file-digests
scorch
Our great sponsors
file-digests | scorch | |
---|---|---|
1 | 9 | |
7 | 180 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
almost 2 years ago | about 1 year ago | |
Ruby | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | ISC License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
file-digests
-
Embarking on my hoarding journey
If you really care, you can use something like scorch or file-digests to get the hashes of your files and just store that in a text file, recalculating monthly. No need to get fancy with it. Hell, write your own simple script that hashes, outputs to file, and checks previous versions.
scorch
-
How do I ensure that I do not get a time-delayed ransomware attack?
The method I use is to run scorch every night to compute hashes for new files and check around 12% of old files for hash errors every night. Even if your backup is the same day as a ransomware attack, you will still catch it if the attack hits enough files for one to get randomly scrubbed. Also scorch is designed around making the hash database small and independent from the rest of the system, so you can automate copying it to a bunch of different places.
- Does this not exists? Checksum program...
-
ZFS or BTRFS for raid0 + backup server
Lastly, you could just point scorch (https://github.com/trapexit/scorch) at your drives and run it on a cron or systemd timer - just have the script alert you with an e-mail or whatever your preferred method is. Not ideal but probably less work than rebuilding two arrays because you don't like the format of error messages.
-
Embarking on my hoarding journey
If you really care, you can use something like scorch or file-digests to get the hashes of your files and just store that in a text file, recalculating monthly. No need to get fancy with it. Hell, write your own simple script that hashes, outputs to file, and checks previous versions.
-
Tool to add checksum to files on EXT4 and verify them.
Not exactly what you're looking for but close -> https://github.com/trapexit/scorch
-
Tool to compare file set against a list of hashes and import new/unique files
Scorch should fit the bill (https://github.com/trapexit/scorch)
- Generate hash for all files in all folders and subfolders on HDD
- Manual File Indexing
- Manual file indexing on my NAS
What are some alternatives?
drive-desktop
cshatag - Detect silent data corruption under Linux using sha256 stored in extended attributes
CaptfEncoder - Captfencoder is opensource a rapid cross platform network security tool suite, providing network security related code conversion, classical cryptography, cryptography, asymmetric encryption, miscellaneous tools, and aggregating all kinds of online tools.
znapzend - zfs backup with remote capabilities and mbuffer integration.
Shoes - Shoes 4 : the next version of Shoes
CalCorrupt - File corrupter using PyQt5
alfred-run-shortcut - Quickly run any shortcut from macOS Monterey Shortcuts app
HashCheck - HashCheck Shell Extension for Windows with added SHA2, SHA3, and multithreading; originally from code.kliu.org
Glimmer - DSL Framework consisting of a DSL Engine and a Data-Binding Library used in Glimmer DSL for SWT (JRuby Desktop Development GUI Framework), Glimmer DSL for Opal (Pure Ruby Web GUI), Glimmer DSL for LibUI (Prerequisite-Free Ruby Desktop Development GUI Library), Glimmer DSL for Tk (Ruby Tk Desktop Development GUI Library), Glimmer DSL for GTK (Ruby-GNOME Desktop Development GUI Library), Glimmer DSL for XML (& HTML), and Glimmer DSL for CSS
honst - Fixes your dataset according to your rules.
are-we-there-yet - Are We There Yet? Small Project Tracking Desktop App for Windows and Mac. Built with Glimmer (Ruby Desktop Development GUI Library)
MultiPar - Parchive tool