![]() You can also see if you can find that file’s original upload size and hash, e.g. If you see AES, look at what’s around hex 31F032D, especially after that, although if done right, that should have already been end-of-file. Read the rest of this lightly…ĪES File Format describes the file format, and gives a hex-viewer example. Never mind the expansion, yours did the usual binary-even shrink, but it might still be good to look at Windows’s view and to see if at least the start looks right. Extra stuff can be removed…ĮDIT: Miscounted digits. They like to use binary values… Here, though, you had one seemingly expand from (in hex) 31F032D to A00000 which begs the question of whether you got the start of a good file plus extra stuff at its end (somehow). ![]() We more often see files get truncated to even binary values, and I suspect file system issues. Though has been handling this well (thanks!), I’ve been having the urge to ask whether the wrong-sized file originally mentioned is the same wrong size when viewed from Windows, and also what it looks like when viewed in a hex editor (if you’re into that sort of thing) on either system. I’m hoping this is something simple because this is as close to Crashplan as I could find. Why doesn’t the “purge-broken-files” commandline remove the files in question? And will a subsequent backup attempt put the purged files back with the correct hash?.What happened to cause these warnings to start appearing?.I then went back and did a “purge-broken-files” but all it did was list them again. I ran the Commandline “list-broken-files” and it listed them. 12:21:27 -06 - : remote file is listed as Verified with size 10485760 but should be 52364077, please verify the sha256 hash “SlrV6tpAozmL7zKZjfMlI1Ntakoziu/0FLDgIvcdYXo=”.Just recently I started getting warnings like this: ![]() I’m on Xubuntu Linux 18.04 with Duplicati 2.0.4.15_canary_.Īfter a little adjustment here and there, I got Duplicati backing up my Linux files to a Windows 10 share. New user of Duplicati and former user of CrashPlan.
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