Copy files without overwrite

风流意气都作罢 提交于 2019-11-27 06:08:17
For %F In ("C:\From\*.*") Do If Not Exist "C:\To\%~nxF" Copy "%F" "C:\To\%~nxF"
Dr. belisarius

Robocopy, or "Robust File Copy", is a command-line directory replication command. It has been available as part of the Windows Resource Kit starting with Windows NT 4.0, and was introduced as a standard feature of Windows Vista, Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008.

   robocopy c:\Sourcepath c:\Destpath /E /XC /XN /XO

To elaborate (using Hydrargyrum, HailGallaxar and Andy Schmidt answers):

  • /E makes Robocopy recursively copy subdirectories, including empty ones.
  • /XC excludes existing files with the same timestamp, but different file sizes. Robocopy normally overwrites those.
  • /XN excludes existing files newer than the copy in the destination directory. Robocopy normally overwrites those.
  • /XO excludes existing files older than the copy in the destination directory. Robocopy normally overwrites those.

With the Changed, Older, and Newer classes excluded, Robocopy does exactly what the original poster wants - without needing to load a scripting environment.

References: Technet, Wikipedia
Download from: Microsoft Download Link (Link last verified on Mar 30, 2016)

Belisarius' solution is good.

To elaborate on that slightly terse answer:

  • /E makes Robocopy recursively copy subdirectories, including empty ones.
  • /XC excludes existing files with the same timestamp, but different file sizes. Robocopy normally overwrites those.
  • /XN excludes existing files newer than the copy in the source directory. Robocopy normally overwrites those.
  • /XO excludes existing files older than the copy in the source directory. Robocopy normally overwrites those.

With the Changed, Older, and Newer classes excluded, Robocopy does exactly what the original poster wants - without needing to load a scripting environment.

sachin11

You can try this:

echo n | copy /-y <SOURCE> <DESTINATION>

-y simply prompts before overwriting and we can pipe n to all those questions. So this would in essence just copy non-existing files. :)

Here it is in batch file form:

@echo off
set source=%1
set dest=%2
for %%f in (%source%\*) do if not exist "%dest%\%%~nxf" copy "%%f" "%dest%\%%~nxf"
HailGallaxar

I just want to clarify something from my own testing.

@Hydrargyrum wrote:

  • /XN excludes existing files newer than the copy in the source directory. Robocopy normally overwrites those.
  • /XO excludes existing files older than the copy in the source directory. Robocopy normally overwrites those.

This is actually backwards. XN does "eXclude Newer" files but it excludes files that are newer than the copy in the destination directory. XO does "eXclude Older", but it excludes files that are older than the copy in the destination directory.

Of course do your own testing as always.

Adam Ruth

There is an odd way to do this with xcopy:

echo nnnnnnnnnnn | xcopy /-y source target

Just include as many n's as files you're copying, and it will answer n to all of the overwrite questions.

robocopy src dst /MIR /XX

/XX : eXclude "eXtra" files and dirs (present in destination but not source). This will prevent any deletions from the destination. (this is the default)

Robocopy can be downloaded here for systems where it is not installed already. (I.e. Windows Server 2003.)

http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?displaylang=en&id=17657 (no reboot required for installation)

Remember to set your path to the robocopy exe. You do this by right clicking "my computer"> properties>advanced>"Environment Variables", then find the path system variable and add this to the end: ";C:\Program Files\Windows Resource Kits\Tools" or wherever you installed it. Make sure to leave the path variable strings that are already there and just append the addtional path.

once the path is set, you can run the command that belisarius suggests. It works great.

It won't let me comment directly on the incorrect messages - but let me just warn everyone, that the definition of the /XN and /XO options are REVERSED compared to what has been posted in previous messages.

The Exclude Older/Newer files option is consistent with the information displayed in RoboCopy's logging: RoboCopy will iterate through the SOURCE and then report whether each file in the SOURCE is "OLDER" or "NEWER" than the file in the destination.

Consequently, /XO will exclude OLDER SOURCE files (which is intuitive), not "older than the source" as had been claimed here.

If you want to copy only new or changed source files, but avoid replacing more recent destination files, then /XO is the correct option to use.

A simple approach would be to use the /MIR option, to mirror the two directories. Basically it will copy only the new files to destination. In next comand replace source and destination with the paths to your folders, the script will search for any file with any extensions.

robocopy <source directory> <destination directory> *.* /MIR

This is what has worked for me. I use this to "add" files over to the other drive, with no overwrites.

Batch file: robocopy-missingfiles.bat

@echo off
echo Copying 
echo      "%1"
echo   to "%2"
echo.
echo Press Cntr+C to abort
Pause
echo.
@echo on
robocopy %1 %2 /Xo /XN /XC /J /SL /S /MT:8 /R:1 /W:1 /V /DCOPY:DAT /ETA /COPY:DATO /FFT /A-:SH /XD $RECYCLE.BIN "System Volume Information"

Example:

robocopy-missingfiles.bat f:\Working-folder\ E:\Backup-folder\

Do test before implementation.

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