chkbit is a tool that ensures the safety of your files by checking if their data integrity remains intact over time, especially during transfers and backups. It helps detect issues like disk damage, filesystem errors, and malware interference.
-
On your Disk: chkbit starts by creating checksums for each folder on your main disk. It alerts you to potential problems such as damage on the disk, filesystem errors, and malware attacks that could alter your files.
-
On your Backup: Regardless of your storage media, chkbit stores indexes in hidden files alongside your data during backups. When you run chkbit on your backup, it verifies that every byte was accurately transferred. If issues like bitrot/data degradation occur, chkbit helps identify damaged files, alerting you to replace them with other backups.
-
For Data in the Cloud: chkbit is useful for cloud-stored data, alerting you to any changes introduced by cloud providers like video re-encoding or image compression. It ensures your files remain unchanged in the cloud.
Remember to always maintain multiple backups for comprehensive data protection.
You can download the official chkbit binaries from the releases page and place it in your PATH
.
For macOS and Linux it can also be installed via Homebrew:
brew install chkbit
Building from the source requires Go.
- Either install it directly
go install github.com/laktak/chkbit/v5/cmd/chkbit@latest
- or clone and build
git clone https://github.com/laktak/chkbit
chkbit/scripts/build
# binary:
ls -l chkbit/chkbit
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 [<paths> ...] [flags]
Arguments:
[<paths> ...] directories to check
Flags:
-h, --help Show context-sensitive help.
-H, --tips Show tips.
-c, --check check mode: chkbit will verify files in readonly mode (default mode)
-u, --update update mode: add and update indices
-a, --add-only add mode: only add new files, do not check existing (quicker)
-i, --show-ignored-only show-ignored mode: only show ignored files
-m, --show-missing show missing files/directories
-d, --include-dot include dot files
--force force update of damaged items (advanced usage only)
-S, --skip-symlinks do not follow symlinks
-R, --no-recurse do not recurse into subdirectories
-D, --no-dir-in-index do not track directories in the index
-l, --log-file=STRING write to a logfile if specified
--log-verbose verbose logging
--algo="blake3" hash algorithm: md5, sha512, blake3 (default: blake3)
--index-name=".chkbit" filename where chkbit stores its hashes, needs to start with '.' (default: .chkbit)
--ignore-name=".chkbitignore" filename that chkbit reads its ignore list from, needs to start with '.' (default: .chkbitignore)
-w, --workers=5 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
-V, --version show version information
$ chkbit -H
.chkbitignore rules:
each line should contain exactly one name
you may use Unix shell-style wildcards (see README)
lines starting with '#' are skipped
lines starting with '/' are only applied to the current directory
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
del: file/directory removed
ign: ignored (see .chkbitignore)
EXC: exception/panic
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.
chkbit is designed to detect "damage". To repair your files you need to think ahead:
- backup regularly
- run chkbit before each backup
- run chkbit after a backup on the backup media (readonly)
- in case of any issues, restore from a checked backup medium.
Add a .chkbitignore
file containing the names of the files/directories you wish to ignore
- each line should contain exactly one name
- you may use Unix shell-style wildcards
*
matches everything?
matches any single character[seq]
matches any character in seq[!seq]
matches any character not in seq
- lines starting with
#
are skipped - lines starting with
/
are only applied to the current directory - you can use
path/sub/name
to ignore a file/directory in a sub path - hidden files (starting with a
.
) are ignored by default
chkbit is can also be used in other Go programs.
go get github.com/laktak/chkbit/v5
For more information see the documentation on pkg.go.dev.
You would typically run it only on content that you keep for a long time (e.g. your pictures, music, videos).
The advantage of the .chkbit files is that
- when you make a backup the index is also backed up, a central index would need to be backed up separately
- if the index is just a play file it can't be damaged as easily
- if it is damaged, only one directory is affected
- if you split up your files over backups, the relevant index is alwys included
- when updating an index, only the index in one directory is affected, reducing the risk of errors
- also useful, when you move a directory the index moves with it
The disadvantage is obviously that you get hidden .chkbit
files in your content folders.
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.
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).
List them with
find . -name .chkbit
and add -delete
to delete.
On Linux/macOS you can try:
Create test and set the modified time:
$ echo foo1 > test; touch -t 201501010000 test
$ chkbit -u .
new ./test
Processed 1 file.
- 0:00:00 elapsed
- 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.
- 0:00:00 elapsed
- 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.
- 0:00:00 elapsed
- 173.93 files/second
- 0.00 MB/second
chkbit detected damage in these files:
./test
error: detected 1 file with damage!
DMG
indicates damage.