cksfv − tests and creates simple file verification (SFV) listings
cksfv [-bciqrLR] [-C dir] [-f file] [-g path] [file ...]
cksfv is a tool for verifying CRC32 checksums of files. CRC32 checksums are used to verify that files are not corrupted. The algorithm is cryptographically crippled so it can not be used for security purposes. md5sum (1) or sha1sum (1) are much better tools for checksuming files. cksfv should only be used for compatibility with other systems.
cksfv has two operation modes: checksum creation and checksum verification
In checksum creation mode cksfv outputs CRC32 checksums of files to to stdout, normally redirected to an .sfv file.
In checksum verification mode cksfv reads filenames from an sfv file, and compares the recorded checksum values against recomputed checksums of files.
These options are available
−b |
Strip dirnames from filenames that are checksumed. loads the files from original positions, but prints only basenames to catalogue in sfv file. | ||
−c |
Use stdout for printing progress and final resolution (files OK or some errors detected). This is useful for external programs analysing output of cksfv. This also forces fflushes on the output when needed. | ||
−C dir |
Change current directory before proceeding with a verification operation. This option is mostly obsoleted with -g option. Earlier this was used to verify checksums in a different directory: cksfv -C foo -f foo/bar.sfv |
−f file
Verify checksums in the sfv file
−g path
Go to the path name directory and verify checksums in the sfv file
−i |
Ignore case in filenames. This is used in the checksum verification mode. | ||
−L |
Follow symlinks when recursing subdirectories. This option can be used with the -r and -R options. | ||
−q |
Enable QUIET mode (instead of verbose mode), only error messages are printed | ||
−v |
Enable VERBOSE mode, this is the default mode | ||
−r |
recurse directories and check the .sfv files in each. Symlinks are not followed by default. This option cannot be used with -f and -g options. | ||
−R |
recurse directories and read checksum for each file. Symlinks are not followed by default. |
Verify checksums
of files listed in ’foo/files.sfv’:
cksfv -g foo/files.sfv
Create checksums
for a set of files:
cksfv *.gz > files.sfv
Verify checksums
of case-insensitive filenames listed in
’files.sfv’.
This is sometimes useful with files created by operating
systems
that have case-insensitive filesystem names.
cksfv -i -g files.sfv
Check checksums
of files ’foo’ and ’bar’ listed in
’files.sfv’:
cksfv -g files.sfv foo bar
Create checksums
of files matching /foo/bar/* and strip dirnames away:
cksfv -b /foo/bar/* > files.sfv
Recursively scan
/foo/bar and verify each .sfv file:
cksfv -C /foo/bar -r
Same as
previous, but starting from the current working directory
and also following symlinks during recursion:
cksfv -r -L
basename(1) dirname(1) md5sum(1) sha1sum(1)
This manual page was originally written by Stefan Alfredsson <[email protected]>. It was later modified by Heikki Orsila <[email protected]> and Durk van Veen <[email protected]>.