How To Install bdsync on CentOS 8

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bdsync is Remote sync for block devices

Introduction

In this tutorial we learn how to install bdsync on CentOS 8.

What is bdsync

Bdsync can be used to synchronize block devices over a network. It generates a “binary patchfile” in an efficient way by comparing MD5 checksums of 32k blocks of the local block device LOCDEV and the remote block device REMDEV. This binary patchfile can be sent to the remote machine and applied to its block device DSTDEV, after which the local blockdev LOCDEV and the remote block device REMDEV are synchronized. bdsync was built to do the only thing rsync isn’t able to do block devices.

We can use yum or dnf to install bdsync on CentOS 8. In this tutorial we discuss both methods but you only need to choose one of method to install bdsync.

Install bdsync on CentOS 8 Using dnf

Update yum database with dnf using the following command.

sudo dnf makecache --refresh

The output should look something like this:

CentOS Linux 8 - AppStream                                       43 kB/s | 4.3 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - BaseOS                                          65 kB/s | 3.9 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - ContinuousRelease                               43 kB/s | 3.0 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - Extras                                          23 kB/s | 1.5 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - FastTrack                                       40 kB/s | 3.0 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - HighAvailability                                36 kB/s | 3.9 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - Plus                                            24 kB/s | 1.5 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - PowerTools                                      50 kB/s | 4.3 kB     00:00    
Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux Modular 8 - x86_64           13 kB/s | 9.2 kB     00:00    
Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux 8 - x86_64                   24 kB/s | 8.5 kB     00:00    
Metadata cache created.

After updating yum database, We can install bdsync using dnf by running the following command:

sudo dnf -y install bdsync

Install bdsync on CentOS 8 Using yum

Update yum database with yum using the following command.

sudo yum makecache --refresh

The output should look something like this:

CentOS Linux 8 - AppStream                                       43 kB/s | 4.3 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - BaseOS                                          65 kB/s | 3.9 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - ContinuousRelease                               43 kB/s | 3.0 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - Extras                                          23 kB/s | 1.5 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - FastTrack                                       40 kB/s | 3.0 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - HighAvailability                                36 kB/s | 3.9 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - Plus                                            24 kB/s | 1.5 kB     00:00    
CentOS Linux 8 - PowerTools                                      50 kB/s | 4.3 kB     00:00    
Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux Modular 8 - x86_64           13 kB/s | 9.2 kB     00:00    
Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux 8 - x86_64                   24 kB/s | 8.5 kB     00:00    
Metadata cache created.

After updating yum database, We can install bdsync using yum by running the following command:

sudo yum -y install bdsync

How To Uninstall bdsync on CentOS 8

To uninstall only the bdsync package we can use the following command:

sudo dnf remove bdsync

bdsync Package Contents on CentOS 8

/usr/bin/bdsync
/usr/lib/.build-id
/usr/lib/.build-id/b1
/usr/lib/.build-id/b1/2e4305f507b19e23fa08e42dc98575ec1c06a4
/usr/share/doc/bdsync
/usr/share/doc/bdsync/COPYING
/usr/share/doc/bdsync/README.md
/usr/share/man/man1/bdsync.1.gz

References

Summary

In this tutorial we learn how to install bdsync on CentOS 8 using yum and dnf.

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