chkbit
chkbit is a lightweight tool to check the data integrity of your files. It allows you to verify that the data has not changed since you put it there and that it is still the same when you move it somewhere else.
On your Disk
chkbit starts with your primary disk. It creates checksums for each folder that will follow your data onto your backups.
Even though your filesystems should have built in checksums, it is usually not trivial to take them onto another media.
On your backup
No matter what storage media or filesystem you use, chkbit stores its indexes in hidden files that are backed up together with your data.
When you run chkbit-verify on your backup media you can make sure that every byte was correctly transferred.
If your backup media fails or experiences bitrot/data degradation, chkbit allows you to discover what files were damaged and need to be replaced by other backups.
Data in the Cloud
Some cloud providers re-encode your videos or compress your images to save space. chkbit will alert you of any changes.
Installation
The easiest way to install python CLI tools is with pipx.
pipx install chkbit
You can also use pip:
pip install --user chkbit
NOTE version 3 now uses the blake3 hash algorithm by default as it is not only better but also faster than md5.
Usage
Run chkbit -u PATH
to create/update the chkbit index.
chkbit will
- create a
.chkbit
index in every subdirectory of the path it was given. - update the index with blake3 (see --algo) hashes for every file.
- report damage for files that failed the integrity check since the last run (check the exit status).
Run chkbit PATH
to verify only.
usage: chkbit [-h] [-u] [--algo ALGO] [-f] [-s] [--index-name NAME] [--ignore-name NAME] [-w N] [--plain] [-q] [-v] [PATH ...]
Checks the data integrity of your files. See https://github.com/laktak/chkbit-py
positional arguments:
PATH directories to check
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-u, --update update indices (without this chkbit will verify files in readonly mode)
--algo ALGO hash algorithm: md5, sha512, blake3 (default: blake3)
-f, --force force update of damaged items
-s, --skip-symlinks do not follow symlinks
--index-name NAME filename where chkbit stores its hashes (default: .chkbit)
--ignore-name NAME filename that chkbit reads its ignore list from (default: .chkbitignore)
-w N, --workers N number of workers to use (default: 5)
--plain show plain status instead of being fancy
-q, --quiet quiet, don't show progress/information
-v, --verbose verbose output
Status codes:
DMG: error, data damage detected
EIX: error, index damaged
old: warning, file replaced by an older version
new: new file
upd: file updated
ok : check ok
skp: skipped (see .chkbitignore)
EXC: internal exception
chkbit is set to use only 5 workers by default so it will not slow your system to a crawl. You can specify a higher number to make it a lot faster if the IO throughput can also keep up.
Repair
chkbit cannot repair damage, its job is simply to detect it.
You should
- backup regularly.
- run chkbit before each backup.
- check for damage on the backup media.
- in case of damage restore from a checked backup.
Ignore files
Add a .chkbitignore
file containing the names of the files/directories you wish to ignore
- each line should contain exactly one name
- lines starting with
#
are skipped - you may use Unix shell-style wildcards
- at the moment does not allow to match files in subdirectories (PR welcome)
FAQ
Should I run chkbit
on my whole drive?
You would typically run it only on content that you keep for a long time (e.g. your pictures, music, videos).
Why is chkbit placing the index in .chkbit
files (vs a database)?
The advantage of the .chkbit files is that
- when you move a directory the index moves with it
- when you make a backup the index is also backed up
The disadvantage is obviously that you get hidden .chkbit
files in your content folders.
How does chkbit work?
chkbit operates on files.
When run for the first time it records a hash of the file contents as well as the file modification time.
When you run it again it first checks the modification time,
- if the time changed (because you made an edit) it records a new hash.
- otherwise it will compare the current hash to the recorded value and report an error if they do not match.
I wish to use a stronger hash algorithm
chkbit now uses blake3 by default. You can also specify --algo sha512
or --algo md5
.
Note that existing index files will use the hash that they were created with. If you wish to update all hashes you need to delete your existing indexes first. A conversion mode may be added later (PR welcome).
How can I delete the index files?
List them with
find . -name .chkbit
and add -delete
to delete.
Can I test if chkbit is working correctly?
On Linux/OS X you can try:
Create test and set the modified time:
$ echo foo1 > test; touch -t 201501010000 test
$ chkbit -u .
new ./test
Processed 1 file.
- 192.31 files/second
- 0.00 MB/second
- 1 directory was updated
- 1 file hash was added
- 0 file hashes were updated
new
indicates a new file was added.
Now update test with a new modified:
$ echo foo2 > test; touch -t 201501010001 test # update test & modified
$ chkbit -u .
upd ./test
Processed 1 file.
- 191.61 files/second
- 0.00 MB/second
- 1 directory was updated
- 0 file hashes were added
- 1 file hash was updated
upd
indicates the file was updated.
Now update test with the same modified to simulate damage:
$ echo foo3 > test; touch -t 201501010001 test
$ chkbit -u .
DMG ./test
Processed 1 file.
- 173.93 files/second
- 0.00 MB/second
chkbit detected damage in these files:
./test
error: detected 1 file with damage!
DMG
indicates damage.
Development
With pipenv (install with pipx install pipenv
):
# setup
pipenv install
# run chkbit
pipenv run python3 -m cli.main
To build a source distribution package from pyproject.toml
pipx run build
You can then install your own package with
pipx install dist/chkbit-*.tar.gz