Found too yesterday on F-Droid. Absoutley glorious, even runs perfectly smooth on a almost 10 year old Galaxy S6 Edge.
Found too yesterday on F-Droid. Absoutley glorious, even runs perfectly smooth on a almost 10 year old Galaxy S6 Edge.
This was my exact setup for years. I had a J3455 NUC and increased its memory to 16GB and installed Proxmox. It worked really well.
I think both of these are fine. Certainly way better than most App icons on Android.
Same things make us laugh, make us cry.
Like it says in the book… We are both blessed and cursed.
I don’t know if these are uncommon but I have a few cool usecases besides the regular 1:1 folder syncing, maybe someone else finds them useful.
Also you should know that the way I have all of this setup is that I have a container that hosts a bunch of SMB Network drives and a syncthing container that stores all of the fodlers on that drive. Having them also easily accessible through smb is great when I just wanna quickly copy something or back the folders up.
So here are some of my maybe unorthodoz usecases :
I also used to have a setup that would sync Minecraft Bedrock and Stardew Valley saves between devices (where Windows and Android saves are compatible) but Android 11 introduced a stupid restriction that prevents synching from accessing the the saves are located on Android.
ok that is wild! thanks!
Ok thanks, it then seems like some Software thing. Are your clock speeds also higher under linux when idle?
I got it working but curiously enough the server needed to add the clients as introducers. Then it worked and I got a message on all devices that a new folder has been added and showing a UI that easily allowed me to add the folder.
maybe, since its mostly XML files maybe I can make a script that scrambles the Device IDs for something new. But I was hoping for a built in solution.
I always added the “server” as an introducer but for some reason the server itsself gets a prompt to add all the folders from the client but the client doesn’t get a list of all the folders the server is sharing which is what I’m after. The introducer does however work by directly giving me a list of all the other devices the “server” has been connected to. I’m using syncthing version 1.20.1 on my server btw.
Thanks, I have tried method you described but in my case it led to a total mess since the device I exported from and imported from then were indistinctable for all other devices causing issues.
But thanks for telling me about syncthing fork! I will definitly check it out!
At least with Java, its the over(ab)use of Reflections and stuff like dependency injection that slows things down to a crawl.