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Rclone is a tool for managing material in cloud services. In DDC, it is primarily a way of transferring content out of a donor's cloud storage into DDC's digital storage.

Setting up Rclone

Rclone should already be installed in BitCurator but if you are transferring content that you need to log in to access, you'll need to do some additional set up to connect to cloud storage service. This will have to be repeated for each cloud storage service and possibly reconnected if some time has passed between the last time you've used Rclone. Below lists the general set up process with sections for specific cloud storage providers used in practice so far. If there is a cloud storage provider you need to access that's not covered below, please contact the digital archivist.

General setup

This general setup will work with DropBox

  1. Open the terminal on the left-hand side of the BitCurator desktop
  2. Type "rclone config" and hit enter

  3. Type "new" or "n" for new remote, i.e. new cloud service
  4. Enter a name for the cloud serve (e.g. dropbox)
  5. Choose the number that is listed in the terminal for cloud service you named in step 4. (e.g. DropBox is 10)
  6. Hit enter for questions about client id and client secret to accept the defaults
  7. Type "no" and hit enter for the advanced config question
  8. Type "y" and hit enter for the auto config option
  9. A link will appear in the terminal if it doesn't open in a browser, highlight and copy it. Paste the link into your internet browser.
  10. On the page that pops up, choose the option to authorize Rclone access
  11. Return to the terminal, if you see "got code" as part of the output above, type "y" for "this is ok" and hit enter
  12. Type "q" and hit enter to quit if done setting up cloud connections.

OneDrive or Sharepoint

  1. Open the terminal on the left-hand side of the BitCurator desktop
  2. Type "rclone config" and hit enter

  3. Type "new" or "n" for new remote, i.e. new cloud service
  4. Enter a name for the cloud serve (e.g. onedrive)
  5. Choose the number that is listed in the terminal for cloud service you named in step 4. (e.g. OneDrive is 26)
  6. Hit enter for questions about client id and client secret to accept the defaults
  7. Choose a national cloud region for OneDrive, most likely, 1 - "Microsoft Cloud Global"
  8. Type "no" and hit enter for the advanced config question
  9. Type "y" and hit enter for the auto config option
  10. A link will appear in the terminal if it doesn't open in a browser, highlight and copy it. Paste the link into your internet browser.
  11. Return to the terminal, if you see "got code" as part of the output above.
  12. Type of connection, enter a number for the type of OneDrive/Sharepoint connection. 1 for basic OneDrive Personal or Business, you will get your personal one drive account and anything shared with you. 2 for sharepoint root will give you sharepoints that are open to you. 3 you can choose enter the site url for a specific sharepoint site, this is the easiest option to find exactly what you want.
  13. If you chose option 2, select the sharepoint from the list that you want to access. If you chose option 3, enter the url for the sharepoint site.
  14. If the drive you selected looks good, type "y" for "this is ok" and hit enter
  15. You will then get a summary of the configuration, if everything looks ok, type "y" for "this is ok" and hit enter
  16. Type "q" and hit enter to quit if done setting up cloud connections.

Google Drive

  1. Open the terminal on the left-hand side of the BitCurator desktop
  2. Type "rclone config" and hit enter

  3. Type "new" or "n" for new remote, i.e. new cloud service
  4. Enter a name for the cloud serve (e.g. googledrive)
  5. Choose the number that is listed in the terminal for cloud service you named in step 4. (e.g. Google Drive is 15)
  6. For application client id, the digital archivist has set this up. Contact them for access to the ID. Copy and paste that here and hit enter
  7. The OAuth Client Secret, follow the same steps as 6 which will be found in the same place as the client ID.
  8. For "Scope that rclone should use when requesting access from drive" choose 2 - "Read-only access to file metadata and file contents."
  9. Press enter for ID of root folder
  10. Press enter for Service Account Credentials JSON file path
  11. Type "no" and hit enter for the advanced config question
  12. "y" and hit enter for the auto config option
  13. A link will appear in the terminal if it doesn't open in a browser, highlight and copy it. Paste the link into your internet browser.
  14. On the page that pops up, choose the option to authorize Rclone access
  15. Configure this as a shared drive - (still need to check on this)
  16. Return to the terminal, if you see "got code" as part of the output above, type "y" for "this is ok" and hit enter
  17. Type "q" and hit enter to quit if done setting up cloud connections.

Using Rclone

In general we use Rclone for transferring files from cloud services. When possible we also use it to confirm the fixity of the files downloaded.

Copying files

The command to copy files is fairly simple, you specify that you want to copy the files, enter their location, and then their destination. For instance:

rclone copy [name of remote as set up above]:[name_of_folder_or_file (if spaces in name, you can put quotation marks around this after the colon)] [/path/to/destination/folder, i.e. processing folder, etc.]

Here is an example:

rclone copy dropbox:"Robert Birgeneau INT" /media/sf_BCShared01/processing/2022_061acc 

Extracting checksums

Some cloud providers have checksums stored in their system that you can extract and facilitate fixity checking. Some are unique to their system or some can be more standard types. Here is a general layout of the command to extract the checksums into a text file:

rclone hashsum [type of checksum] [remote source]:"folder_name or file" (same as when copying) --output-file /path/to/output/file.txt 

Here is an example for dropbox:

rclone hashsum dropbox dropbox:"Robert Birgeneau INT" /media/sf_BCShared01/processing/2022_061acc/submissionDocumentation/dropbox_checksums.txt

Here is an example for OneDrive or SharePoint:

rclone hashsum quickxor onedrive:"Robert Birgeneau INT" /media/sf_BCShared01/processing/2022_061acc/submissionDocumentation/onedrive_checksums.txt

Here is an example for Google Drive, because you can reuse md5 checksums in Archivematica, we have named the checksum file in the convention that it will recognize:

rclone hashsum md5 googledrive:"Robert Birgeneau INT" /media/sf_BCShared01/processing/2022_061acc/submissionDocumentation/checksum.md5

Confirming fixity

In order to confirm fixity, there are number of options:

Confirm the using the checksums you extracted in the steps above:

rclone checksum [checksum type] /path/to/checksum/file.txt /path/to/local_directory/of/copied_file

Confirm without local checksums/those that rclone generates:

rclone check [remote name]:[source folder] /path/to/local_copy/of/source_folder

 

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