I can't think of any justification for rsync as a tag on a programming site. It's not like we have an ls or scp tag.
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10There are criteria to be checked if a tag merits deletion: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/239190/when-to-burninate/… please read them and update your question with your findings.– reneJan 30, 2019 at 17:33
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4Not that we necessarily should have them, but scp and ls do exist.– Paul RoubJan 30, 2019 at 17:35
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3Rsync also happens to be a network protocol (partial/delta transfers), and has a few basic implementations in some programming languages.– marioJan 30, 2019 at 17:38
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2Is it causing a problem by being here?– jscsJan 30, 2019 at 17:42
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2@JoshCaswell - it seems to attract people who don't know how to use rsync as such, causing OT posts.– tinkJan 30, 2019 at 17:45
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1Misuse of a tag is not enough to justify burninating it. A tag cleanup might be necessary, but [rsync] is a useful tag to have around.– Pika Supports UkraineJan 30, 2019 at 17:57
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1@pizzastaticvoidmain actually, it is. That's what got [internet] removed.– BraiamJan 31, 2019 at 2:10
2 Answers
Writing as an answer as it's my view and it may become longer than a comment.
I think rsync has valid use within programming, as it can be induced programmatically. The difference between ls and rsync within the coding realm is that ls is simply list. When a programmer wants to ask a question about lists, they'll ask something like How do I list using XYZ?.
It's much more generic than rsync. A potentially good question may revolve around the premise of invoking rsync in bash.
For that, I think it's a valid tag - just used out of place too often. Despite the tag's very clear description about how it should be used, it's still getting used in a way that's not desirable.
I'm not sure what flags are available, but maybe something to flag a tooltip if rsync tag is added about proper use to remind the user on proper use.
I'd recommend keeping it and dealing with questions individually. Rsync is a commonly used tool that introduces many subtle complexities for automation, which usually involve kind-of-advanced scripting, which tends to fall into on-topic.
Additionally there are plenty of libraries around invoking rsync (either as a linked object wrapped in another language, or through shell execution) that it's worth treating it case-by-case instead of in a blanket way.
I can think of plenty of off topic examples, but the on-topic ones I can think of from my own adventures using it alone tell me that we should keep it.
I think I've yelled at rsync more than sed, to be honest, but that's purely anecdotal.