![]() ![]() However, RNR allows disabling the use of the on-disk database, either by a command line option ( -n, -nodb) or using the No DB button. This is why RNR defaults to using a database to track file operations, even though this slows down the operations considerably when copying or moving many small files. ![]() The developer values file copy / move reliability over speed. This is the RNR File Manager copy dialog:Īlso, every file operation is logged to a database, so in case the power goes off, you will know where the copy process was interrupted, and resume from there. Thanks to this, you can start a very large file copy operation and leave it unattended, and it will not get stuck due to some file that already exists, or due to an error that can be skipped. To achieve this goal, RNR uses completely non-interactive copy / move operations, allowing the user to set actions beforehand in case there are conflicts (overwrite, skip, rename existing and rename copy), while also skipping all errors. RNR features fast file and directory browser with Vim-style keys and powerful fuzzy filter, the ability to browse archives as if they were directories, along with many other features, having its main goal to " be the most robust file copier in existence". However, if you get errors on non-Linux systems, the developer mentions that they won't consider them as bugs. The text-based application is officially supported only on Linux, but it may work on macOS, FreeBSD or Cygwin. ![]() ![]() RNR File Manager (RNR's Not Ranger) is a new terminal file manager for Linux that combines features of Midnight Commander and Ranger in order to provide the best of both worlds, while also offering a robust file copier. ![]()
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