As we all know, file copying on Linux has long relied on the classic cp command, which remains reliable but offers little feedback and limited control over long or complex operations.

To address this, a promising new Rust-based command-line tool called cpx emerge, designed as an alternative rather than a replacement, that approaches the same task with a focus on performance, visibility, and configurability.

It targets scenarios where large directory trees, interrupted transfers, or the need for detailed progress reporting make standard tools less convenient to use. The project is currently Linux-only and leverages modern kernel features to improve copy throughput and reliability.

  • artifex@piefed.social
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    10 hours ago

    So many things from the Modern UNIX tools repo!

    My daily drivers are: lsd instead of ls - colors, icons, tree-view, more formatting, dust instead of du for better formatting, jq for viewing JSON, gtop instead of top just because it’s so pretty

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    (I’ve aliased most of these, but there are a few toolchains that have broken)