Then take down user/application access to the source, do one final pass while no-one is using the source so that everything is fully synchronized, and then cut over to the target system. One full copy and several incremental synchronizing passes. You mentioned reading something to the contrary possibly what you read is incomplete or incorrect.Ģ.) Normally, with EMCopy (and Robocopy, and many similar tools) you run several passes. EMCopy will only overwrite on the target if the file can be copied. You mentioned reading that it stopped possibly what you read did not mention the 'continue' option.ġ.b) If a file is locked on the source, it cannot be copied to the target, so EMCopy leaves any previously-copied version on the target alone. In other words, whether it stops or continues on an error is entirely up to whoever wrote the EMCopy command line. If you leave out the '/c' it will not continue, but stop on the first (unrecoverable after retries) error. Answers with reference to your question numbering:ġ.a) If your EMCopy command contains the '/c' option, EMCopy will continue after any error (after retries) with the remaining files.
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