conflicts will be skipped.
 
 
- confirmbigdel 
- 
When this is set to true, Unison will request an extra confirmation if it appears that the entire replica has been deleted, before propagating the change. If the batch flag is also set, synchronization will be aborted. When the path preference is used, the same confirmation will be requested for top-level paths. (At the moment, this flag only affects the text user interface.) See also the mountpoint preference.
 
 
- confirmmerge 
- 
Setting this preference causes both the text and graphical interfaces to ask the user if the results of a merge command may be commited to the replica or not. Since the merge command works on temporary files, the user can then cancel all the effects of applying the merge if it turns out that the result is not satisfactory. In batch-mode, this preference has no effect. Default is false.
 
 
- contactquietly 
- 
If this flag is set, Unison will skip displaying the `Contacting server' message (which some users find annoying) during startup.
 
 
- copymax n
- 
A number indicating how many instances of the external copying utility Unison is allowed to run simultaneously (default to 1).
 
 
- copyprog xxx
- 
A string giving the name of an external program that can be used to copy large files efficiently (plus command-line switches telling it to copy files in-place). The default setting invokes rsync with appropriate options—most users should not need to change it.
 
 
- copyprogrest xxx
- 
A variant of copyprog that names an external program that should be used to continue the transfer of a large file that has already been partially transferred. Typically, copyprogrest will just be copyprog with one extra option (e.g., –partial, for rsync). The default setting invokes rsync with appropriate options—most users should not need to change it.
 
 
- copyquoterem xxx
- 
When set to true, this flag causes Unison to add an extra layer of quotes to the remote path passed to the external copy program. This is needed by rsync, for example, which internally uses an ssh connection requiring an extra level of quoting for paths containing spaces. When this flag is set to default, extra quotes are added if the value of copyprog contains the string rsync.
 
 
- copythreshold n
- 
A number indicating above what filesize (in kilobytes) Unison should use the external copying utility specified by copyprog. Specifying 0 will cause all copies to use the external program; a negative number will prevent any files from using it. The default is -1. See the Making Unison Faster on Large Files section for more information.
 
 
- debug xxx
- 
This preference is used to make Unison print various sorts of information about what it is doing internally on the standard error stream. It can be used many times, each time with the name of a module for which debugging information should be printed. Possible arguments for debugcan be found by looking for calls toUtil.debugin the sources (using, e.g.,grep). Setting-debug allcauses information from all modules to be printed (this mode of usage is the first one to try, if you are trying to understand something that Unison seems to be doing wrong);-debug verboseturns on some additional debugging output from some modules (e.g., it will show exactly what bytes are being sent across the network).
 
 
- diff xxx
- 
This preference can be used to control the name and command-line arguments of the system utility used to generate displays of file differences. The default is `diff -u CURRENT2 CURRENT1'. If the value of this preference contains the substrings CURRENT1 and CURRENT2, these will be replaced by the names of the files to be diffed. If not, the two filenames will be appended to the command. In both cases, the filenames are suitably quoted.
 
 
- doc xxx
- 
The command-line argument -doc secname causes unison to display section secname of the manual on the standard output and then exit. Use -doc allto display the whole manual, which includes exactly the same information as the printed and HTML manuals, modulo formatting. Use-doc topicsto obtain a list of the names of the various sections that can be printed.
 
 
- dontchmod 
- 
By default, Unison uses the 'chmod' system call to set the permission bits of files after it has copied them. But in some circumstances (and under some operating systems), the chmod call always fails. Setting this preference completely prevents Unison from ever calling chmod.
 
 
- dumbtty 
- 
When set to true, this flag makes the text mode user interface avoid trying to change any of the terminal settings. (Normally, Unison puts the terminal in `raw mode', so that it can do things like overwriting the current line.) This is useful, for example, when Unison runs in a shell inside of Emacs.
 
 Whendumbttyis set, commands to the user interface need to be followed by a carriage return before Unison will execute them. (When it is off, Unison recognizes keystrokes as soon as they are typed.)
 
 This preference has no effect on the graphical user interface.
 
 
- dumparchives 
- 
When this preference is set, Unison will create a file unison.dump on each host, containing a text summary of the archive, immediately after loading it.
 
 
- fastcheck xxx
- 
When this preference is set to true, Unison will use the modification time and length of a file as a
 `pseudo inode number' when scanning replicas for updates, instead of reading the full contents of every file. Under Windows, this may cause Unison to miss propagating an update if the modification time and length of the file are both unchanged by the update. However, Unison will never overwrite such an update with a change from the other replica, since it always does a safe check for updates just before propagating a change. Thus, it is reasonable to use this switch under Windows most of the time and occasionally run Unison once with fastcheck set tofalse, if you are worried that Unison may have overlooked an update. For backward compatibility,yes,no, anddefaultcan be used in place oftrue,false, andauto. See the Fast Checking section for more information.
 
 
- fat 
- 
When this is set to true, Unison will use appropriate options to synchronize efficiently and without error a replica located on a FAT filesystem on a non-Windows machine: do not synchronize permissions (perms = 0); never use chmod (	t dontchmod = true); treat filenames as case insensitive (ignorecase = true); do not attempt to synchronize symbolic links (links = false); ignore inode number changes when detecting updates (ignoreinodenumbers = true). Any of these change can be overridden by explicitely setting the corresponding preference in the profile.
 
 
- follow xxx
- 
Including the preference -follow pathspec causes Unison to treat symbolic links matching pathspec as `invisible' and behave as if the object pointed to by the link had appeared literally at this position in the replica. See the Symbolic Links section for more details. The syntax of pathspec is described in the Path Specification section.
 
 
- force xxx
- 
Including the preference -force root causes Unison to resolve all differences (even non-conflicting changes) in favor of root. This effectively changes Unison from a synchronizer into a mirroring utility. 
 
 You can also specify-force newer(or-force older) to force Unison to choose the file with the later (earlier) modtime. In this case, the-timespreference must also be enabled.
 
 This preference is overridden by theforcepartialpreference.
 
 This preference should be used only if you are sure you know what you are doing!
 
 
- forcepartial xxx
- 
Including the preference forcepartial = PATHSPEC -> root causes Unison to resolve all differences (even non-conflicting changes) in favor of root for the files in PATHSPEC (see the Path Specification section for more information). This effectively changes Unison from a synchronizer into a mirroring utility. 
 
 You can also specifyforcepartial PATHSPEC -> newer(orforcepartial PATHSPEC older) to force Unison to choose the file with the later (earlier) modtime. In this case, the-timespreference must also be enabled.
 
 This preference should be used only if you are sure you know what you are doing!
 
 
- group 
- 
When this flag is set to true, the group attributes of the files are synchronized. Whether the group names or the group identifiers are synchronized depends on the preference numerids.
 
 
- halfduplex 
- 
When this flag is set to true, Unison network communication is forced to be half duplex (the client and the server never simultaneously emit data). If you experience unstabilities with your network link, this may help. The communication is always half-duplex when synchronizing with a Windows machine due to a limitation of Unison current implementation that could result in a deadlock.
 
 
- height n
- 
Used to set the height (in lines) of the main window in the graphical user interface.
 
 
- ignore xxx
- 
Including the preference -ignore pathspec causes Unison to completely ignore paths that match pathspec (as well as their children). This is useful for avoiding synchronizing temporary files, object files, etc. The syntax of pathspec is described in the Path Specification section, and further details on ignoring paths is found in the Ignoring Paths section.
 
 
- ignorearchives 
- 
When this preference is set, Unison will ignore any existing archive files and behave as though it were being run for the first time on these replicas. It is not a good idea to set this option in a profile: it is intended for command-line use.
 
 
- ignorecase xxx
- 
When set to true, this flag causes Unison to treat filenames as case insensitive—i.e., files in the two replicas whose names differ in (upper- and lower-case) `spelling' are treated as the same file. When the flag is set to false, Unison will treat all filenames as case sensitive. Ordinarily, when the flag is set to default, filenames are automatically taken to be case-insensitive if either host is running Windows or OSX. In rare circumstances it may be useful to set the flag manually.
 
 
- ignoreinodenumbers 
- 
When set to true, this preference makes Unison not take advantage of inode numbers during fast update detection. This switch should be used with care, as it is less safe than the standard update detection method, but it can be useful with filesystems which do not support inode numbers.
 
 
- ignorelocks 
- 
When this preference is set, Unison will ignore any lock files that may have been left over from a previous run of Unison that was interrupted while reading or writing archive files; by default, when Unison sees these lock files it will stop and request manual intervention. This option should be set only if you are positive that no other instance of Unison might be concurrently accessing the same archive files (e.g., because there was only one instance of unison running and it has just crashed or you have just killed it). It is probably not a good idea to set this option in a profile: it is intended for command-line use.
 
 
- ignorenot xxx
- 
This preference overrides the preference ignore. 
 It gives a list of patterns 
 (in the same format as 
 ignore) for paths that should definitely not be ignored, 
 whether or not they happen to match one of theignorepatterns.
 
 Note that the semantics of ignore and ignorenot is a
 little counter-intuitive. When detecting updates, Unison examines
 paths in depth-first order, starting from the roots of the replicas
 and working downwards. Before examining each path, it checks whether
 it matches ignore and does not match ignorenot; in this case
 it skips this path and all its descendants. This means that,
 if some parent of a given path matches an ignore pattern, then 
 it will be skipped even if the path itself matches an ignorenot
 pattern. In particular, putting ignore = Path * in your profile
 and then using ignorenot to select particular paths to be 
 synchronized will not work. Instead, you should use the path
 preference to choose particular paths to synchronize.
 
 
- immutable xxx
- 
This preference specifies paths for directories whose immediate children are all immutable files — i.e., once a file has been created, its contents never changes. When scanning for updates, Unison does not check whether these files have been modified; this can speed update detection significantly (in particular, for mail directories).
 
 
- immutablenot xxx
- 
This preference overrides immutable.
 
 
- key xxx
- 
Used in a profile to define a numeric key (0-9) that can be used in the graphical user interface to switch immediately to this profile.
 
 
- killserver 
- 
When set to true, this flag causes Unison to kill the remote server process when the synchronization is finished. This behavior is the default forsshconnections, so this preference is not normally needed when running overssh; it is provided so that socket-mode servers can be killed off after a single run of Unison, rather than waiting to accept future connections. (Some users prefer to start a remote socket server for each run of Unison, rather than leaving one running all the time.)
 
 
- label xxx
- 
Used in a profile to provide a descriptive string documenting its settings. (This is useful for users that switch between several profiles, especially using the `fast switch' feature of the graphical user interface.)
 
 
- links xxx
- 
When set to true, this flag causes Unison to synchronize symbolic links. When the flag is set to false, symbolic links will result in an error during update detection. Ordinarily, when the flag is set to default, symbolic links are synchronized except when one of the hosts is running Windows. In rare circumstances it may be useful to set the flag manually.
 
 
- log 
- 
When this flag is set, Unison will log all changes to the filesystems
 on a file.
 
 
- logfile xxx
- 
By default, logging messages will be appended to the file
 unison.login your HOME directory. Set this preference if
 you prefer another file.
 
 
- maxbackups n
- 
This preference specifies the number of backup versions that will be kept by unison, for each path that matches the predicate backup. The default is 2.
 
 
- maxerrors n
- 
This preference controls after how many errors Unison aborts a directory transfer. Setting it to a large number allows Unison to transfer most of a directory even when some files fail to be copied. The default is 1. If the preference is set too high, Unison may take a long time to abort in case of repeated failures (for instance, when the disk is full).
 
 
- maxthreads n
- 
This preference controls how much concurrency is allowed during the transport phase. Normally, it should be set reasonably high to maximize performance, but when Unison is used over a low-bandwidth link it may be helpful to set it lower (e.g. to 1) so that Unison doesn't soak up all the available bandwidth. The default is the special value 0, which mean 20 threads when file content streaming is desactivated and 1000 threads when it is activated.
 
 
- merge xxx
- 
This preference can be used to run a merge program which will create a new version for each of the files and the backup, with the last backup and the both replicas. Setting the merge preference for a path will also cause this path to be backed up, just like 	t backup. The syntax of pathspec>cmd is described in the Path Specification section, and further details on Merging functions are present in the Merging files section.
 
 
- mountpoint xxx
- 
Including the preference -mountpoint PATH causes Unison to double-check, at the end of update detection, that PATH exists and abort if it does not. This is useful when Unison is used to synchronize removable media. This preference can be given more than once. See the Mount Points section.
 
 
- nocreation xxx
- 
Including the preference -nocreation root prevents Unison from performing any file creation on root root.
 
 This preference can be included twice, once for each root, if you want to prevent any creation.
 
 
- nocreationpartial xxx
- 
Including the preference nocreationpartial = PATHSPEC -> root prevents Unison from performing any file creation in PATHSPEC on root root (see the Path Specification section for more information). It is recommended to use BelowPath patterns when selecting a directory and all its contents.
 
 
- nodeletion xxx
- 
Including the preference -nodeletion root prevents Unison from performing any file deletion on root root.
 
 This preference can be included twice, once for each root, if you want to prevent any creation.
 
 
- nodeletionpartial xxx
- 
Including the preference nodeletionpartial = PATHSPEC -> root prevents Unison from performing any file deletion in PATHSPEC on root root (see the Path Specification section for more information). It is recommended to use BelowPath patterns when selecting a directory and all its contents.
 
 
- noupdate xxx
- 
Including the preference -noupdate root prevents Unison from performing any file update or deletion on root root.
 
 This preference can be included twice, once for each root, if you want to prevent any update.
 
 
- noupdatepartial xxx
- 
Including the preference noupdatepartial = PATHSPEC -> root prevents Unison from performing any file update or deletion in PATHSPEC on root root (see the Path Specification section for more information). It is recommended to use BelowPath patterns when selecting a directory and all its contents.
 
 
- numericids 
- 
When this flag is set to true, groups and users are synchronized numerically, rather than by name.
 
 The special uid 0 and the special group 0 are never mapped via user/group names even if this preference is not set.
 
 
- owner 
- 
When this flag is set to true, the owner attributes of the files are synchronized. Whether the owner names or the owner identifiers are synchronizeddepends on the preference numerids.
 
 
- path xxx
- 
When no pathpreference is given, Unison will simply synchronize the two entire replicas, beginning from the given pair of roots. If one or morepathpreferences are given, then Unison will synchronize only these paths and their children. (This is useful for doing a fast sync of just one directory, for example.) Note that path preferences are intepreted literally—they are not regular expressions.
 
 
- perms n
- 
The integer value of this preference is a mask indicating which permission bits should be synchronized. It is set by default to 0o1777: all bits but the set-uid and set-gid bits are synchronised (synchronizing theses latter bits can be a security hazard). If you want to synchronize all bits, you can set the value of this preference to −1. If one of the replica is on a FAT [Windows] filesystem, you should consider using the 	t fat preference instead of this preference. If you need Unison not to set permissions at all, set the value of this preference to 0 and set the preference 	t dontchmod to 	t true.
 
 
- prefer xxx
- 
Including the preference -prefer root causes Unison always to resolve conflicts in favor of root, rather than asking for guidance from the user. (The syntax of root is the same as for the rootpreference, plus the special valuesnewerandolder.)
 
 This preference is overridden by thepreferpartialpreference.
 
 This preference should be used only if you are sure you know what you are doing!
 
 
- preferpartial xxx
- 
Including the preference preferpartial = PATHSPEC -> root causes Unison always to resolve conflicts in favor of root, rather than asking for guidance from the user, for the files in PATHSPEC (see the Path Specification section for more information). (The syntax of root is the same as for the rootpreference, plus the special valuesnewerandolder.)
 
 This preference should be used only if you are sure you know what you are doing!
 
 
- repeat xxx
- 
Setting this preference causes the text-mode interface to synchronize repeatedly, rather than doing it just once and stopping. If the argument is a number, Unison will pause for that many seconds before beginning again.
 
 
- retry n
- 
Setting this preference causes the text-mode interface to try again to synchronize updated paths where synchronization fails. Each such path will be tried N times.
 
 
- root xxx
- 
Each use of this preference names the root of one of the replicas for Unison to synchronize. Exactly two roots are needed, so normal modes of usage are either to give two values for rootin the profile, or to give no values in the profile and provide two on the command line. Details of the syntax of roots can be found in the Roots section.
 
 The two roots can be given in either order; Unison will sort them into a canonical order before doing anything else. It also tries to `canonize' the machine names and paths that appear in the roots, so that, if Unison is invoked later with a slightly different name for the same root, it will be able to locate the correct archives.
 
 
- rootalias xxx
- 
When calculating the name of the archive files for a given pair of roots, Unison replaces any roots matching the left-hand side of any rootalias rule by the corresponding right-hand side.
 
 
- rshargs xxx
- 
The string value of this preference will be passed as additional arguments (besides the host name and the name of the Unison executable on the remote system) to the rshcommand used to invoke the remote server.
 
 
- rshcmd xxx
- 
This preference can be used to explicitly set the name of the rsh executable (e.g., giving a full path name), if necessary.
 
 
- rsrc xxx
- 
When set to true, this flag causes Unison to synchronize resource forks and HFS meta-data. On filesystems that do not natively support resource forks, this data is stored in Carbon-compatible ._ AppleDouble files. When the flag is set to false, Unison will not synchronize these data. Ordinarily, the flag is set to default, and these data are
 automatically synchronized if either host is running OSX. In rare circumstances it is useful to set the flag manually.
 
 
- rsync 
- 
Unison uses the 'rsync algorithm' for 'diffs-only' transfer of updates to large files. Setting this flag to false makes Unison use whole-file transfers instead. Under normal circumstances, there is no reason to do this, but if you are having trouble with repeated 'rsync failure' errors, setting it to false should permit you to synchronize the offending files.
 
 
- selftest 
- 
Run internal tests and exit. This option is mostly for developers and must be used carefully: in particular, it will delete the contents of both roots, so that it can install its own files for testing. This flag only makes sense on the command line. When it is provided, no preference file is read: all preferences must be specified on thecommand line. Also, since the self-test procedure involves overwriting the roots and backup directory, the names of the roots and of the backupdir preference must include the string "test" or else the tests will be aborted. (If these are not given on the command line, dummy subdirectories in the current directory will be created automatically.)
 
 
- servercmd xxx
- 
This preference can be used to explicitly set the name of the Unison executable on the remote server (e.g., giving a full path name), if necessary.
 
 
- showarchive 
- 
When this preference is set, Unison will print out the 'true names'of the roots, in the same form as is expected by the rootaliaspreference.
 
 
- silent 
- 
When this preference is set to true, the textual user interface will print nothing at all, except in the case of errors. Setting silent to true automatically sets the batch preference to true.
 
 
- sortbysize 
- 
When this flag is set, the user interface will list changed files by size (smallest first) rather than by name. This is useful, for example, for synchronizing over slow links, since it puts very large files at the end of the list where they will not prevent smaller files from being transferred quickly.
 
 This preference (as well as the other sorting flags, but not the sorting preferences that require patterns as arguments) can be set interactively and temporarily using the 'Sort' menu in the graphical user interface.
 
 
- sortfirst xxx
- 
Each argument to sortfirst is a pattern pathspec, which describes a set of paths. Files matching any of these patterns will be listed first in the user interface. The syntax of pathspec is described in the Path Specification section.
 
 
- sortlast xxx
- 
Similar to sortfirst, except that files matching one of these patterns will be listed at the very end.
 
 
- sortnewfirst 
- 
When this flag is set, the user interface will list newly created files before all others. This is useful, for example, for checking that newly created files are not `junk', i.e., ones that should be ignored or deleted rather than synchronized.
 
 
- sshargs xxx
- 
The string value of this preference will be passed as additional arguments (besides the host name and the name of the Unison executable on the remote system) to the sshcommand used to invoke the remote server.
 
 
- sshcmd xxx
- 
This preference can be used to explicitly set the name of the ssh executable (e.g., giving a full path name), if necessary.
 
 
- sshversion xxx
- 
This preference can be used to control which version of ssh should be used to connect to the server. Legal values are 1 and 2, which will cause unison to try to use ssh1orssh2instead of justsshto invoke ssh. The default value is empty, which will make unison use whatever version of ssh is installed as the default `ssh' command.
 
 
- stream 
- 
When this preference is set, Unison will use an experimental streaming protocol for transferring file contents more efficiently. The default value is true.
 
 
- terse 
- 
When this preference is set to true, the user interface will not print status messages.
 
 
- testserver 
- 
Setting this flag on the command line causes Unison to attempt to connect to the remote server and, if successful, print a message and immediately exit. Useful for debugging installation problems. Should not be set in preference files.
 
 
- times 
- 
When this flag is set to true, file modification times (but not directory modtimes) are propagated.
 
 
- ui xxx
- 
This preference selects either the graphical or the textual user interface. Legal values are graphicortext.
 
 Because this option is processed specially during Unison's start-up sequence, it can only be used on the command line. In preference files it has no effect.
 
 If the Unison executable was compiled with only a textual interface, this option has no effect. (The pre-compiled binaries are all compiled with both interfaces available.)
 
 
- unicode xxx
- 
When set to true, this flag causes Unison to perform case insensitive file comparisons assuming Unicode encoding. This is the default. When the flag is set to false, a Latin 1 encoding is assumed. When Unison runs in case sensitive mode, this flag only makes a difference if one host is running Windows or Mac OS X. Under Windows, the flag selects between using the Unicode or 8bit Windows API for accessing the filesystem. Under Mac OS X, it selects whether comparing the filenames up to decomposition, or byte-for-byte.
 
 
- version 
- 
Print the current version number and exit. (This option only makes sense on the command line.)
 
 
- xferbycopying 
- 
When this preference is set, Unison will try to avoid transferring file contents across the network by recognizing when a file with the required contents already exists in the target replica. This usually allows file moves to be propagated very quickly. The default value istrue. 
Profiles
A 
profile is a text file that specifies permanent settings for
roots, paths, ignore patterns, and other preferences, so that they do
not need to be typed at the command line every time Unison is run.
Profiles should reside in the 
.unison directory on the client
machine. If Unison is started with just one argument 
name on
the command line, it looks for a profile called 
name.prf in
the 
.unison directory. If it is started with no arguments, it
scans the 
.unison directory for files whose names end in
.prf and offers a menu (provided that the Unison executable is compiled with the graphical user interface). If a file named 
default.prf is
found, its settings will be offered as the default choices.
To set the value of a preference 
p permanently, add to the
appropriate profile a line of the form
        p = true
for a boolean flag or
        p = <value>
for a preference of any other type. 
Whitespaces around 
p and 
xxx are ignored.
A profile may also include blank lines and lines beginning
with 
#; both are ignored.
When Unison starts, it first reads the profile and then the command
line, so command-line options will override settings from the
profile. 
Profiles may also include lines of the form 
include
 name, which will cause the file 
name (or
name.prf, if 
name does not exist in the
.unison directory) to be read at the point, and included as if
its contents, instead of the 
include line, was part of the
profile. Include lines allows settings common to several profiles to
be stored in one place.
A profile may include a preference `
label = desc' to
provide a description of the options selected in this profile. The
string 
desc is listed along with the profile name in the profile
selection dialog, and displayed in the top-right corner of the main
Unison window in the graphical user interface.
The graphical user-interface also supports one-key shortcuts for commonly
used profiles. If a profile contains a preference of the form 
`
key = n', where 
n is a single digit, then
pressing this digit key will cause Unison to immediately switch to
this profile and begin synchronization again from scratch. In this
case, all actions that have been selected for a set of changes
currently being displayed will be discarded.
Sample Profiles
A Minimal Profile
Here is a very minimal profile file, such as might be found in 
.unison/default.prf:
    # Roots of the synchronization
    root = /home/bcpierce
    root = ssh://saul//home/bcpierce
    # Paths to synchronize 
    path = current
    path = common
    path = .netscape/bookmarks.html
A Basic Profile
Here is a more sophisticated profile, illustrating some other useful
features. 
    # Roots of the synchronization
    root = /home/bcpierce
    root = ssh://saul//home/bcpierce
    # Paths to synchronize 
    path = current
    path = common
    path = .netscape/bookmarks.html
    # Some regexps specifying names and paths to ignore
    ignore = Name temp.*
    ignore = Name *~
    ignore = Name .*~
    ignore = Path */pilot/backup/Archive_*
    ignore = Name *.o
    ignore = Name *.tmp
    # Window height
    height = 37
    # Keep a backup copy of every file in a central location
    backuplocation = central
    backupdir = /home/bcpierce/backups
    backup = Name *
    backupprefix = $VERSION.
    backupsuffix = 
    # Use this command for displaying diffs
    diff = diff -y -W 79 --suppress-common-lines
    # Log actions to the terminal
    log = true
A Power-User Profile
When Unison is used with large replicas, it is often convenient to be
able to synchronize just a part of the replicas on a given run (this
saves the time of detecting updates in the other parts). This can be
accomplished by splitting up the profile into several parts — a common
part containing most of the preference settings, plus one “top-level”
file for each set of paths that need to be synchronized. (The 
include mechanism can also be used to allow the same set of preference
settings to be used with different roots.)
The collection
of profiles implementing this scheme might look as follows.
The file 
default.prf is empty except for an 
include
directive:
    # Include the contents of the file common
    include common
Note that the name of the common file is 
common, not 
common.prf; this prevents Unison from offering 
common as one of
the list of profiles in the opening dialog (in the graphical UI).
The file 
common contains the real preferences:
    # Roots of the synchronization
    root = /home/bcpierce
    root = ssh://saul//home/bcpierce
    # (... other preferences ...)
    # If any new preferences are added by Unison (e.g. 'ignore'
    # preferences added via the graphical UI), then store them in the
    # file 'common' rathen than in the top-level preference file
    addprefsto = common
    # Names and paths to ignore:
    ignore = Name temp.*
    ignore = Name *~
    ignore = Name .*~
    ignore = Path */pilot/backup/Archive_*
    ignore = Name *.o
    ignore = Name *.tmp
Note that there are no 
path preferences in 
common. This
means that, when we invoke Unison with the default profile (e.g., by
typing '
unison default' or just '
unison' on the command
line), the whole replicas will be synchronized. (If we 
never want
to synchronize the whole replicas, then 
default.prf would instead
include settings for all the paths that are usually synchronized.)
To synchronize just part of the replicas, Unison is invoked with an
alternate preference file—e.g., doing '
unison workingset', where the
preference file 
workingset.prf contains
    path = current/papers
    path = Mail/inbox
    path = Mail/drafts
    include common
causes Unison to synchronize just the listed subdirectories.
The 
key preference can be used in combination with the graphical UI
to quickly switch between different sets of paths. For example, if the
file 
mail.prf contains
    path = Mail
    batch = true
    key = 2
    include common
then pressing 2 will cause Unison to look for updates in the 
Mail
subdirectory and (because the 
batch flag is set) immediately
propagate any that it finds.
Keeping Backups
When Unison overwrites a file or directory by propagating a new version from
the other replica, it can keep the old version around as a backup. There
are several preferences that control precisely where these backups are
stored and how they are named.
To enable backups, you must give one or more 
backup preferences.
Each of these has the form
    backup = <pathspec>
where 
<pathspec> has the same form as for the 
ignore
preference. For example, 
    backup = Name *
causes Unison to keep backups of 
all files and directories. The
backupnot preference can be used to give a few exceptions: it
specifies which files and directories should 
not be backed up, even if
they match the 
backup pathspec. 
It is important to note that the 
pathspec is matched against the path
that is being updated by Unison, not its descendants. For example, if you
set 
backup = Name *.txt and then delete a whole directory named
foo containing some text files, these files will not be backed up
because Unison will just check that 
foo does not match 
*.txt.
Similarly, if the directory itself happened to be called 
foo.txt,
then the whole directory and all the files in it will be backed up,
regardless of their names. 
Backup files can be stored either 
centrally or 
locally. This
behavior is controlled by the preference 
backuplocation, whose value
must be either 
central or 
local. (The default is
central.) 
When backups are stored locally, they are kept in the same
directory as the original.
When backups are stored centrally, the directory used to hold them is
controlled by the preference 
backupdir and the
environment variable 
UNISONBACKUPDIR. (The environment variable is
checked first.) If neither of these are set, then the directory
.unison/backup in the user's home directory is used.
The preference 
maxbackups controls how many previous versions of
each file are kept (including the current version). 
By default, backup files are named 
.bak.VERSION.FILENAME,
where 
FILENAME is the original filename and 
VERSION is the
backup number (1 for the most recent, 2 for the next most recent,
etc.). This can be changed by setting the preferences 
backupprefix
and/or 
backupsuffix. If desired, 
backupprefix may include a
directory prefix; this can be used with 
backuplocation = local to put all
backup files for each directory into a single subdirectory. For example, setting
    backuplocation = local
    backupprefix = .unison/$VERSION.
    backupsuffix = 
will put all backups in a local subdirectory named 
.unison. Also,
note that the string 
$VERSION in either 
backupprefix or
backupsuffix (it must appear in one or the other) is replaced by
the version number. This can be used, for example, to ensure that backup
files retain the same extension as the originals.
For backward compatibility, the 
backups preference is also supported.
It simply means 
backup = Name * and 
backuplocation = local.
Merging Conflicting Versions
Unison can invoke external programs to merge conflicting versions of a file.
The preference 
merge controls this process. 
The 
merge preference may be given once or several times in a
preference file (it can also be given on the command line, of course, but
this tends to be awkward because of the spaces and special characters
involved). Each instance of the preference looks like this:
    merge = <PATHSPEC> -> <MERGECMD>
The 
<PATHSPEC> here has exactly the same format as for the
ignore preference (see the 
Path specification section). For example,
using “
Name *.txt” as the 
<PATHSPEC> tells Unison that this
command should be used whenever a file with extension 
.txt needs to
be merged. 
Many external merging programs require as inputs not just the two files that
need to be merged, but also a file containing the 
last synchronized
 version. You can ask Unison to keep a copy of the last synchronized
version for some files using the 
backupcurrent preference. This
preference is used in exactly the same way as 
backup and its meaning
is similar, except that it causes backups to be kept of the 
current
contents of each file after it has been synchronized by Unison, rather than
the 
previous contents that Unison overwrote. These backups are kept
on 
both replicas in the same place as ordinary backup files—i.e.
according to the 
backuplocation and 
backupdir preferences.
They are named like the original files if 
backupslocation is set to
'central' and otherwise, Unison uses the 
backupprefix and
backupsuffix preferences and assumes a version number 000 for these
backups.
The 
<MERGECMD> part of the preference specifies what external command
should be invoked to merge files at paths matching the 
<PATHSPEC>.
Within this string, several special substrings are recognized; these will be
substituted with appropriate values before invoking a sub-shell to execute
the command. 
- 
CURRENT1is replaced by the name of (a temporary copy of)
 the local variant of the file.
- CURRENT2is replaced by the name of a temporary
 file, into which the contents of the remote variant of the file have
 been transferred by Unison prior to performing the merge.
- CURRENTARCHis replaced by the name of the backed up copy
 of the original version of the file (i.e., the file saved by Unison
 if the current filename matches the path specifications for the- backupcurrentpreference, as explained above), if one exists.
 If no archive exists and- CURRENTARCHappears in the
 merge command, then an error is signalled.
- CURRENTARCHOPTis replaced by the name of the backed up copy
 of the original version of the file (i.e., its state at the end of
 the last successful run of Unison), if one exists, or the empty
 string if no archive exists.
- NEWis replaced by the name of a temporary file
 that Unison expects to be written by the merge program when it
 finishes, giving the desired new contents of the file.
- PATHis replaced by the path (relative to the roots of
 the replicas) of the file being merged.
- NEW1and- NEW2are replaced by the names of temporary files
 that Unison expects to be written by the merge program when it
 is only able to partially merge the originals; in this case,- NEW1will be written back to the local replica and- NEW2to the remote
 replica;- NEWARCH, if present, will be used as the “last common
 state” of the replicas. (These three options are provided for
 later compatibility with the Harmony data synchronizer.)
To accomodate the wide variety of programs that users might want to use for
merging, Unison checks for several possible situations when the merge
program exits:
- 
If the merge program exits with a non-zero status, then merge is
 considered to have failed and the replicas are not changed.
- If the file NEWhas been created, it is written back to both
 replicas (and stored in the backup directory). Similarly, if just the
 fileNEW1has been created, it is written back to both 
 replicas.
- If neither NEWnorNEW1have been created, then Unison
 examines the temporary filesCURRENT1andCURRENT2that
 were given as inputs to the merge program. If either has been changed (or
 both have been changed in identical ways), then its new contents are written
 back to both replicas. If eitherCURRENT1orCURRENT2has
 been deleted, then the contents of the other are written back to
 both replicas.
- If the files NEW1,NEW2, andNEWARCHhave all
 been created, they are written back to the local replica, remote replica,
 and backup directory, respectively. If the filesNEW1,NEW2have 
 been created, butNEWARCHhas not, then these files are written back to the
 local replica and remote replica, respectively. Also, ifNEW1andNEW2have identical contents, then the same contents are stored as
 a backup (if thebackupcurrentpreference is set for this path) to
 reflect the fact that the path is currently in sync.
- If NEW1andNEW2(resp.CURRENT1andCURRENT2) are created (resp. overwritten) with different contents
 but the merge command did not fail (i.e., it exited with status code 0),
 then we copyNEW1(resp.CURRENT1) to the other replica and
 to the archive.
 
 This behavior is a design choice made to handle the case where a merge
 command only synchronizes some specific contents between two files,
 skipping some irrelevant information (order between entries, for
 instance). We assume that, if the merge command exits normally, then the
 two resulting files are “as good as equal.” (The reason we copy one on
 top of the other is to avoid Unison detecting that the files are unequal
 the next time it is run and trying again to merge them when, in fact, the
 merge program has already made them as similar as it is able to.)
If the 
confirmmerge preference is set and Unison is not run in
batch mode, then Unison will always ask for confirmation before
actually committing the results of the merge to the replicas.
A large number of external merging programs are available. 
For example, on Unix systems setting the 
merge preference to
    merge = Name *.txt -> diff3 -m CURRENT1 CURRENTARCH CURRENT2
                            > NEW || echo "differences detected"
will tell Unison to use the external 
diff3 program for merging. 
Alternatively, users of 
emacs may find the following settings convenient:
    merge = Name *.txt -> emacs -q --eval '(ediff-merge-files-with-ancestor 
                             "CURRENT1" "CURRENT2" "CURRENTARCH" nil "NEW")' 
(These commands are displayed here on two lines to avoid running off the
edge of the page. In your preference file, each command should be written on a
single line.) 
Users running emacs under windows may find something like this useful:
   merge = Name * -> C:\Progra~1\Emacs\emacs\bin\emacs.exe -q --eval
                            "(ediff-files """CURRENT1""" """CURRENT2""")"
Users running Mac OS X (you may need the Developer Tools installed to get
the 
opendiff utility) may prefer
    merge = Name *.txt -> opendiff CURRENT1 CURRENT2 -ancestor CURRENTARCH -merge NEW
Here is a slightly more involved hack. The 
opendiff program can
operate either with or without an archive file. A merge command of this
form 
    merge = Name *.txt -> 
              if [ CURRENTARCHOPTx = x ]; 
              then opendiff CURRENT1 CURRENT2 -merge NEW; 
              else opendiff CURRENT1 CURRENT2 -ancestor CURRENTARCHOPT -merge NEW; 
              fi
(still all on one line in the preference file!) will test whether an archive
file exists and use the appropriate variant of the arguments to 
opendiff. 
Ordinarily, external merge programs are only invoked when Unison is 
not running in batch mode. To specify an external merge program that
should be used no matter the setting of the 
batch flag, use the 
mergebatch preference instead of 
merge.
Please post suggestions for other useful values of the
merge preference to the unison-users mailing list—we'd like
to give several examples here.
The User Interface
Both the textual and the graphical user interfaces are intended to be
mostly self-explanatory. Here are just a few tricks:
- 
By default, when running on Unix the textual user interface will
try to put the terminal into the “raw mode” so that it reads the input a
character at a time rather than a line at a time. (This means you can
type just the single keystroke “>” to tell Unison to
propagate a file from left to right, rather than “>Enter.”)
 
 There are some situations, though, where this will not work — for
example, when Unison is running in a shell window inside Emacs.
Setting thedumbttypreference will force Unison to leave the
terminal alone and process input a line at a time.
Exit code
When running in the textual mode, Unison returns an exit status, which
describes whether, and at which level, the synchronization was successful.
The exit status could be useful when Unison is invoked from a script.
Currently, there are four possible values for the exit status:
- 
0: successful synchronization; everything is up-to-date now.
- 1: some files were skipped, but all file transfers were successful.
- 2: non-fatal failures occurred during file transfer.
- 3: a fatal error occurred, or the execution was interrupted.
The graphical interface does not return any useful information through the
exit status.
Path specification
Several Unison preferences (e.g., 
ignore/
ignorenot,
follow, 
sortfirst/
sortlast, 
backup,
merge, etc.)
specify individual paths or sets of paths. These preferences share a
common syntax based on regular-expressions. Each preference
is associated with a list of path patterns; the paths specified are those
that match any one of the path pattern.
- 
Pattern preferences can be given on the command line,
 or, more often, stored in profiles, using the same syntax as other preferences. 
 For example, a profile line of the form
             ignore = pattern
adds pattern to the list of patterns to be ignored.
 
 
- Each pattern can have one of three forms. The most
general form is a Posix extended regular expression introduced by the
keyword Regex. (The collating sequences and character classes of
full Posix regexps are not currently supported).
                 Regex regexp
For convenience, three other styles of pattern are also recognized:
                 Name name
matches any path in which the last component matches name,
                 Path path
matches exactly the path path, and
                 BelowPath path
matches the path path and any path below.
The name and path arguments of the latter forms of
patterns are not regular expressions. Instead, 
standard “globbing” conventions can be used in name and
path:- 
a *matches any sequence of characters not including/(and not beginning with., when used at the beginning of a
name)
- a ?matches any single character except/(and leading.)
- [xyz]matches any character from the set {x,
 y, z }
- {a,bb,ccc}matches any one of- a,- bb, or- ccc.
 
- The path separator in path patterns is always the
forward-slash character “/” — even when the client or server is
running under Windows, where the normal separator character is a
backslash. This makes it possible to use the same set of path
patterns for both Unix and Windows file systems. 
Some examples of path patterns appear in the 
Ignoring
 Paths section.
Ignoring Paths
Most users of Unison will find that their replicas contain lots of
files that they don't ever want to synchronize — temporary files,
very large files, old stuff, architecture-specific binaries, etc.
They can instruct Unison to ignore these paths using patterns
introduced in the 
Path Patterns section.
For example, the following pattern will make Unison ignore any
path containing the name 
CVS or a name ending in 
.cmo:
             ignore = Name {CVS,*.cmo}
The next pattern makes Unison ignore the path 
a/b:
             ignore = Path a/b
Path patterns do 
not skip filesnames beginning with 
. (as Name
patterns do). For example,
             ignore = Path */tmp
will include 
.foo/tmp in the set of ignore directories, as it is a
path, not a name, that is ignored.
The following pattern makes Unison ignore any path beginning with 
a/b
and ending with a name ending by 
.ml.
             ignore = Regex a/b/.*\.ml
Note that regular expression patterns are “anchored”: they must
match the whole path, not just a substring of the path.
Here are a few extra points regarding the 
ignore preference.
- 
If a directory is ignored, all its descendents will be too.
 
 
- The user interface provides some convenient commands for adding
 new patterns to be ignored. To ignore a particular file, select it
 and press “i”. To ignore all files with the same extension,
 select it and press “E” (with the shift key). To ignore all
 files with the same name, no matter what directory they appear in,
 select it and press “N”.
These new patterns become permanent: they
are immediately added to the current profile on disk.
 
 
- If you use the includedirective to include a common
collection of preferences in several top-level preference files, you will
probably also want to set theaddprefstopreference to the name of
this file. This will cause any new ignore patterns that you add from
inside Unison to be appended to this file, instead of whichever top-level
preference file you started Unison with.
 
 
- Ignore patterns can also be specified on the command line, if
you like (this is probably not very useful), using an option like
-ignore 'Name temp.txt'.
 
 
- Be careful about renaming directories containing ignored files.
Because Unison understands the rename as a delete plus a create, any ignored
files in the directory will be lost (since they are invisible to Unison and
therefore they do not get recreated in the new version of the directory).
 
 
- There is also an ignorenotpreference, which specifies a set of
 patterns for paths that should not be ignored, even if they match anignorepattern. However, the interaction of these two sets of
 patterns can be a little tricky. Here is exactly how it works:- 
 Unison starts detecting updates from the root of the
 replicas—i.e., from the empty path. If the empty path matches an
 ignorepattern and does not match anignorenotpattern, then
 the whole replica will be ignored. (For this reason, it is not a good
 idea to includeName *as anignorepattern. If you want to
 ignore everything except a certain set of files, useName ?*.)
- If the root is a directory, Unison continues looking for updates in
 all the immediate children of the root. Again, if the name of some child matches an
 ignorepattern and does not match anignorenotpattern, then
 this whole path including everything below it will be ignored.
- If any of the non-ignored children are directories, then the process
 continues recursively.
 
 
Symbolic Links
Ordinarily, Unison treats symbolic links in Unix replicas as
“opaque”: it considers the contents of the link to be just the
string specifying where the link points, and it will propagate changes in
this string to the other replica.
It is sometimes useful to treat a symbolic link “transparently,”
acting as though whatever it points to were physically 
in the
replica at the point where the symbolic link appears. To tell Unison
to treat a link in this manner, add a line of the form
             follow = pathspec
to the profile, where 
pathspec is a path pattern as described in
the 
Path Patterns section.
Windows file systems do not support symbolic links; Unison will refuse
to propagate an opaque symbolic link from Unix to Windows and flag the
path as erroneous. When a Unix replica is to be synchronized with a
Windows system, all symbolic links should match either an
ignore pattern or a 
follow pattern.
Permissions
Synchronizing the permission bits of files is slightly tricky when two
different filesytems are involved (e.g., when synchronizing a Windows
client and a Unix server). In detail, here's how it works:
- 
When the permission bits of an existing file or directory are
changed, the values of those bits that make sense on both
operating systems will be propagated to the other replica. The other
bits will not be changed. 
- When a newly created file is propagated to a remote replica, the
permission bits that make sense in both operating systems are also
propagated. The values of the other bits are set to default values
(they are taken from the current umask, if the receiving host is a
Unix system).
- For security reasons, the Unix setuidandsetgidbits are not propagated.
- The Unix owner and group ids are not propagated. (What would
this mean, in general?) All files are created with the owner and
group of the server process.
Cross-Platform Synchronization
If you use Unison to synchronize files between Windows and Unix
systems, there are a few special issues to be aware of.
Case conflicts. In Unix, filenames are case sensitive:
foo and 
FOO can refer to different files. In
Windows, on the other hand, filenames are not case sensitive:
foo and 
FOO can only refer to the same file. This
means that a Unix 
foo and 
FOO cannot be synchronized
onto a Windows system — Windows won't allow two different files to
have the “same” name. Unison detects this situation for you, and
reports that it cannot synchronize the files. 
You can deal with a case conflict in a couple of ways. If you need to
have both files on the Windows system, your only choice is to rename
one of the Unix files to avoid the case conflict, and re-synchronize.
If you don't need the files on the Windows system, you can simply
disregard Unison's warning message, and go ahead with the
synchronization; Unison won't touch those files. If you don't want to
see the warning on each synchronization, you can tell Unison to ignore
the files (see the 
Ignore section).
Illegal filenames. Unix allows some filenames that are
illegal in Windows. For example, colons (`:') are not allowed in
Windows filenames, but they are legal in Unix filenames. This means
that a Unix file 
foo:bar can't be synchronized to a Windows
system. As with case conflicts, Unison detects this situation for
you, and you have the same options: you can either rename the Unix
file and re-synchronize, or you can ignore it.
Slow Links
Unison is built to run well even over relatively slow links such as
modems and DSL connections. 
Unison uses the “rsync protocol” designed by Andrew Tridgell and Paul
Mackerras to greatly speed up transfers of large files in which only
small changes have been made. More information about the rsync protocol
can be found at the rsync web site (
http://samba.anu.edu.au/rsync/).
If you are using Unison with 
ssh, you may get some speed
improvement by enabling 
ssh's compression feature. Do this by
adding the option “
-sshargs -C” to the command line or “
sshargs = -C” to your profile. 
Making Unison Faster on Large Files
Unison's built-in implementation of the rsync algorithm makes transferring
updates to existing files pretty fast. However, for whole-file copies of
newly created files, the built-in transfer method is not highly optimized.
Also, if Unison is interrupted in the middle of transferring a large file,
it will attempt to retransfer the whole thing on the next run.
These shortcomings can be addressed with a little extra work by telling
Unison to use an external file copying utility for whole-file transfers.
The recommended one is the standalone 
rsync tool, which is available
by default on most Unix systems and can easily be installed on Windows
systems using Cygwin.
If you have 
rsync installed on both hosts, you can make Unison use it
simply by setting the 
copythreshold flag to something non-negative.
If you set it to 0, Unison will use the external copy utility for 
all
whole-file transfers. (This is probably slower than letting Unison copy
small files by itself, but can be useful for testing.) If you set it to a
larger value, Unison will use the external utility for all files larger than
this size (which is given in kilobytes, so setting it to 1000 will cause the
external tool to be used for all transfers larger than a megabyte).
If you want to use a different external copy utility, set both the 
copyprog and 
copyprogpartial preferences—the former is used for
the first transfer of a file, while the latter is used when Unison sees a
partially transferred temp file on the receiving host. Be careful here:
Your external tool needs to be instructed to copy files in place (otherwise
if the transfer is interrupted Unison will not notice that some of the data
has already been transferred, the next time it tries). The default values
are: 
   copyprog      =   rsync --inplace --compress
   copyprogrest  =   rsync --partial --inplace --compress
You may also need to set the 
copyquoterem preference. When it is set
to 
true, this causes Unison to add an extra layer of quotes to
the remote path passed to the external copy program. This is is needed by
rsync, for example, which internally uses an ssh connection, requiring an
extra level of quoting for paths containing spaces. When this flag is set to
default, extra quotes are added if the value of 
copyprog
contains the string 
rsync. The default value is 
default,
naturally.
If a 
directory transfer is interrupted, the next run of Unison will
automatically skip any files that were completely transferred before the
interruption. (This behavior is always on: it does not depend on the
setting of the 
copythreshold preference.) Note, though, that the new
directory will not appear in the destination filesystem until everything has
been transferred—partially transferred directories are kept in a temporary
location (with names like 
.unison.DIRNAME....) until the transfer is
complete.
Fast Update Detection
If your replicas are large and at least one of them is on a Windows
system, you may find that Unison's default method for detecting changes
(which involves scanning the full contents of every file on every
sync—the only completely safe way to do it under Windows) is too slow.
Unison provides a preference 
fastcheck that, when set to
true, causes it to use file creation times as 'pseudo inode
numbers' when scanning replicas for updates, instead of reading the full
contents of every file. 
When 
fastcheck is set to 
no,
Unison will perform slow checking—re-scanning the contents of each file
on each synchronization—on all replicas. When 
fastcheck is set
to 
default (which, naturally, is the default), Unison will use
fast checks on Unix replicas and slow checks on Windows replicas.
This strategy may cause Unison to miss propagating an update if the
 modification time and length of the file are both unchanged
by the update.
However, Unison will never 
overwrite such an update with a change
from the other replica, since it always does a safe check for updates
just before propagating a change. Thus, it is reasonable to use this
switch most of the time and occasionally run Unison once with 
fastcheck set to 
no, if you are worried that Unison may have
overlooked an update.
Fastcheck is (always) automatically disabled for files with extension
.xls or 
.mpp, to prevent Unison from being confused by the 
habits of certain programs (Excel, in particular) of updating files without
changing their modification times.
Mount Points and Removable Media
Using Unison removable media such as USB drives can be dangerous unless you
are careful. If you synchronize a directory that is stored on removable
media when the media is not present, it will look to Unison as though the
whole directory has been deleted, and it will proceed to delete the
directory from the other replica—probably not what you want!
To prevent accidents, Unison provides a preference called
mountpoint. Including a line like
             mountpoint = foo
in your preference file will cause Unison to check, after it finishes
detecting updates, that something actually exists at the path
foo on both replicas; if it does not, the Unison run will
abort. 
Click-starting Unison
On Windows NT/2k/XP systems, the graphical version of Unison can be
invoked directly by clicking on its icon. On Windows 95/98 systems,
click-starting also works, 
as long as you are not using ssh.
Due to an incompatibility with ocaml and Windows 95/98 that is not
under our control, you must start Unison from a DOS window in Windows
95/98 if you want to use ssh.
When you click on the Unison icon, two windows will be created:
Unison's regular window, plus a console window, which is used only for
giving your password to ssh (if you do not use ssh to connect, you can
ignore this window). When your password is requested, you'll need to
activate the console window (e.g., by clicking in it) before typing.
If you start Unison from a DOS window, Unison's regular window will
appear and you will type your password in the DOS window you were
using.
To use Unison in this mode, you must first create a profile (see
the 
Profile section). Use your favorite editor for this. 
Installing Ssh
Warning: These instructions may be out of date. More current
 information can be found the
 Unison
 Wiki.
Your local host will need just an ssh client; the remote host needs an
ssh server (or daemon), which is available on Unix systems. Unison is
known to work with ssh version 1.2.27 (Unix) and version 1.2.14
(Windows); other versions may or may not work.
Unix
Most modern Unix installations come with 
ssh pre-installed.
Windows
Many Windows implementations of ssh only provide graphical interfaces,
but Unison requires an ssh client that it can invoke with a
command-line interface. A suitable version of ssh can be installed as
follows. 
- 
Download an sshexecutable.
 
 Warning: there are many implementations and ports of ssh for
Windows, and not all of them will work with Unison. We have gotten
Unison to work with Cygwin's port of openssh, and we suggest you try
that one first. Here's how to install it:- 
First, create a new folder on your desktop to hold temporary
 installation files. It can have any name you like, but in these
 instructions we'll assume that you call it Foo.
- Direct your web browser to www.cygwin.com, and click on the
 “Install now!” link. This will download a file, setup.exe;
 save it in the directoryFoo. The filesetup.exeis a
 small program that will download the actual install files from
 the Internet when you run it.
- Start setup.exe(by double-clicking). This brings up a
 series of dialogs that you will have to go through. Select
 “Install from Internet.” For “Local Package Directory” select
 the directoryFoo. For “Select install root directory” we
 recommend that you use the default,C:\cygwin. The next
 dialog asks you to select the way that you want to connect to the
 network to download the installation files; we have used “Use IE5
 Settings” successfully, but you may need to make a different
 selection depending on your networking setup. The next dialog gives
 a list of mirrors; select one close to you.
 
 Next you are asked to select which packages to install. The default
 settings in this dialog download a lot of packages that are not
 strictly necessary to run Unison with ssh. If you don't want to
 install a package, click on it until “skip” is shown. For a
 minimum installation, select only the packages “cygwin” and
 “openssh,” which come to about 1900KB; the full installation is
 much larger. Note that you are plan to build unison using the free
 CygWin GNU C compiler, you need to install essential development
 packages such as “gcc”, “make”, “fileutil”, etc; we refer to
 the file “INSTALL.win32-cygwin-gnuc” in the source distribution
 for further details.
  After the packages are downloaded and installed, the next dialog
 allows you to choose whether to “Create Desktop Icon” and “Add to
 Start Menu.” You make the call.
- You can now delete the directory Fooand its contents.
 Some people have reported problems using Cygwin's ssh with Unison. If
you have trouble, you might try this one instead:
  http://opensores.thebunker.net/pub/mirrors/ssh/contrib/ssh-1.2.14-win32bin.zip
 
 
 
- You must set the environment variables HOME and PATH.
 Ssh will create a directory .sshin the directory given
 by HOME, so that it has a place to keep data like your public and
 private keys. PATH must be set to include the Cygwinbindirectory, so that Unison can find the ssh executable.
- Test ssh from a DOS shell by typing
      ssh <remote host> -l <login name>
You should get a prompt for your password on<remote host>,
 followed by a working connection.
- Note that ssh-keygenmay not work (fails with
 “gethostname: no such file or directory”) on some systems. This is
 OK: you can use ssh with your regular password for the remote
 system.
- You should now be able to use Unison with an ssh connection. If
 you are logged in with a different user name on the local and remote
 hosts, provide your remote user name when providing the remote root
 (i.e., //username@host/path...).
Changes in Version 2.40.61
Changes since 2.40.1:
 
- 
Added "BelowPath" patterns, that match a path as well as all paths below
 (convenient to use with nodeletion,update,creationpartial preferences)
- Added a "fat" preference that makes Unison use the right options
 when one of the replica is on a FAT filesystem.
- Allow "prefer/force=newer" even when not synchronizing modification
 times. (The reconciler will not be aware of the modification time
 of unchanged files, so the synchronization choices of Unison can be
 different from when "times=true", but the behavior remains sane:
 changed files with the most recent modification time will be
 propagated.)
- Minor fixes and improvements:
- 
Compare filenames up to decomposition in case sensitive mode when
 one host is running MacOSX and the unicode preference is set to
 true.
- Rsync: somewhat faster compressor
- Make Unicode the default on all architectures (it was only the
 default when a Mac OS X or Windows machine was involved).
 
Changes since 2.32:
 
- 
Major enhancement: Unicode support. 
- 
Unison should now handle unicode filenames correctly on all platforms.
- This functionality is controlled by a new preference unicode.
- Unicode mode is now the default when one of the hosts is under
 Windows or MacOS. This may make upgrades a bit more painful (the
 archives cannot be reused), but this is a much saner default.
 
- Partial transfer of directories. If an error occurs while
 transferring a directory, the part transferred so far is copied into
 place (and the archives are updated accordingly).
 The "maxerrors" preference controls how many transfer error Unison
 will accept before stopping the transfer of a directory (by default,
 only one). This makes it possible to transfer most of a directory
 even if there are some errors. Currently, only the first error is
 reported by the GUIs.
 
 Also, allow partial transfer of a directory when there was an error deep
 inside this directory during update detection. At the moment, this
 is only activated with the text and GTK UIs, which have been
 modified so that they show that the transfer is going to be partial
 and so that they can display all errors.
- Improvement to the code for resuming directory transfers:
- 
if a file was not correctly transferred (or the source has been
 modified since, with unchanged size), Unison performs a new
 transfer rather than failing
 
- spurious files are deleted (this can happen if a file is deleted
 on the source replica before resuming the transfer; not deleting
 the file would result in it reappearing on the target replica)
 
- Experimental streaming protocol for transferring file contents (can
 be disabled by setting the directive "stream" to false): file
 contents is transfered asynchronously (without waiting for a response
 from the destination after each chunk sent) rather than using the
 synchronous RPC mechanism. As a consequence:
 - 
 Unison now transfers the contents of a single file at a time
 (Unison used to transfer several contents simultaneously in order
 to hide the connection latency.)
 
- the transfer of large files uses the full available bandwidth
 and is not slowed done due to the connection latency anymore
 
- we get performance improvement for small files as well by
 scheduling many files simultaneously (as scheduling a file for
 transfer consume little ressource: it does not mean allocating a
 large buffer anymore)
 
 
- Changes to the internal implementation of the rsync algorithm:
- 
use longer blocks for large files (the size of a block is the
 square root of the size of the file for large files);
 
- transmit less checksum information per block (we still have less
 than one chance in a hundred million of transferring a file
 incorrectly, and Unison will catch any transfer error when
 fingerprinting the whole file)
 
- avoid transfer overhead (which was 4 bytes per block)
 For a 1G file, the first optimization saves a factor 50 on the
 amount of data transferred from the target to the source (blocks
 are 32768 bytes rather than just 700 bytes). The two other
 optimizations save another factor of 2 (from 24 bytes per block
 down to 10).
- Implemented an on-disk file fingerprint cache to speed-up update
 detection after a crash: this way, Unison does not have do recompute
 all the file fingerprints from scratch.
 - 
 When Unison detects that the archive case-sensitivity mode
 does not match the current settings, it populates the fingerprint
 cache using the archive contents. This way, changing the
 case-sensitivity mode should be reasonably fast.
 
 
- New preferences "noupdate=root", "nodeletion=root", "nocreation=root"
 that prevent Unison from performing files updates, deletions or
 creations on the given root. Also 'partial' versions of 'noupdate',
 'nodeletion' and 'nocreation' 
- Limit the number of simultaneous external copy program
 ("copymax" preference)
- New "links" preference. When set to false, Unison will report an
 error on symlinks during update detection. (This is the default
 when one host is running Windows but not Cygwin.) This is better
 than failing during propagation.
- Added a preference "halfduplex" to force half-duplex communication
 with the server. This may be useful on unreliable links (as a more
 efficient alternative to "maxthreads = 1").
- Renamed preference "pretendwin" to "ignoreinodenumbers" (an alias is
 kept for backwards compatibility).
- Ignore one-second differences when synchronizing modification time.
 (Technically, this is an incompatible archive format change, but it
 is backward compatible. To trigger a problem, a user would have to
 synchronize modification times on a filesystem with a two-second
 granularity and then downgrade to a previous version of Unison,
 which does not work well in such a case. Thus, it does not
 seem worthwhile to increment the archive format number, which would
 impact all users.)
- Do not keep many files simultaneously opened anymore when the rsync
 algorithm is in use.
- Add “ignorearchives” preference to ignore existing archives (to
 avoid forcing users to delete them manually, in situations where one
 archive has gotten deleted or corrupted).
- Mac OS
- 
fixed rsync bug which could result in an "index out of bounds"
 error when transferring resource forks.
- Fixed bug which made Unison ignore finder information and resource
 fork when compiled to 64bit on Mac OSX.
- should now be 64 bit clean (the Growl framework is not up to date,
 though)
- Made the bridge between Objective C and Ocaml code GC friendly
 (it was allocating ML values and putting them in an array which
 was not registered with the GC)
- use darker grey arrows (patch contributed by Eric Y. Kow)
 
- GTK user interface
- 
assistant for creating profiles
- profile editor
- pop up a summary window when the replicas are not fully
 synchronized after transport
- display estimated remaining time and transfer rate on the
 progress bar
- allow simultaneous selection of several items
- Do not reload the preference file before a new update
 detection if it is unchanged
- disabled scrolling to the first unfinished item during transport.
 It goes way too fast when lot of small files are synchronized, and it
 makes it impossible to browse the file list during transport.
- take into account the "height" preference again
- the internal list of selected reconciler item was not always in
 sync with what was displayed (GTK bug?); workaround implemented
- Do not display "Looking for change" messages during propagation
 (when checking the targe is unchanged) but only during update detection
- Apply patch to fix some crashes in the OSX GUI, thanks to Onne Gorter.
 
- Text UI
- 
During update detection, display status by updating a single line
rather than generating a new line of output every so often. Should be less
confusing.
 
- Windows 
- 
Fastcheck is now the default under Windows. People mostly use NTFS
 nowadays and the Unicode API provides an equivalent to inode numbers
 for this filesystem.
- Only use long UNC path for accessing replicas (as '..' is
 not handled with this format of paths, but can be useful)
- Windows text UI: now put the console into UTF-8 output mode. This
 is the right thing to do when in Unicode mode, and is no worse than
 what we had previously otherwise (the console use some esoteric
 encoding by default). This only works when using a Unicode font
 instead of the default raster font.
- Don't get the home directory from environment variable HOME under
 Windows (except for Cygwin binaries): we don't want the behavior of
 Unison to depends on whether it is run from a Cygwin shell (where
 HOME is set) or in any other way (where HOME is usually not set).
 
- Miscellaneous fixes and improvements
- 
Made a server waiting on a socket more resilient to unexpected
 lost connections from the client.
- Small patch to property setting code suggested by Ulrich Gernkow.
- Several fixes to the change transfer functions (both the internal ones
 and external transfers using rsync). In particular, limit the number of
 simultaneous transfer using an rsync
 (as the rsync algorithm can use a large amount of memory when
 processing huge files)
- Keep track of which file contents are being transferred, and delay
 the transfer of a file when another file with the same contents is
 currently being transferred. This way, the second transfer can be
 skipped and replaced by a local copy.
- Experimental update detection optimization:
 do not read the contents of unchanged directories
- When a file transfer fails, turn off fastcheck for this file on the
 next sync.
- Fixed bug with case insensitive mode on a case sensitive filesystem:
- 
if file "a/a" is created on one replica and directory "A" is
 created on the other, the file failed to be synchronized the first
 time Unison is run afterwards, as Unison uses the wrong path "a/a"
 (if Unison is run again, the directories are in the archive, so
 the right path is used);
 
- if file "a" appears on one replica and file "A" appears on the
 other with different contents, Unison was unable to synchronize
 them.
 
- Improved error reporting when the destination is updated during
 synchronization: Unison now tells which file has been updated, and how.
- Limit the length of temporary file names
- Case sensitivity information put in the archive (in a backward
 compatible way) and checked when the archive is loaded
- Got rid of the 16mb marshalling limit by marshalling to a bigarray.
- Resume copy of partially transferred files.
 
Changes since 2.31:
 
- 
Small user interface changes
- 
Small change to text UI "scanning..." messages, to print just
 directories (hopefully making it clearer that individual files are
 not necessarily being fingerprinted). 
 
- Minor fixes and improvements:
- 
Ignore one hour differences when deciding whether a file may have
 been updated. This avoids slow update detection after daylight
 saving time changes under Windows. This makes Unison slightly more
 likely to miss an update, but it should be safe enough.
- Fix a small bug that was affecting mainly windows users. We need to
 commit the archives at the end of the sync even if there are no
 updates to propagate because some files (in fact, if we've just
 switched to DST on windows, a LOT of files) might have new modtimes
 in the archive. (Changed the text UI only. It's less clear where
 to change the GUI.)
- Don't delete the temp file when a transfer fails due to a
 fingerprint mismatch (so that we can have a look and see why!) We've also
 added more debugging code togive more informative error messages when we
 encounter the dreaded and longstanding "assert failed during file
 transfer" bug
- Incorrect paths ("path" directive) now result in an error update
 item rather than a fatal error.
- Create parent directories (with correct permissions) during
 transport for paths which point to non-existent locations in the
 destination replica.
 
Changes since 2.27:
 
- 
If Unison is interrupted during a directory transfer, it will now
leave the partially transferred directory intact in a temporary
location. (This maintains the invariant that new files/directories are
transferred either completely or not at all.) The next time Unison is run,
it will continue filling in this temporary directory, skipping transferring
files that it finds are already there.
- We've added experimental support for invoking an external file
transfer tool for whole-file copies instead of Unison's built-in transfer
protocol. Three new preferences have been added:
- 
copyprog is a string giving the name (and command-line
switches, if needed) of an external program that can be used to copy large
files efficiently. By default, rsync is invoked, but other tools such as
scp can be used instead by changing the value of this preference. (Although
this is not its primary purpose, rsync is actually a pretty fast way of
copying files that don't already exist on the receiving host.) For files
that do already exist on (but that have been changed in one replica), Unison
will always use its built-in implementation of the rsync algorithm.
- Added a "copyprogrest" preference, so that we can give different
command lines for invoking the external copy utility depending on whether a
partially transferred file already exists or not. (Rsync doesn't seem to
care about this, but other utilities may.)
- copythreshold is an integer (-1 by default), indicating above what
filesize (in megabytes) Unison should use the external copying utility
specified by copyprog. Specifying 0 will cause ALL copies to use the
external program; a negative number will prevent any files from using it.
(Default is -1.)
 Thanks to Alan Schmitt for a huge amount of hacking and to an anonymous
sponsor for suggesting and underwriting this extension.
- Small improvements:
- 
Added a new preference, dontchmod. By default, Unison uses the
chmod system call to set the permission bits of files after it has
copied them. But in some circumstances (and under some operating systems),
the chmod call always fails. Setting this preference completely prevents
Unison from ever calling chmod.
- Don't ignore files that look like backup files if the backuplocation preference is set to central
- Shortened the names of several preferences. The old names are also
still supported, for backwards compatibility, but they do not appear in the
documentation.
- Lots of little documentation tidying. (In particular, preferences are
separated into Basic and Advanced! This should hopefully make Unison a
little more approachable for new users.
- Unison can sometimes fail to transfer a file, giving the unhelpful
message "Destination updated during synchronization" even though the file
has not been changed. This can be caused by programs that change either the
file's contents or the file's extended attributes without changing
its modification time. It's not clear what is the best fix for this – it
is not Unison's fault, but it makes Unison's behavior puzzling – but at
least Unison can be more helpful about suggesting a workaround (running once
with fastcheck set to false). The failure message has been changed to
give this advice.
- Further improvements to the OS X GUI (thanks to Alan Schmitt and Craig
Federighi).
 
- Very preliminary support for triggering Unison from an external 
 filesystem-watching utility. The current implementation is very
 simple, not efficient, and almost completely untested—not ready 
 for real users. But if someone wants to help improve it (e.g.,
 by writing a filesystem watcher for your favorite OS), please make
 yourself known!
 
 On the Unison side, the new behavior is very simple:- 
 use the text UI 
 
- start Unison with the command-line flag "-repeat FOO", 
 where FOO is name of a file where Unison should look 
 for notifications of changes
 
- when it starts up, Unison will read the whole contents 
 of this file (on both hosts), which should be a 
 newline-separated list of paths (relative to the root 
 of the synchronization) and synchronize just these paths, 
 as if it had been started with the "-path=xxx" option for 
 each one of them
 
- when it finishes, it will sleep for a few seconds and then
 examine the watchfile again; if anything has been added, it
 will read the new paths, synchronize them, and go back to 
 sleep
 
- that's it!
 
 To use this to drive Unison "incrementally," just start it in 
 this mode and start up a tool (on each host) to watch for
 new changes to the filesystem and append the appropriate paths
 to the watchfile. Hopefully such tools should not be too hard
 to write.
- Bug fixes:
- 
Fixed a bug that was causing new files to be created with
 permissions 0x600 instead of using a reasonable default (like
 0x644), if the 'perms' flag was set to 0. (Bug reported by Ben
 Crowell.)
- Follow maxthreads preference when transferring directories.
 
Changes since 2.17:
 
- 
Major rewrite and cleanup of the whole Mac OS X graphical user
interface by Craig Federighi. Thanks, Craig!!!
- Small fix to ctime (non-)handling in update detection under windows
 with fastcheck. 
- Several small fixes to the GTK2 UI to make it work better under
Windows [thanks to Karl M for these].
- The backup functionality has been completely rewritten. The external
interface has not changed, but numerous bugs, irregular behaviors, and
cross-platform inconsistencies have been corrected.
- The Unison project now accepts donations via PayPal. If you'd like to
donate, you can find a link to the donation page on the
Unison home
 page.
- Some important safety improvements:
- 
Added a new mountpointpreference, which can be used to specify
a path that must exist in both replicas at the end of update detection
(otherwise Unison aborts). This can be used to avoid potentially dangerous
situations when Unison is used with removable media such as external hard
drives and compact flash cards.
- The confirmation of “big deletes” is now controlled by a boolean preference
 confirmbigdeletes. Default is true, which gives the same behavior as
 previously. (This functionality is at least partly superceded by themountpointpreference, but it has been left in place in case it is
 useful to some people.)
- If Unison is asked to “follow” a symbolic link but there is
 nothing at the other end of the link, it will now flag this path as an
 error, rather than treating the symlink itself as missing or deleted.
 This avoids a potentially dangerous situation where a followed symlink
 points to an external filesystem that might be offline when Unison is run
 (whereupon Unison would cheerfully delete the corresponding files in the
 other replica!).
 
 
 
- Smaller changes:
- 
Added forcepartialandpreferpartialpreferences, which
behave likeforceandpreferbut can be specified on a
per-path basis. [Thanks to Alan Schmitt for this.]
- A bare-bones self test feature was added, which runs unison through
 some of its paces and checks that the results are as expected. The
 coverage of the tests is still very limited, but the facility has already
 been very useful in debugging the new backup functionality (especially in
 exposing some subtle cross-platform issues).
- Refined debugging code so that the verbosity of individual modules
 can be controlled separately. Instead of just putting '-debug
 verbose' on the command line, you can put '-debug update+', which
 causes all the extra messages in the Update module, but not other
 modules, to be printed. Putting '-debug verbose' causes all modules
 to print with maximum verbosity.
- Removed mergebatchpreference. (It never seemed very useful, and
 its semantics were confusing.)
- Rewrote some of the merging functionality, for better cooperation
 with external Harmony instances.
- Changed the temp file prefix from .#to.unison.
- Compressed the output from the text user interface (particularly
 when run with the -terseflag) to make it easier to interpret the
 results when Unison is run several times in succession from a script.
- Diff and merge functions now work under Windows.
- Changed the order of arguments to the default diff command (so that
 the + and - annotations in diff's output are reversed).
- Added .mppfiles to the “never fastcheck” list (like.xlsfiles).
 
 
 
- Many small bugfixes, including:
- 
Fixed a longstanding bug regarding fastcheck and daylight saving time
 under Windows when Unison is set up to synchronize modification times.
 (Modification times cannot be updated in the archive in this case,
 so we have to ignore one hour differences.)
- Fixed a bug that would occasionally cause the archives to be left in
 non-identical states on the two hosts after synchronization.
- Fixed a bug that prevented Unison from communicating correctly between
 32- and 64-bit architectures.
- On windows, file creation times are no longer used as a proxy for
 inode numbers. (This is unfortunate, as it makes fastcheck a little less
 safe. But it turns out that file creation times are not reliable 
 under Windows: if a file is removed and a new file is created in its
 place, the new one will sometimes be given the same creation date as the
 old one!)
- Set read-only file to R/W on OSX before attempting to change other attributes.
- Fixed bug resulting in spurious "Aborted" errors during transport
(thanks to Jerome Vouillon) 
- Enable diff if file contents have changed in one replica, but
only properties in the other.
- Removed misleading documentation for 'repeat' preference.
- Fixed a bug in merging code where Unison could sometimes deadlock
 with the external merge program, if the latter produced large
 amounts of output.
- Workaround for a bug compiling gtk2 user interface against current versions
 of gtk2+ libraries. 
- Added a better error message for "ambiguous paths".
- Squashed a longstanding bug that would cause file transfer to fail
 with the message “Failed: Error in readWrite: Is a directory.”
- Replaced symlinks with copies of their targets in the Growl framework in src/uimac.
 This should make the sources easier to check out from the svn repository on WinXP
 systems.
- Added a workaround (suggested by Karl M.) for the problem discussed
 on the unison users mailing list where, on the Windows platform, the
 server would hang when transferring files. I conjecture that
 the problem has to do with the RPC mechanism, which was used to
 make a call back from the server to the client (inside the Trace.log 
 function) so that the log message would be appended to the log file on 
 the client. The workaround is to dump these messages (about when
 xferbycopying shortcuts are applied and whether they succeed) just to the
 standard output of the Unison process, not to the log file.
 
Changes since 2.13.0:
 
- 
The features for performing backups and for invoking external merge
programs have been completely rewritten by Stephane Lescuyer (thanks,
Stephane!). The user-visible functionality should not change, but the
internals have been rationalized and there are a number of new features.
See the manual (in particular, the description of the backupXXXpreferences) for details.
- Incorporated patches for ipv6 support, contributed by Samuel Thibault.
(Note that, due to a bug in the released OCaml 3.08.3 compiler, this code
will not actually work with ipv6 unless compiled with the CVS version of the
OCaml compiler, where the bug has been fixed; however, ipv4 should continue
to work normally.)
- OSX interface:
- 
Incorporated Ben Willmore's cool new icon for the Mac UI.
 
- Small fixes:
- 
Fixed off by one error in month numbers (in printed dates) reported 
 by Bob Burger
 
Changes since 2.12.0:
 
- 
New convention for release numbering: Releases will continue to be
given numbers of the form X.Y.Z, but, 
from now on, just the major version number (X.Y) will be considered
significant when checking compatibility between client and server versions.
The third component of the version number will be used only to identify
“patch levels” of releases.
 
 This change goes hand in hand with a change to the procedure for making new
releases. Candidate releases will initially be given “beta release”
status when they are announced for public consumption. Any bugs that are
discovered will be fixed in a separate branch of the source repository
(without changing the major version number) and new tarballs re-released as
needed. When this process converges, the patched beta version will be
dubbed stable.
- Warning (failure in batch mode) when one path is completely emptied.
 This prevents Unison from deleting everything on one replica when
 the other disappear.
- Fix diff bug (where no difference is shown the first time the diff
 command is given).
- User interface changes:
- 
Improved workaround for button focus problem (GTK2 UI)
- Put leading zeroes in date fields
- More robust handling of character encodings in GTK2 UI
- Changed format of modification time displays, from modified at hh:mm:ss on dd MMM, yyyytomodified on yyyy-mm-dd hh:mm:ss
- Changed time display to include seconds (so that people on FAT
 filesystems will not be confused when Unison tries to update a file
 time to an odd number of seconds and the filesystem truncates it to
 an even number!)
- Use the diff "-u" option by default when showing differences between files
 (the output is more readable)
- In text mode, pipe the diff output to a pager if the environment
 variable PAGER is set
- Bug fixes and cleanups in ssh password prompting. Now works with
 the GTK2 UI under Linux. (Hopefully the Mac OS X one is not broken!)
- Include profile name in the GTK2 window name
- Added bindings ',' (same as '<') and '.' (same as '>') in the GTK2 UI
 
- Mac GUI:
- 
actions like < and > scroll to the next item as necessary.
- Restart has a menu item and keyboard shortcut (command-R).
- Added a command-line tool for Mac OS X. It can be installed from
 the Unison menu.
- New icon.
- Handle the "help" command-line argument properly.
- Handle profiles given on the command line properly.
- When a profile has been selected, the profile dialog is replaced by a
 "connecting" message while the connection is being made. This
 gives better feedback.
- Size of left and right columns is now large enough so that
 "PropsChanged" is not cut off.
 
- Minor changes:
- 
Disable multi-threading when both roots are local
- Improved error handling code. In particular, make sure all files
 are closed in case of a transient failure
- Under Windows, use $UNISONfor home directory as a last resort
 (it was wrongly moved before$HOMEand$USERPROFILEin
 Unison 2.12.0)
- Reopen the logfile if its name changes (profile change)
- Double-check that permissions and modification times have been
 properly set: there are some combination of OS and filesystem on
 which setting them can fail in a silent way.
- Check for bad Windows filenames for pure Windows synchronization
 also (not just cross architecture synchronization).
 This way, filenames containing backslashes, which are not correctly
 handled by unison, are rejected right away.
- Attempt to resolve issues with synchronizing modification times
 of read-only files under Windows
- Ignore chmod failures when deleting files
- Ignore trailing dots in filenames in case insensitive mode
- Proper quoting of paths, files and extensions ignored using the UI
- The strings CURRENT1 and CURRENT2 are now correctly substitued when
 they occur in the diff preference
- Improvements to syncing resource forks between Macs via a non-Mac system.
 
Changes since 2.10.2:
 
Changes since 2.9.20:
 
- 
Incompatible change: 
  Archive format has changed. 
- Major functionality changes:
- 
Major tidying and enhancement of 'merge' functionality. The main
 user-visible change is that the external merge program may either write
 the merged output to a single new file, as before, or it may modify one or
 both of its input files, or it may write two new files. In the
 latter cases, its modifications will be copied back into place on both the
 local and the remote host, and (if the two files are now equal) the
 archive will be updated appropriately. More information can be found in
 the user manual. Thanks to Malo Denielou and Alan Schmitt for these
 improvements.
 
 Warning: the new merging functionality is not completely compatible with
 old versions! Check the manual for details.
- Files larger than 2Gb are now supported.
- Added preliminary (and still somewhat experimental) support for the
 Apple OS X operating system. 
- 
Resource forks should be transferred correctly. (See the manual for
details of how this works when synchronizing HFS with non-HFS volumes.)
Synchronization of file type and creator information is also supported.
- On OSX systems, the name of the directory for storing Unison's
archives, preference files, etc., is now determined as follows:
- 
 if ~/.unisonexists, use it
- otherwise, use ~/Library/Application Support/Unison, 
 creating it if necessary.
 
- A preliminary native-Cocoa user interface is under construction. This
still needs some work, and some users experience unpredictable crashes, so
it is only for hackers for now. Run make with UISTYLE=mac to build
this interface.
 
 
 
 
- Minor functionality changes:
- 
Added an ignorelocks preference, which forces Unison to override left-over
 archive locks. (Setting this preference is dangerous! Use it only if you
 are positive you know what you are doing.) 
- Added a new preference assumeContentsAreImmutable. If a directory
 matches one of the patterns set in this preference, then update detection
 is skipped for files in this directory. (The 
 purpose is to speed update detection for cases like Mail folders, which
 contain lots and lots of immutable files.) Also a preference
 assumeContentsAreImmutableNot, which overrides the first, similarly
 to ignorenot. (Later amendment: these preferences are now called
 immutable and immutablenot.)
- The ignorecase flag has been changed from a boolean to a three-valued
 preference. The default setting, called default, checks the operating systems
 running on the client and server and ignores filename case if either of them is
 OSX or Windows. Setting ignorecase to true or false overrides
 this behavior. If you have been setting ignorecase on the command
 line using -ignorecase=true or -ignorecase=false, you will
 need to change to -ignorecase true or -ignorecase false.
- a new preference, 'repeat', for the text user interface (only). If 'repeat' is set to
 a number, then, after it finishes synchronizing, Unison will wait for that many seconds and
 then start over, continuing this way until it is killed from outside. Setting repeat to true
 will automatically set the batch preference to true. 
- Excel files are now handled specially, so that the fastcheck
 optimization is skipped even if the fastcheck flag is set. (Excel
 does some naughty things with modtimes, making this optimization
 unreliable and leading to failures during change propagation.)
- The ignorecase flag has been changed from a boolean to a three-valued
 preference. The default setting, called 'default', checks the operating systems
 running on the client and server and ignores filename case if either of them is
 OSX or Windows. Setting ignorecase to 'true' or 'false' overrides this behavior.
- Added a new preference, 'repeat', for the text user interface (only,
 at the moment). If 'repeat' is set to a number, then, after it finishes
 synchronizing, Unison will wait for that many seconds and then start over,
 continuing this way until it is killed from outside. Setting repeat to
 true will automatically set the batch preference to true.
- The 'rshargs' preference has been split into 'rshargs' and 'sshargs' 
 (mainly to make the documentation clearer). In fact, 'rshargs' is no longer
 mentioned in the documentation at all, since pretty much everybody uses
 ssh now anyway.
 
- Documentation
- 
The web pages have been completely redesigned and reorganized.
 (Thanks to Alan Schmitt for help with this.)
 
- User interface improvements
- 
Added a GTK2 user interface, capable (among other things) of displaying filenames
 in any locale encoding. Kudos to Stephen Tse for contributing this code! 
- The text UI now prints a list of failed and skipped transfers at the end of
 synchronization. 
- Restarting update detection from the graphical UI will reload the current
 profile (which in particular will reset the -path preference, in case
 it has been narrowed by using the “Recheck unsynchronized items”
 command).
- Several small improvements to the text user interface, including a
 progress display.
 
- Bug fixes (too numerous to count, actually, but here are some):
- 
The maxthreads preference works now.
- Fixed bug where warning message about uname returning an unrecognized
 result was preventing connection to server. (The warning is no longer
 printed, and all systems where 'uname' returns anything other than 'Darwin' 
 are assumed not to be running OS X.)
- Fixed a problem on OS X that caused some valid file names (e.g.,
 those including colons) to be considered invalid.
- Patched Path.followLink to follow links under cygwin in addition to Unix
 (suggested by Matt Swift).
- Small change to the storeRootsName function, suggested by bliviero at 
 ichips.intel.com, to fix a problem in unison with the `rootalias'
 option, which allows you to tell unison that two roots contain the same 
 files. Rootalias was being applied after the hosts were 
 sorted, so it wouldn't work properly in all cases.
- Incorporated a fix by Dmitry Bely for setting utimes of read-only files
 on Win32 systems. 
 
- Installation / portability:
- 
Unison now compiles with OCaml version 3.07 and later out of the box.
- Makefile.OCaml fixed to compile out of the box under OpenBSD.
- a few additional ports (e.g. OpenBSD, Zaurus/IPAQ) are now mentioned in 
 the documentation 
- Unison can now be installed easily on OSX systems using the Fink
 package manager
 
Changes since 2.9.1:
 
- 
Added a preference maxthreads that can be used to limit the
number of simultaneous file transfers.
- Added a backupdir preference, which controls where backup
files are stored.
- Basic support added for OSX. In particular, Unison now recognizes
when one of the hosts being synchronized is running OSX and switches to
a case-insensitive treatment of filenames (i.e., 'foo' and 'FOO' are
considered to be the same file).
 (OSX is not yet fully working,
 however: in particular, files with resource forks will not be
 synchronized correctly.)
- The same hash used to form the archive name is now also added to
the names of the temp files created during file transfer. The reason for
this is that, during update detection, we are going to silently delete
any old temp files that we find along the way, and we want to prevent
ourselves from deleting temp files belonging to other instances of Unison
that may be running in parallel, e.g. synchronizing with a different
host. Thanks to Ruslan Ermilov for this suggestion.
- Several small user interface improvements
- Documentation
- 
FAQ and bug reporting instructions have been split out as separate
 HTML pages, accessible directly from the unison web page.
- Additions to FAQ, in particular suggestions about performance
tuning. 
 
- Makefile
- 
Makefile.OCaml now sets UISTYLE=text or UISTYLE=gtk automatically,
 depending on whether it finds lablgtk installed
- Unison should now compile “out of the box” under OSX
 
Changes since 2.8.1:
 
- 
Changing profile works again under Windows
- File movement optimization: Unison now tries to use local copy instead of
 transfer for moved or copied files. It is controled by a boolean option
 “xferbycopying”.
- Network statistics window (transfer rate, amount of data transferred).
 [NB: not available in Windows-Cygwin version.]
- symlinks work under the cygwin version (which is dynamically linked).
- Fixed potential deadlock when synchronizing between Windows and
Unix 
- Small improvements:
 -  
 If neither the USERPROFILE nor the HOME environment
 variables are set, then Unison will put its temporary commit log
 (called DANGER.README) into the directory named by the 
 UNISON environment variable, if any; otherwise it will use
 C:.
 
- alternative set of values for fastcheck: yes = true; no = false;
 default = auto.
 
- -silent implies -contactquietly
 
 
- Source code:
 - 
 Code reorganization and tidying. (Started breaking up some of the
 basic utility modules so that the non-unison-specific stuff can be
 made available for other projects.)
 
- several Makefile and docs changes (for release);
 
- further comments in “update.ml”;
 
- connection information is not stored in global variables anymore.
 
 
Changes since 2.7.78:
 
- 
Small bugfix to textual user interface under Unix (to avoid leaving
 the terminal in a bad state where it would not echo inputs after Unison
 exited).
 
Changes since 2.7.39:
 
- 
Improvements to the main web page (stable and beta version docs are
 now both accessible).
- User manual revised.
- Added some new preferences:
- 
“sshcmd” and “rshcmd” for specifying paths to ssh and rsh programs.
- “contactquietly” for suppressing the “contacting server” message
during Unison startup (under the graphical UI).
 
- Bug fixes:
- 
Fixed small bug in UI that neglected to change the displayed column 
 headers if loading a new profile caused the roots to change.
- Fixed a bug that would put the text UI into an infinite loop if it
 encountered a conflict when run in batch mode.
- Added some code to try to fix the display of non-Ascii characters in 
 filenames on Windows systems in the GTK UI. (This code is currently 
 untested—if you're one of the people that had reported problems with
 display of non-ascii filenames, we'd appreciate knowing if this actually 
 fixes things.)
- `-prefer/-force newer' works properly now. 
 (The bug was reported by Sebastian Urbaniak and Sean Fulton.)
 
- User interface and Unison behavior:
- 
Renamed `Proceed' to `Go' in the graphical UI.
- Added exit status for the textual user interface.
- Paths that are not synchronized because of conflicts or errors during 
 update detection are now noted in the log file.
- [END]messages in log now use a briefer format
- Changed the text UI startup sequence so that
 ./unison -ui text will use the default profile instead of failing.
- Made some improvements to the error messages.
- Added some debugging messages to remote.ml.
 
Changes since 2.7.7:
 
- 
Incorporated, once again, a multi-threaded transport sub-system.
 It transfers several files at the same time, thereby making much
 more effective use of available network bandwidth. Unlike the
 earlier attempt, this time we do not rely on the native thread
 library of OCaml. Instead, we implement a light-weight,
 non-preemptive multi-thread library in OCaml directly. This version
 appears stable. 
 
 Some adjustments to unison are made to accommodate the multi-threaded
 version. These include, in particular, changes to the
 user interface and logging, for example:- 
 Two log entries for each transferring task, one for the
 beginning, one for the end.
 
- Suppressed warning messages against removing temp files left
 by a previous unison run, because warning does not work nicely
 under multi-threading. The temp file names are made less likely
 to coincide with the name of a file created by the user. They
 take the form
 .#<filename>.<serial>.unison.tmp.
 [N.b. This was later changed to.unison.<filename>.<serial>.unison.tmp.]
 
- Added a new command to the GTK user interface: pressing 'f' causes
 Unison to start a new update detection phase, using as paths just
 those paths that have been detected as changed and not yet marked as
 successfully completed. Use this command to quickly restart Unison on
 just the set of paths still needing attention after a previous run.
- Made the ignorecase preference user-visible, and changed the
 initialization code so that it can be manually set to true, even if
 neither host is running Windows. (This may be useful, e.g., when using 
 Unison running on a Unix system with a FAT volume mounted.)
- Small improvements and bug fixes:
 - 
 Errors in preference files now generate fatal errors rather than
 warnings at startup time. (I.e., you can't go on from them.) Also,
 we fixed a bug that was preventing these warnings from appearing in the
 text UI, so some users who have been running (unsuspectingly) with 
 garbage in their prefs files may now get error reports.
 
- Error reporting for preference files now provides file name and
 line number.
 
- More intelligible message in the case of identical change to the same 
 files: “Nothing to do: replicas have been changed only in identical 
 ways since last sync.”
 
- Files with prefix '.#' excluded when scanning for preference
 files.
 
- Rsync instructions are send directly instead of first
 marshaled.
 
- Won't try forever to get the fingerprint of a continuously changing file:
 unison will give up after certain number of retries.
 
- Other bug fixes, including the one reported by Peter Selinger
 (force=older preferencenot working).
 
- Compilation:
 - 
 Upgraded to the new OCaml 3.04 compiler, with the LablGtk
 1.2.3 library (patched version used for compiling under Windows).
 
- Added the option to compile unison on the Windows platform with
 Cygwin GNU C compiler. This option only supports building
 dynamically linked unison executables.
 
 
Changes since 2.7.4:
 
- 
Fixed a silly (but debilitating) bug in the client startup sequence.
 
Changes since 2.7.1:
 
- 
Added addprefstopreference, which (when set) controls which
preference file new preferences (e.g. new ignore patterns) are added to.
- Bug fix: read the initial connection header one byte at a time, so
that we don't block if the header is shorter than expected. (This bug
did not affect normal operation — it just made it hard to tell when you
were trying to use Unison incorrectly with an old version of the server,
since it would hang instead of giving an error message.)
 
Changes since 2.6.59:
 
- 
Changed fastcheckfrom a boolean to a string preference. Its 
 legal values areyes(for a fast check),no(for a safe 
 check), ordefault(for a fast check—which also happens to be 
 safe—when running on Unix and a safe check when on Windows). The default 
 isdefault.
- Several preferences have been renamed for consistency. All
 preference names are now spelled out in lowercase. For backward
 compatibility, the old names still work, but they are not mentioned in
 the manual any more.
- The temp files created by the 'diff' and 'merge' commands are now
 named by prepending a new prefix to the file name, rather than
 appending a suffix. This should avoid confusing diff/merge programs
 that depend on the suffix to guess the type of the file contents.
- We now set the keepalive option on the server socket, to make sure
 that the server times out if the communication link is unexpectedly broken. 
- Bug fixes:
- 
When updating small files, Unison now closes the destination file.
- File permissions are properly updated when the file is behind a
 followed link.
- Several other small fixes.
 
Changes since 2.6.38:
 
- 
Major Windows performance improvement! 
 
 We've added a preferencefastcheckthat makes Unison look only at
a file's creation time and last-modified time to check whether it has
changed. This should result in a huge speedup when checking for updates
in large replicas.
 
 When this switch is set, Unison will use file creation times as 
 'pseudo inode numbers' when scanning Windows replicas for updates, 
 instead of reading the full contents of every file. This may cause 
 Unison to miss propagating an update if the create time, 
 modification time, and length of the file are all unchanged by 
 the update (this is not easy to achieve, but it can be done). 
 However, Unison will never overwrite such an update with
 a change from the other replica, since it 
 always does a safe check for updates just before propagating a 
 change. Thus, it is reasonable to use this switch most of the time 
 and occasionally run Unison once with fastcheck set to false, 
 if you are worried that Unison may have overlooked an update.
 
 Warning: This change is has not yet been thoroughly field-tested. If you 
 set thefastcheckpreference, pay careful attention to what
 Unison is doing.
 
 
- New functionality: centralized backups and merging 
- 
This version incorporates two pieces of major new functionality,
 implemented by Sylvain Roy during a summer internship at Penn: a
 centralized backup facility that keeps a full backup of
 (selected files 
 in) each replica, and a merging feature that allows Unison to
 invoke an external file-merging tool to resolve conflicting changes to
 individual files.
 
 
- Centralized backups:
- 
 Unison now maintains full backups of the last-synchronized versions
 of (some of) the files in each replica; these function both as
 backups in the usual sense
 and as the “common version” when invoking external
 merge programs.
 
- The backed up files are stored in a directory  /.unison/backup on each
 host. (The name of this directory can be changed by setting
 the environment variable UNISONBACKUPDIR.)
- The predicate backupcontrols which files are actually
 backed up:
 giving the preference 'backup = Path *' causes backing up
 of all files.
- Files are added to the backup directory whenever unison updates
 its archive. This means that
 - 
 When unison reconstructs its archive from scratch (e.g., 
 because of an upgrade, or because the archive files have
 been manually deleted), all files will be backed up.
 
- Otherwise, each file will be backed up the first time unison
 propagates an update for it.
 
 
- The preference backupversionscontrols how many previous
 versions of each file are kept. The default is 2 (i.e., the last 
 synchronized version plus one backup).
- For backward compatibility, the backupspreference is also
 still supported, butbackupis now preferred.
- It is OK to manually delete files from the backup directory (or to throw
 away the directory itself). Before unison uses any of these files for 
 anything important, it checks that its fingerprint matches the one 
 that it expects. 
 
 
 
- Merging:
- 
 Both user interfaces offer a new 'merge' command, invoked by pressing
 'm' (with a changed file selected). 
 
- The actual merging is performed by an external program. 
 The preferences mergeandmerge2control how this
 program is invoked. If a backup exists for this file (see thebackuppreference), then themergepreference is used for 
 this purpose; otherwisemerge2is used. In both cases, the 
 value of the preference should be a string representing the command 
 that should be passed to a shell to invoke the 
 merge program. Within this string, the special substringsCURRENT1,CURRENT2,NEW, andOLDmay appear
 at any point. Unison will substitute these as follows before invoking
 the command:- 
 CURRENT1is replaced by the name of the local 
 copy of the file;
- CURRENT2is replaced by the name of a temporary
 file, into which the contents of the remote copy of the file have
 been transferred by Unison prior to performing the merge;
- NEWis replaced by the name of a temporary
 file that Unison expects to be written by the merge program when
 it finishes, giving the desired new contents of the file; and
- OLDis replaced by the name of the backed up
 copy of the original version of the file (i.e., its state at the 
 end of the last successful run of Unison), if one exists 
 (applies only to- merge, not- merge2).
 For example, on Unix systems setting themergepreference to
   merge = diff3 -m CURRENT1 OLD CURRENT2 > NEW
 will tell Unison to use the externaldiff3program for merging.
 
 A large number of external merging programs are available. For 
 example,emacsusers may find the following convenient:
    merge2 = emacs -q --eval '(ediff-merge-files "CURRENT1" "CURRENT2" 
               nil "NEW")' 
    merge = emacs -q --eval '(ediff-merge-files-with-ancestor 
               "CURRENT1" "CURRENT2" "OLD" nil "NEW")' 
(These commands are displayed here on two lines to avoid running off the
edge of the page. In your preference file, each should be written on a
single line.)
 
 
- If the external program exits without leaving any file at the
 path NEW, 
 Unison considers the merge to have failed. If the merge program writes
 a file calledNEWbut exits with a non-zero status code,
 then Unison 
 considers the merge to have succeeded but to have generated conflicts.
 In this case, it attempts to invoke an external editor so that the
 user can resolve the conflicts. The value of theeditorpreference controls what editor is invoked by Unison. The default
 isemacs.
 
 
- Please send us suggestions for other useful values of the
 merge2andmergepreferences – we'd like to give several 
 examples in the manual.
 
 
 
 
- Smaller changes:
- 
When one preference file includes another, unison no longer adds the
 suffix '.prf' to the included file by default. If a file with 
 precisely the given name exists in the .unison directory, it will be used; 
 otherwise Unison will 
 add.prf, as it did before. (This change means that included 
 preference files can be namedblah.includeinstead ofblah.prf, so that unison will not offer them in its 'choose 
 a preference file' dialog.)
- For Linux systems, we now offer both a statically linked and a dynamically
 linked executable. The static one is larger, but will probably run on more
 systems, since it doesn't depend on the same versions of dynamically
 linked library modules being available.
- Fixed the forceandpreferpreferences, which were
 getting the propagation direction exactly backwards.
- Fixed a bug in the startup code that would cause unison to crash
 when the default profile (~/.unison/default.prf) does not exist.
- Fixed a bug where, on the run when a profile is first created, 
 Unison would confusingly display the roots in reverse order in the user
 interface.
 
 
 
- For developers:
- 
We've added a module dependency diagram to the source distribution, in
 src/DEPENDENCIES.ps, to help new prospective developers with
 navigating the code.
 
Changes since 2.6.11:
 
Changes since 2.6.1:
 
- 
The synchronization of modification times has been disabled for
 directories.
 
 
- Preference files may now include lines of the form
 include <name>, which will causename.prfto be read
 at that point.
 
 
- The synchronization of permission between Windows and Unix now
 works properly.
 
 
- A binding CYGWIN=binmodein now added to the environment
 so that the Cygwin port of OpenSSH works properly in a non-Cygwin
 context.
 
 
- The servercmdandaddversionnopreferences can now
 be used together:-addversionnoappends an appropriate-NNNto the server command, which is found by using the value
 of the-servercmdpreference if there is one, or else justunison.
 
 
- Both '-pref=val'and'-pref val'are now allowed for
 boolean values. (The former can be used to set a preference to false.)
 
 
- Lot of small bugs fixed.
 
Changes since 2.5.31:
 
- 
The logpreference is now set totrueby default,
 since the log file seems useful for most users.
- Several miscellaneous bugfixes (most involving symlinks).
 
Changes since 2.5.25:
 
- 
Incompatible change: 
  Archive format has changed (again). 
 
 
- Several significant bugs introduced in 2.5.25 have been fixed. 
 
Changes since 2.5.1:
 
- 
Incompatible change: 
  Archive format has changed. Make sure you
synchronize your replicas before upgrading, to avoid spurious
conflicts. The first sync after upgrading will be slow.
 
 
- New functionality:
- 
Unison now synchronizes file modtimes, user-ids, and group-ids. 
 
 These new features are controlled by a set of new preferences, all of
which are currentlyfalseby default.- 
When the timespreference is set totrue, file
modification times are propaged. (Because the representations of time
may not have the same granularity on both replicas, Unison may not always
be able to make the modtimes precisely equal, but it will get them as
close as the operating systems involved allow.)
- When the ownerpreference is set totrue, file
ownership information is synchronized.
- When the grouppreference is set totrue, group 
information is synchronized.
- When the numericIdspreference is set totrue, owner
and group information is synchronized numerically. By default, owner and
group numbers are converted to names on each replica and these names are
synchronized. (The special user id 0 and the special group 0 are never
mapped via user/group names even if this preference is not set.)
 
 
 
- Added an integer-valued preference permsthat can be used to
control the propagation of permission bits. The value of this preference
is a mask indicating which permission bits should be synchronized. It is
set by default to 0o1777: all bits but the set-uid and set-gid bits are
synchronised (synchronizing theses latter bits can be a security hazard).
If you want to synchronize all bits, you can set the value of this
preference to −1.
 
 
- Added a logpreference (defaultfalse), which makes
Unison keep a complete record of the changes it makes to the replicas.
By default, this record is written to a file calledunison.login
the user's home directory (the value of theHOMEenvironment
variable). If you want it someplace else, set thelogfilepreference to the full pathname you want Unison to use.
 
 
- Added an ignorenotpreference that maintains a set of patterns 
 for paths that should definitely not be ignored, whether or not
 they match anignorepattern. (That is, a path will now be ignored
 iff it matches an ignore pattern and does not match any ignorenot patterns.)
 
 
 
- User-interface improvements:
- 
Roots are now displayed in the user interface in the same order
as they were given on the command line or in the preferences file.
- When the batchpreference is set, the graphical user interface no 
 longer waits for user confirmation when it displays a warning message: it
 simply pops up an advisory window with a Dismiss button at the bottom and
 keeps on going.
- Added a new preference for controlling how many status messages are
 printed during update detection: statusdepthcontrols the maximum
 depth for paths on the local machine (longer paths are not displayed, nor
 are non-directory paths). The value should be an integer; default is 1.
- Removed the traceandsilentpreferences. They did
not seem very useful, and there were too many preferences for controlling
output in various ways.
- The text UI now displays just the default command (the one that
will be used if the user just types <return>) instead of all
available commands. Typing?will print the full list of
possibilities.
- The function that finds the canonical hostname of the local host
(which is used, for example, in calculating the name of the archive file
used to remember which files have been synchronized) normally uses the
gethostnameoperating system call. However, if the environment
variableUNISONLOCALHOSTNAMEis set, its value will now be used
instead. This makes it easier to use Unison in situations where a
machine's name changes frequently (e.g., because it is a laptop and gets
moved around a lot).
- File owner and group are now displayed in the “detail window” at
the bottom of the screen, when unison is configured to synchronize them.
 
 
 
- For hackers:
- 
Updated to Jacques Garrigue's new version of lablgtk, which
 means we can throw away our local patched version.
 
 If you're compiling the GTK version of unison from sources, you'll need
 to update your copy of lablgtk to the developers release.
 (Warning: installing lablgtk under Windows is currently a bit
 challenging.)
 
 
- The TODO.txt file (in the source distribution) has been cleaned up
and reorganized. The list of pending tasks should be much easier to
make sense of, for people that may want to contribute their programming
energies. There is also a separate file BUGS.txt for open bugs.
- The Tk user interface has been removed (it was not being maintained
and no longer compiles).
- The debugpreference now prints quite a bit of additional
information that should be useful for identifying sources of problems.
- The version number of the remote server is now checked right away 
 during the connection setup handshake, rather than later. (Somebody
 sent a bug report of a server crash that turned out to come from using
 inconsistent versions: better to check this earlier and in a way that
 can't crash either client or server.)
- Unison now runs correctly on 64-bit architectures (e.g. Alpha
linux). We will not be distributing binaries for these architectures
ourselves (at least for a while) but if someone would like to make them
available, we'll be glad to provide a link to them.
 
 
 
- Bug fixes:
- 
Pattern matching (e.g. for ignore) is now case-insensitive
 when Unison is in case-insensitive mode (i.e., when one of the replicas
 is on a windows machine).
- Some people had trouble with mysterious failures during
 propagation of updates, where files would be falsely reported as having
 changed during synchronization. This should be fixed.
- Numerous smaller fixes.
 
Changes since 2.4.1:
 
- 
Added a number of 'sorting modes' for the user interface. By
default, conflicting changes are displayed at the top, and the rest of
the entries are sorted in alphabetical order. This behavior can be
changed in the following ways:
- 
Setting the sortnewfirstpreference totruecauses
newly created files to be displayed before changed files.
- Setting sortbysizecauses files to be displayed in
increasing order of size.
- Giving the preference sortfirst=<pattern>(where<pattern>is a path descriptor in the same format as 'ignore' and 'follow'
patterns, causes paths matching this pattern to be displayed first.
- Similarly, giving the preference sortlast=<pattern>causes paths matching this pattern to be displayed last.
 The sorting preferences are described in more detail in the user manual.
Thesortnewfirstandsortbysizeflags can also be accessed
from the 'Sort' menu in the grpahical user interface.
 
 
- Added two new preferences that can be used to change unison's
fundamental behavior to make it more like a mirroring tool instead of
a synchronizer.
- 
Giving the preference preferwith argument<root>(by adding-prefer <root>to the command line orprefer=<root>)
to your profile) means that, if there is a conflict, the contents of<root>should be propagated to the other replica (with no questions asked).
Non-conflicting changes are treated as usual.
- Giving the preference forcewith argument<root>will make unison resolve all differences in favor of the given
root, even if it was the other replica that was changed.
 These options should be used with care! (More information is available in
the manual.)
 
 
- Small changes:
- 
Changed default answer to 'Yes' in all two-button dialogs in the 
 graphical interface (this seems more intuitive).
 
 
- The rsyncpreference has been removed (it was used to
activate rsync compression for file transfers, but rsync compression is
now enabled by default).
- In the text user interface, the arrows indicating which direction
changes are being 
 propagated are printed differently when the user has overridded Unison's
 default recommendation (====>instead of---->). This
 matches the behavior of the graphical interface, which displays such
 arrows in a different color.
- Carriage returns (Control-M's) are ignored at the ends of lines in
 profiles, for Windows compatibility.
- All preferences are now fully documented in the user manual. 
 
Changes since 2.3.12:
 
- 
Incompatible change: 
  Archive format has changed. Make sure you
synchronize your replicas before upgrading, to avoid spurious
conflicts. The first sync after upgrading will be slow.
 
 
- New/improved functionality:
- 
A new preference -sortbysize controls the order in which changes
 are displayed to the user: when it is set to true, the smallest
 changed files are displayed first. (The default setting is false.) 
- A new preference -sortnewfirst causes newly created files to be 
 listed before other updates in the user interface.
- We now allow the ssh protocol to specify a port. 
- Incompatible change: The unison: protocol is deprecated, and we added
 file: and socket:. You may have to modify your profiles in the
 .unison directory.
 If a replica is specified without an explicit protocol, we now
 assume it refers to a file. (Previously "//saul/foo" meant to use
 SSH to connect to saul, then access the foo directory. Now it means
 to access saul via a remote file mechanism such as samba; the old
 effect is now achieved by writing ssh://saul/foo.)
- Changed the startup sequence for the case where roots are given but
 no profile is given on the command line. The new behavior is to
 use the default profile (creating it if it does not exist), and
 temporarily override its roots. The manual claimed that this case
 would work by reading no profile at all, but AFAIK this was never
 true.
- In all user interfaces, files with conflicts are always listed first
- A new preference 'sshversion' can be used to control which version
 of ssh should be used to connect to the server. Legal values are 1 and 2.
 (Default is empty, which will make unison use whatever version of ssh
 is installed as the default 'ssh' command.)
- The situation when the permissions of a file was updated the same on
 both side is now handled correctly (we used to report a spurious conflict)
 
 
 
- Improvements for the Windows version:
- 
The fact that filenames are treated case-insensitively under
Windows should now be handled correctly. The exact behavior is described
in the cross-platform section of the manual.
- It should be possible to synchronize with Windows shares, e.g.,
 //host/drive/path.
- Workarounds to the bug in syncing root directories in Windows.
The most difficult thing to fix is an ocaml bug: Unix.opendir fails on
c: in some versions of Windows.
 
 
 
- Improvements to the GTK user interface (the Tk interface is no
longer being maintained): 
- 
The UI now displays actions differently (in blue) when they have been
 explicitly changed by the user from Unison's default recommendation.
- More colorful appearance.
- The initial profile selection window works better.
- If any transfers failed, a message to this effect is displayed along with
 'Synchronization complete' at the end of the transfer phase (in case they
 may have scrolled off the top).
- Added a global progress meter, displaying the percentage of total
 bytes that have been transferred so far.
 
 
 
- Improvements to the text user interface:
- 
The file details will be displayed automatically when a
 conflict is been detected.
- when a warning is generated (e.g. for a temporary
 file left over from a previous run of unison) Unison will no longer
 wait for a response if it is running in -batch mode.
- The UI now displays a short list of possible inputs each time it waits
 for user interaction. 
- The UI now quits immediately (rather than looping back and starting
 the interaction again) if the user presses 'q' when asked whether to 
 propagate changes.
- Pressing 'g' in the text user interface will proceed immediately
 with propagating updates, without asking any more questions.
 
 
 
- Documentation and installation changes:
- 
The manual now includes a FAQ, plus sections on common problems and
on tricks contributed by users.
- Both the download page and the download directory explicitly say
what are the current stable and beta-test version numbers.
- The OCaml sources for the up-to-the-minute developers' version (not
guaranteed to be stable, or even to compile, at any given time!) are now
available from the download page.
- Added a subsection to the manual describing cross-platform
 issues (case conflicts, illegal filenames)
 
 
 
- Many small bug fixes and random improvements.
 
 
Changes since 2.3.1:
 
- 
Several bug fixes. The most important is a bug in the rsync
module that would occasionally cause change propagation to fail with a
'rename' error.
 
Changes since 2.2:
 
- 
The multi-threaded transport system is now disabled by default.
(It is not stable enough yet.)
- Various bug fixes.
- A new experimental feature: 
 
 The final component of a -path argument may now be the wildcard 
 specifier*. When Unison sees such a path, it expands this path on 
 the client into into the corresponding list of paths by listing the
 contents of that directory.
 
 Note that if you use wildcard paths from the command line, you will
 probably need to use quotes or a backslash to prevent the * from
 being interpreted by your shell.
 
 If both roots are local, the contents of the first one will be used
 for expanding wildcard paths. (Nb: this is the first one after the
 canonization step – i.e., the one that is listed first in the user 
 interface – not the one listed first on the command line or in the
 preferences file.)
Changes since 2.1:
 
- 
The transport subsystem now includes an implementation by
Sylvain Gommier and Norman Ramsey of Tridgell and Mackerras's
rsyncprotocol. This protocol achieves much faster 
transfers when only a small part of a large file has been changed by
sending just diffs. This feature is mainly helpful for transfers over
slow links—on fast local area networks it can actually degrade
performance—so we have left it off by default. Start unison with
the-rsyncoption (or putrsync=truein your preferences
file) to turn it on.
 
 
- “Progress bars” are now diplayed during remote file transfers,
showing what percentage of each file has been transferred so far.
 
 
- The version numbering scheme has changed. New releases will now
 be have numbers like 2.2.30, where the second component is
 incremented on every significant public release and the third
 component is the “patch level.”
 
 
- Miscellaneous improvements to the GTK-based user interface.
- The manual is now available in PDF format.
 
 
- We are experimenting with using a multi-threaded transport
subsystem to transfer several files at the same time, making
much more effective use of available network bandwidth. This feature
is not completely stable yet, so by default it is disabled in the
release version of Unison.
 
 If you want to play with the multi-threaded version, you'll need to
recompile Unison from sources (as described in the documentation),
setting the THREADS flag in Makefile.OCaml to true. Make sure that
your OCaml compiler has been installed with the-with-pthreadsconfiguration option. (You can verify this by checking whether the
filethreads/threads.cmain the OCaml standard library
directory contains the string-lpthreadnear the end.)
Changes since 1.292:
 
- 
Reduced memory footprint (this is especially important during
the first run of unison, where it has to gather information about all
the files in both repositories). 
- Fixed a bug that would cause the socket server under NT to fail
 after the client exits. 
- Added a SHIFT modifier to the Ignore menu shortcut keys in GTK
 interface (to avoid hitting them accidentally). 
 
Changes since 1.231:
 
- 
Tunneling over ssh is now supported in the Windows version. See
the installation section of the manual for detailed instructions.
 
 
- The transport subsystem now includes an implementation of the
rsyncprotocol, built by Sylvain Gommier and Norman Ramsey.
This protocol achieves much faster transfers when only a small part of
a large file has been changed by sending just diffs. The rsync
feature is off by default in the current version. Use the-rsyncswitch to turn it on. (Nb. We still have a lot of
tuning to do: you may not notice much speedup yet.)
 
 
- We're experimenting with a multi-threaded transport subsystem,
written by Jerome Vouillon. The downloadable binaries are still
single-threaded: if you want to try the multi-threaded version, you'll
need to recompile from sources. (Say make THREADS=true.)
Native thread support from the compiler is required. Use the option-threads Nto select the maximal number of concurrent 
threads (default is 5). Multi-threaded
and single-threaded clients/servers can interoperate.
 
 
- A new GTK-based user interface is now available, thanks to
Jacques Garrigue. The Tk user interface still works, but we'll be
shifting development effort to the GTK interface from now on.
- OCaml 3.00 is now required for compiling Unison from sources.
The modules uitkandmyfileselecthave been changed to
use labltk instead of camltk. To compile the Tk interface in Windows,
you must have ocaml-3.00 and tk8.3. When installing tk8.3, put it inc:\Tclrather than the suggestedc:\Program Files\Tcl, 
and be sure to install the headers and libraries (which are not 
installed by default).
 
 
- Added a new -addversionnoswitch, which causes unison to
useunison-<currentversionnumber>instead of justunisonas the remote server command. This allows multiple versions of unison
to coexist conveniently on the same server: whichever version is run
on the client, the same version will be selected on the server.
Changes since 1.219:
 
- 
Incompatible change: 
  Archive format has changed. Make sure you
synchronize your replicas before upgrading, to avoid spurious
conflicts. The first sync after upgrading will be slow.
 
 
- This version fixes several annoying bugs, including:
- 
Some cases where propagation of file permissions was not
working.
- umask is now ignored when creating directories
- directories are create writable, so that a read-only directory and
 its contents can be propagated.
- Handling of warnings generated by the server.
- Synchronizing a path whose parent is not a directory on both sides is
now flagged as erroneous. 
- Fixed some bugs related to symnbolic links and nonexistant roots.
- 
When a change (deletion or new contents) is propagated onto a 
 'follow'ed symlink, the file pointed to by the link is now changed.
 (We used to change the link itself, which doesn't fit our assertion
 that 'follow' means the link is completely invisible)
 
- When one root did not exist, propagating the other root on top of it
 used to fail, becuase unison could not calculate the working directory
 into which to write changes. This should be fixed.
 
 
 
 
- A human-readable timestamp has been added to Unison's archive files.
 
 
- The semantics of Path and Name regular expressions now
correspond better. 
 
 
- Some minor improvements to the text UI (e.g. a command for going
back to previous items)
 
 
- The organization of the export directory has changed — should
be easier to find / download things now.
 
Changes since 1.200:
 
- 
Incompatible change: 
  Archive format has changed. Make sure you
synchronize your replicas before upgrading, to avoid spurious
conflicts. The first sync after upgrading will be slow.
 
 
- This version has not been tested extensively on Windows.
 
 
- Major internal changes designed to make unison safer to run
at the same time as the replicas are being changed by the user.
 
 
- Internal performance improvements. 
 
Changes since 1.190:
 
- 
Incompatible change: 
  Archive format has changed. Make sure you
synchronize your replicas before upgrading, to avoid spurious
conflicts. The first sync after upgrading will be slow.
 
 
- A number of internal functions have been changed to reduce the
amount of memory allocation, especially during the first
synchronization. This should help power users with very big replicas.
 
 
- Reimplementation of low-level remote procedure call stuff, in
preparation for adding rsync-like smart file transfer in a later
release. 
 
 
- Miscellaneous bug fixes.
 
Changes since 1.180:
 
- 
Incompatible change: 
  Archive format has changed. Make sure you
synchronize your replicas before upgrading, to avoid spurious
conflicts. The first sync after upgrading will be slow.
 
 
- Fixed some small bugs in the interpretation of ignore patterns. 
 
 
- Fixed some problems that were preventing the Windows version
from working correctly when click-started.
 
 
- Fixes to treatment of file permissions under Windows, which were
causing spurious reports of different permissions when synchronizing
between windows and unix systems.
 
 
- Fixed one more non-tail-recursive list processing function,
which was causing stack overflows when synchronizing very large
replicas. 
 
Changes since 1.169:
 
- 
The text user interface now provides commands for ignoring
 files. 
- We found and fixed some more non-tail-recursive list
 processing functions. Some power users have reported success with
 very large replicas.
- Incompatible change: 
 Files ending in .tmpare no longer ignored automatically. If you want
to ignore such files, put an appropriate ignore pattern in your profile.
 
 
- Incompatible change: 
  The syntax of ignore and follow
patterns has changed. Instead of putting a line of the form
                 ignore = <regexp>
in your profile (.unison/default.prf), you should put:
                 ignore = Regexp <regexp>
Moreover, two other styles of pattern are also recognized:
                 ignore = Name <name>
matches any path in which one component matches<name>, while
                 ignore = Path <path>
matches exactly the path<path>.
 
 Standard “globbing” conventions can be used in<name>and<path>:- 
a ?matches any single character except/
- a *matches any sequence of characters not including/
- [xyz]matches any character from the set {x,
 y, z }
- {a,bb,ccc}matches any one of- a,- bb, or- ccc.
 
 See the user manual for some examples.
Changes since 1.146:
 
- 
Some users were reporting stack overflows when synchronizing
 huge directories. We found and fixed some non-tail-recursive list
 processing functions, which we hope will solve the problem. Please 
 give it a try and let us know.
- Major additions to the documentation. 
 
Changes since 1.142:
 
- 
Major internal tidying and many small bugfixes.
- Major additions to the user manual.
- Unison can now be started with no arguments – it will prompt
automatically for the name of a profile file containing the roots to
be synchronized. This makes it possible to start the graphical UI
from a desktop icon.
- Fixed a small bug where the text UI on NT was raising a 'no such
 signal' exception.
 
Changes since 1.139:
 
- 
The precompiled windows binary in the last release was compiled
with an old OCaml compiler, causing propagation of permissions not to
work (and perhaps leading to some other strange behaviors we've heard
reports about). This has been corrected. If you're using precompiled
binaries on Windows, please upgrade.
- Added a -debugcommand line flag, which controls debugging
of various modules. Say-debug XXXto enable debug tracing for
moduleXXX, or-debug allto turn on absolutely everything.
- Fixed a small bug where the text UI on NT was raising a 'no such signal'
exception.
 
Changes since 1.111:
 
- 
Incompatible change: 
  The names and formats of the preference files in
the .unison directory have changed. In particular:
- 
the file “prefs” should be renamed to default.prf
- the contents of the file “ignore” should be merged into
 default.prf. Each line of the form REGEXPin ignore should
 become a line of the formignore = REGEXPin default.prf.
 
- Unison now handles permission bits and symbolic links. See the
manual for details.
 
 
- You can now have different preference files in your .unison
directory. If you start unison like this
             unison profilename
(i.e. with just one “anonymous” command-line argument), then the
file~/.unison/profilename.prfwill be loaded instead ofdefault.prf.
 
 
- Some improvements to terminal handling in the text user interface
 
 
- Added a switch -killServer that terminates the remote server process
when the unison client is shutting down, even when using sockets for 
communication. (By default, a remote server created using ssh/rsh is 
terminated automatically, while a socket server is left running.)
- When started in 'socket server' mode, unison prints 'server started' on
 stderr when it is ready to accept connections. 
 (This may be useful for scripts that want to tell when a socket-mode server 
 has finished initalization.)
- We now make a nightly mirror of our current internal development
 tree, in case anyone wants an up-to-the-minute version to hack
 around with.
- Added a file CONTRIB with some suggestions for how to help us
make Unison better.