Xxcopy

Author: d | 2025-04-25

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I do not have sufficient knowledge of xxcopy to provide you with an answer on how to use that specific tool, but based on our comments exchange, I feel that I can still write you an acceptable answer.Given that you know how to use RoboCopy, my suggestion is to setup everything using RoboCopy and use TeraCopy to verify the files after the copy was done succesfully. Of course, TeraCopy is not the only tool you can use to verify the files, but I have found out that TeraCopy is an extremely powerful and fast tool, especially since you can immediately fix problems after the verify, and once you get to know TeraCopy, you may even switch to it as it can verify files by default after each copy.How to verify files with TeraCopy?In order to verify files with TeraCopy, copy the files with TeraCopy first. If you install TeraCopy, it is as easy as just using a windows copy/paste and let TeraCopy handle the copy. You can also do it manually by dragging the files into TeraCopy and selecting its destination from the GUI.Once you are ready to copy the files with TeraCopy, it will notice that the files already exists and asks you what to do. Select here to Skip all. TeraCopy will now attempt to copy the files, skipping everything (unless new files were added, it will copy those) and mark everything else as skipped.Once done, it allows you to verify/test the current list. This is what you are after. The list will have one checkmark before succesful copied files, and an arrow to the right for skipped files. Once a file is verified, it changes to 2 checkmarks and turns blue.Anything that is not exactly the same will show up as an error.Once the verification is done, remove all succesfully transferred files. Either your list is now empty (all was succesful) or a few errors remain.You can see why they failed and attempt to copy them again, or manaully work with the files. Of creativity to handle. Generally this is caused by file writes that don't use either method, or a share is there a directory or three down that'll allow it to work.for /D %%D in (*.*) do call copydir.cmd %%D[CopyDir.CMD]subst m: %1m:xcopy *.* F:\newlocation\ /s/e/h/q/ysubst m: /delRun that at the top of your directory structure to chop off the top of said directory structure and hopefully make your paths small enough to be visible to everything. Use whatever copy tool you need to use instead of xcopy. answered Jul 23, 2009 at 1:27 sysadmin1138♦sysadmin1138136k19 gold badges183 silver badges306 bronze badges You probably need to use something multithreaded like richcopy it allows you to specify how many threads and how deep to dig per thread. I haven't tried it on 5 million dirs but I've used it on thousands and it worked far better than robocopy. Another copy utility in my bag o tricks is XXcopy. It's not as fast but has some pretty cool directory cloning options. Since it's command line I don't think it's' even going to try to enumerate the structure, just pump it thru. answered Jul 23, 2009 at 0:12 Jim BJim B24.2k4 gold badges38 silver badges61 bronze badges Can you back it up using Windows NTbackup or a similar utility? Typically when I'm moving large amounts of data, I will backup from one device and then restore to another. answered Jul 23, 2009 at 10:08 AaronAaron1,0021 gold badge12 silver badges18 bronze badges Maybe try the good old xcopy answered Jul 22, 2009 at 23:28 SvenSven101k15 gold badges186 silver badges229 bronze badges 2 I've never used it and can't vouch for it, but people say good things about TeraCopy. answered Jul 22, 2009 at 23:54 Carl CCarl C1,0283 gold badges10 silver badges19 bronze badges Not a real answer, more a suggested line of attack: The *nix way to do this would be using tar cf - | tar xvf -, essentially asking tar to create a archive and directly pipe it into tar to extract it (somewhere else). Maybe this can be done on windows in a similar fashion aswell. answered Jul 22, 2009 at 23:59 This may sound like sort of a bad hack, but on several past occasions when copying huge directory structures, I used WinRAR to archive (with compression) to a file and then extract it to the destination drive.Not the most graceful solution, I

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Comments

User9574

I do not have sufficient knowledge of xxcopy to provide you with an answer on how to use that specific tool, but based on our comments exchange, I feel that I can still write you an acceptable answer.Given that you know how to use RoboCopy, my suggestion is to setup everything using RoboCopy and use TeraCopy to verify the files after the copy was done succesfully. Of course, TeraCopy is not the only tool you can use to verify the files, but I have found out that TeraCopy is an extremely powerful and fast tool, especially since you can immediately fix problems after the verify, and once you get to know TeraCopy, you may even switch to it as it can verify files by default after each copy.How to verify files with TeraCopy?In order to verify files with TeraCopy, copy the files with TeraCopy first. If you install TeraCopy, it is as easy as just using a windows copy/paste and let TeraCopy handle the copy. You can also do it manually by dragging the files into TeraCopy and selecting its destination from the GUI.Once you are ready to copy the files with TeraCopy, it will notice that the files already exists and asks you what to do. Select here to Skip all. TeraCopy will now attempt to copy the files, skipping everything (unless new files were added, it will copy those) and mark everything else as skipped.Once done, it allows you to verify/test the current list. This is what you are after. The list will have one checkmark before succesful copied files, and an arrow to the right for skipped files. Once a file is verified, it changes to 2 checkmarks and turns blue.Anything that is not exactly the same will show up as an error.Once the verification is done, remove all succesfully transferred files. Either your list is now empty (all was succesful) or a few errors remain.You can see why they failed and attempt to copy them again, or manaully work with the files.

2025-04-18
User2529

Of creativity to handle. Generally this is caused by file writes that don't use either method, or a share is there a directory or three down that'll allow it to work.for /D %%D in (*.*) do call copydir.cmd %%D[CopyDir.CMD]subst m: %1m:xcopy *.* F:\newlocation\ /s/e/h/q/ysubst m: /delRun that at the top of your directory structure to chop off the top of said directory structure and hopefully make your paths small enough to be visible to everything. Use whatever copy tool you need to use instead of xcopy. answered Jul 23, 2009 at 1:27 sysadmin1138♦sysadmin1138136k19 gold badges183 silver badges306 bronze badges You probably need to use something multithreaded like richcopy it allows you to specify how many threads and how deep to dig per thread. I haven't tried it on 5 million dirs but I've used it on thousands and it worked far better than robocopy. Another copy utility in my bag o tricks is XXcopy. It's not as fast but has some pretty cool directory cloning options. Since it's command line I don't think it's' even going to try to enumerate the structure, just pump it thru. answered Jul 23, 2009 at 0:12 Jim BJim B24.2k4 gold badges38 silver badges61 bronze badges Can you back it up using Windows NTbackup or a similar utility? Typically when I'm moving large amounts of data, I will backup from one device and then restore to another. answered Jul 23, 2009 at 10:08 AaronAaron1,0021 gold badge12 silver badges18 bronze badges Maybe try the good old xcopy answered Jul 22, 2009 at 23:28 SvenSven101k15 gold badges186 silver badges229 bronze badges 2 I've never used it and can't vouch for it, but people say good things about TeraCopy. answered Jul 22, 2009 at 23:54 Carl CCarl C1,0283 gold badges10 silver badges19 bronze badges Not a real answer, more a suggested line of attack: The *nix way to do this would be using tar cf - | tar xvf -, essentially asking tar to create a archive and directly pipe it into tar to extract it (somewhere else). Maybe this can be done on windows in a similar fashion aswell. answered Jul 22, 2009 at 23:59 This may sound like sort of a bad hack, but on several past occasions when copying huge directory structures, I used WinRAR to archive (with compression) to a file and then extract it to the destination drive.Not the most graceful solution, I

2025-04-23

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