Provided by: magicrescue_1.1.10+dfsg-2build2_amd64 

NAME
dupemap - Creates a database of file checksums and uses it to eliminate duplicates
SYNOPSIS
dupemap [ options ] [ -d database ] operation path...
DESCRIPTION
dupemap recursively scans each path to find checksums of file contents. Directories are searched through
in no particular order. Its actions depend on whether the -d option is given, and on the operation
parameter, which must be a comma-seperated list of scan, report, delete:
Without -d
dupemap will take action when it sees the same checksum repeated more than once, i.e. it simply finds
duplicates recursively. The action depends on operation:
report Report what files are encountered more than once, printing their names to standard output.
delete[,report]
Delete files that are encountered more than once. Print their names if report is also given.
WARNING: use the report operation first to see what will be deleted.
WARNING: You are advised to make a backup of the target first, e.g. with "cp -al" (for GNU cp) to
create hard links recursively.
With -d
The database argument to -d will denote a database file (see the "DATABASE" section in this manual for
details) to read from or write to. In this mode, the scan operation should be run on one path, followed
by the report or delete operation on another (not the same!) path.
scan Add the checksum of each file to database. This operation must be run initially to create the
database. To start over, you must manually delete the database file(s) (see the "DATABASE"
section).
report Print each file name if its checksum is found in database.
delete[,report]
Delete each file if its checksum is found in database. If report is also present, print the name
of each deleted file.
WARNING: if you run dupemap delete on the same path you just ran dupemap scan on, it will delete
every file! The idea of these options is to scan one path and delete files in a second path.
WARNING: use the report operation first to see what will be deleted.
WARNING: You are advised to make a backup of the target first, e.g. with "cp -al" (for GNU cp) to
create hard links recursively.
OPTIONS
-d database
Use database as an on-disk database to read from or write to. See the "DESCRIPTION" section above
about how this influences the operation of dupemap.
-I file
Reads input files from file in addition to those listed on the command line. If file is "-", read
from standard input. Each line will be interpreted as a file name.
The paths given here will NOT be scanned recursively. Directories will be ignored and symlinks
will be followed.
-m minsize
Ignore files below this size.
-M maxsize
Ignore files above this size.
USAGE
General usage
The easiest operations to understand is when the -d option is not given. To delete all duplicate files
in /tmp/recovered-files, do:
$ dupemap delete /tmp/recovered-files
Often, dupemap scan is run to produce a checksum database of all files in a directory tree. Then dupemap
delete is run on another directory, possibly following dupemap report. For example, to delete all files
in /tmp/recovered-files that already exist in $HOME, do this:
$ dupemap -d homedir.map scan $HOME
$ dupemap -d homedir.map delete,report /tmp/recovered-files
Usage with magicrescue
The main application for dupemap is to take some pain out of performing undelete operations with
magicrescue(1). The reason is that magicrescue will extract every single file of the specified type on
the block device, so undeleting files requires you to find a few files out of hundreds, which can take a
long time if done manually. What we want to do is to only extract the documents that don't exist on the
file system already.
In the following scenario, you have accidentally deleted some important Word documents in Windows. If
this were a real-world scenario, then by all means use The Sleuth Kit. However, magicrescue will work
even when the directory entries were overwritten, i.e. more files were stored in the same folder later.
You boot into Linux and change to a directory with lots of space. Mount the Windows partition,
preferably read-only (especially with NTFS), and create the directories we will use.
$ mount -o ro /dev/hda1 /mnt/windows
$ mkdir healthy_docs rescued_docs
Extract all the healthy Word documents with magicrescue and build a database of their checksums. It may
seem a little redundant to send all the documents through magicrescue first, but the reason is that this
process may modify them (e.g. stripping trailing garbage), and therefore their checksum will not be the
same as the original documents. Also, it will find documents embedded inside other files, such as
uncompressed zip archives or files with the wrong extension.
$ find /mnt/windows -type f \
|magicrescue -I- -r msoffice -d healthy_docs
$ dupemap -d healthy_docs.map scan healthy_docs
$ rm -rf healthy_docs
Now rescue all "msoffice" documents from the block device and get rid of everything that's not a *.doc.
$ magicrescue -Mo -r msoffice -d rescued_docs /dev/hda1 \
|grep -v '\.doc$'|xargs rm -f
Remove all the rescued documents that also appear on the file system, and remove duplicates.
$ dupemap -d healthy_docs.map delete,report rescued_docs
$ dupemap delete,report rescued_docs
The rescued_docs folder should now contain only a few files. This will be the undeleted files and some
documents that were not stored in contiguous blocks (use that defragger ;-)).
Usage with fsck
In this scenario (based on a true story), you have a hard disk that's gone bad. You have managed to dd
about 80% of the contents into the file diskimage, and you have an old backup from a few months ago. The
disk is using reiserfs on Linux.
First, use fsck to make the file system usable again. It will find many nameless files and put them in
lost+found. You need to make sure there is some free space on the disk image, so fsck has something to
work with.
$ cp diskimage diskimage.bak
$ dd if=/dev/zero bs=1M count=2048 >> diskimage
$ reiserfsck --rebuild-tree diskimage
$ mount -o loop diskimage /mnt
$ ls /mnt/lost+found
(tons of files)
Our strategy will be to restore the system with the old backup as a base and merge the two other sets of
files (/mnt/lost+found and /mnt) into the backup after eliminating duplicates. Therefore we create a
checksum database of the directory we have unpacked the backup in.
$ dupemap -d backup.map scan ~/backup
Next, we eliminate all the files from the rescued image that are also present in the backup.
$ dupemap -d backup.map delete,report /mnt
We also want to remove duplicates from lost+found, and we want to get rid of any files that are also
present in the other directories in /mnt.
$ dupemap delete,report /mnt/lost+found
$ ls /mnt|grep -v lost+found|xargs dupemap -d mnt.map scan
$ dupemap -d mnt.map delete,report /mnt/lost+found
This should leave only the files in /mnt that have changed since the last backup or got corrupted.
Particularly, the contents of /mnt/lost+found should now be reduced enough to manually sort through them
(or perhaps use magicsort(1)).
Primitive intrusion detection
You can use dupemap to see what files change on your system. This is one of the more exotic uses, and
it's only included for inspiration.
First, you map the whole file system.
$ dupemap -d old.map scan /
Then you come back a few days/weeks later and run dupemap report. This will give you a view of what has
not changed. To see what has changed, you need a list of the whole file system. You can get this list
along with preparing a new map easily. Both lists need to be sorted to be compared.
$ dupemap -d old.map report /|sort > unchanged_files
$ dupemap -d current.map scan /|sort > current_files
All that's left to do is comparing these files and preparing for next week. This assumes that the dbm
appends the ".db" extension to database files.
$ diff unchanged_files current_files > changed_files
$ mv current.map.db old.map.db
DATABASE
The actual database file(s) written by dupecheck will have some relation to the database argument, but
most implementations append an extension. For example, Berkeley DB names the files database.db, while
Solaris and GDBM creates both a database.dir and database.pag file.
dupecheck depends on a database library for storing the checksums. It currently requires the POSIX-
standardized ndbm library, which must be present on XSI-compliant UNIXes. Implementations are not
required to handle hash key collisions, and a failure to do that could make dupecheck delete too many
files. I haven't heard of such an implementation, though.
The current checksum algorithm is the file's CRC32 combined with its size. Both values are stored in
native byte order, and because of varying type sizes the database is not portable across architectures,
compilers and operating systems.
SEE ALSO
magicrescue(1), weeder(1)
This tool does the same thing weeder does, except that weeder cannot seem to handle many files without
crashing, and it has no largefile support.
BUGS
There is a tiny chance that two different files can have the same checksum and size. The probability of
this happening is around 1 to 10^14, and since dupemap is part of the Magic Rescue package, which deals
with disaster recovery, that chance becomes an insignificant part of the game. You should consider this
if you apply dupemap to other applications, especially if they are security-related (see next paragraph).
It is possible to craft a file to have a known CRC32. You need to keep this in mind if you use dupemap
on untrusted data. A solution to this could be to implement an option for using MD5 checksums instead.
AUTHOR
Jonas Jensen <jbj@knef.dk>
LATEST VERSION
This tool is part of Magic Rescue. You can find the latest version at
<https://github.com/jbj/magicrescue>
1.1.10 2018-10-16 DUPEMAP(1)