Description Usage Arguments Value Overwrite/Update Implementation See Also
View source: R/boxr_dir_verbs.R
box_fetch()
download the contents of a Box folder to a local directory
box_push()
upload the contents of a local directory to a Box folder
Files present in the origin but not the destination will be copied over.
Behavior when a file exists in both depends on the arguments supplied.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 |
dir_id |
|
local_dir |
|
recursive |
|
overwrite |
|
delete |
|
ignore_dots |
|
Object with S3 class boxr_dir_wide_operation_result
.
In the interests of preventing mishaps, overwrite
is by default set
to FALSE
, which means that files which exist in the destination,
but which are out of date, are not modified.
Setting overwrite
to TRUE
is likely to produce expected
behavior for most users.
This is a conservative precaution to prevent users unexpectedly overwriting their files, and may change as a default in later releases.
However, files at Box are versioned, and most operating systems have file recovery features (e.g. 'Trash' (Ubuntu/Debian/OSX), or 'Recycle Bin' (Windows)), so unintended modification of files will be revertible for most users.
At the time of writing, the Box API allows for only one file at a time to be uploaded/downloaded. As a result, boxr recursively scans the directory tree, uploading/downloading files in loops. Because the Box API can send, but not accept, gzipped files, downloading tends to be faster than uploading.
box_fetch()
/box_push()
rely on the internal function
box_dir_diff()
to determine how to process individual files
(i.e. which to update, which to leave as is, etc.). See its help page for
details.
box_dl()
/box_ul()
for single file
operations, box_dir_diff()
determines how files should be processed
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.