Detects bit rotten files on the hard drive to save your precious photo and music collection from slow decay.
Go to the desired directory and simply invoke:
$ bitrot
This will start digging through your directory structure recursively
indexing all files found. The index is stored in a .bitrot.db
file
which is a SQLite 3 database.
Next time you run bitrot
it will add new files and update the index
for files with a changed modification date. Most importantly however, it
will report all errors, e.g. files that changed on the hard drive but
still have the same modification date.
All paths stored in .bitrot.db
are relative so it's safe to rescan
a folder after moving it to another drive. Just remember to move it in
a way that doesn't touch modification dates. Otherwise the checksum
database is useless.
Obviously depends on how fast the underlying drive is. Historically the script was single-threaded because back in 2013 checksum calculations on a single core still outran typical drives, including the mobile SSDs of the day. In 2020 this is no longer the case so the script now uses a process pool to calculate SHA1 hashes and perform stat() calls.
No rigorous performance tests have been done. Scanning a ~1000 file directory totalling ~5 GB takes 2.2s on a 2018 MacBook Pro 15" with a AP0512M SSD. Back in 2013, that same feat on a 2015 MacBook Air with a SM0256G SSD took over 20 seconds.
On that same 2018 MacBook Pro 15", scanning a 60+ GB music library takes 24 seconds. Back in 2013, with a typical 5400 RPM laptop hard drive it took around 15 minutes. How times have changed!
There's a simple but comprehensive test scenario using pytest and pytest-order.
Install:
$ python3 -m venv .venv $ . .venv/bin/activate (.venv)$ pip install -e .[test]
Run:
(.venv)$ pytest -x ==================== test session starts ==================== platform darwin -- Python 3.10.12, pytest-7.4.0, pluggy-1.2.0 rootdir: /Users/ambv/Documents/Python/bitrot plugins: order-1.1.0 collected 12 items tests/test_bitrot.py ............ [100%] ==================== 12 passed in 15.05s ====================
- officially remove Python 2 support that was broken since 1.0.0 anyway; now the package works with Python 3.8+ because of a few features
- significantly sped up execution on solid state drives by using a process pool executor to calculate SHA1 hashes and perform stat() calls; use -w1 if your runs on slow magnetic drives were negatively affected by this change
- sped up execution by pre-loading all SQLite-stored hashes to memory and doing comparisons using Python sets
- all UTF-8 filenames are now normalized to NFKD in the database to enable cross-operating system checks
- the SQLite database is now vacuumed to minimize its size
- bugfix: additional Python 3 fixes when Unicode names were encountered
- bugfix: one place in the code incorrectly hardcoded UTF-8 as the filesystem encoding
- bugfix: print the path that failed to decode with FSENCODING
- bugfix: when using -q, don't hide warnings about files that can't be statted or read
- bugfix: -s is no longer broken on Python 3
- bugfix: bitrot.db checksum checking messages now obey --quiet
- Python 3 compatibility
- bitrot now keeps track of its own database's bitrot by storing a checksum of .bitrot.db in .bitrot.sha512
- bugfix: now properly uses the filesystem encoding to decode file names for use with the .bitrotdb database. Report and original patch by pallinger.
- bugfix: SHA1 computation now works correctly on Windows; previously opened files in text-mode. This fix will change hashes of files containing some specific bytes like 0x1A.
- when a file changes or is renamed, the timestamp of the last check is updated, too
- bugfix: files that disappeared during the run are now properly ignored
- bugfix: files that are locked or with otherwise denied access are skipped. If they were read before, they will be considered "missing" in the report.
- bugfix: if there are multiple files with the same content in the scanned directory tree, renames are now handled properly for them
- refactored some horrible code to be a little less horrible
- more control over performance with
--commit-interval
and--chunk-size
command-line arguments - bugfix: symbolic links are now properly skipped (or can be followed if
--follow-links
is passed) - bugfix: files that cannot be opened are now gracefully skipped
- bugfix: fixed a rare division by zero when run in an empty directory
- bugfix: warn about test mode only in test mode
--test
command-line argument for testing the state without updating the database on disk (works for testing databases you don't have write access to)- size of the data read is reported upon finish
- minor performance updates
- renames are now reported as such
- all non-regular files (e.g. symbolic links, pipes, sockets) are now skipped
- progress presented in percentage
--sum
command-line argument for easy comparison of multiple databases
- fixed regression from 0.2.0 where new files caused a
KeyError
exception
--verbose
and--quiet
command-line arguments- if a file is no longer there, its entry is removed from the database
- First published version.
Glued together by Łukasz Langa. Multiple improvements by Ben Shepherd, Jean-Louis Fuchs, Marcus Linderoth, p1r473, Peter Hofmann, Phil Lundrigan, Reid Williams, Stan Senotrusov, Yang Zhang, and Zhuoyun Wei.