The shell access can be restricted to the rsync command though.
#Synkron not copying new folders to destination update
For efficient synchronization of modified files, use rsync -a server:/remote/path /local/path/, but this requires SSH shell access, not just SFTP access. Open Synkron, set name of synchronization, select source directory, keep Master and check Update existing files only, set destination directory for. New features allow you to specify which files should not be copied, and also which. This example would exclude anything containing 'old' in the name. Source and Destination folders can reside anywhere on your network. That's irrelevant for a one-time download but wasteful if you're synchronizing files that have been modified. Just call the Copy-Folder -FromPath inetpub -ToPath new-inetpub -Exclude custerr,history,logs,temp,after you get a hold of all your folders to filter them down. Note that rsync over SSHFS can't take advantage of the delta transfer algorithm, because it's unable to compute partial checksums on the remote side. On the server, SSHFS requires SFTP if the server allows SFTP then you can use SSHFS with it. On the client, SSHFS requires FUSE, which is available on most modern unices. SSHFS is a filesystem that uses SFTP to make a remote filesystem appear as a local filessytem. The easiest way to do complex things over SFTP is to use SSHFS. If the file is present but shorter, the end of the file will be transferred, which makes sense if the local file is the product of an interrupted download.
![synkron not copying new folders to destination synkron not copying new folders to destination](https://i.stack.imgur.com/szPLL.png)
and 'more' outputs that Logfile to the screen with information as to how many new, and changed files copied. File-sync Comparative analysis of two destinations Folder Comparison.
![synkron not copying new folders to destination synkron not copying new folders to destination](https://www.ghacks.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/synkron.jpg)