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660 lines
26 KiB
Groff
660 lines
26 KiB
Groff
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.TH "SYNCTHING-FAQ" "7" "Oct 17, 2021" "v1" "Syncthing"
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.SH NAME
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syncthing-faq \- Frequently Asked Questions
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.INDENT 0.0
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%General\fP
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.INDENT 2.0
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%What is Syncthing?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Is it “syncthing”, “Syncthing” or “SyncThing”?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%What things are synced?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Is synchronization fast?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%How does Syncthing differ from BitTorrent/Resilio Sync?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Why is there no iOS client?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Should I keep my device IDs secret?\fP
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.UNINDENT
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Troubleshooting\fP
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.INDENT 2.0
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Where are the Syncthing logs?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Why is the sync so slow?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Why does it use so much CPU?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Why is the setup more complicated than BitTorrent/Resilio Sync?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Why do I get “Host check error” in the GUI/API?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%My Syncthing database is corrupt\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Why do I see Syncthing twice in task manager?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%How can I view the history of changes?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Does the audit log contain every change?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Why does Syncthing connect to this unknown/suspicious address?\fP
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.UNINDENT
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Usage\fP
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.INDENT 2.0
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%What if there is a conflict?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%How do I serve a folder from a read only filesystem?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%I really hate the .stfolder directory, can I remove it?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Am I able to nest shared folders in Syncthing?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%How do I rename/move a synced folder?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%How do I configure multiple users on a single machine?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Does Syncthing support syncing between folders on the same system?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%When I do have two distinct Syncthing\-managed folders on two hosts, how does Syncthing handle moving files between them?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Is Syncthing my ideal backup application?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%How can I exclude files with brackets ([]) in the name?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%How do I access the web GUI from another computer?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%I don’t like the GUI or the theme. Can it be changed?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%How do I upgrade Syncthing?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%Where do I find the latest release?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%How do I run Syncthing as a daemon process on Linux?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%How do I increase the inotify limit to get my filesystem watcher to work?\fP
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.IP \(bu 2
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\fI\%How do I reset the GUI password?\fP
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.UNINDENT
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.UNINDENT
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.SH GENERAL
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.SS What is Syncthing?
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.sp
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Syncthing is an application that lets you synchronize your files across multiple
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devices. This means the creation, modification or deletion of files on one
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machine will automatically be replicated to your other devices. We believe your
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data is your data alone and you deserve to choose where it is stored. Therefore
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Syncthing does not upload your data to the cloud but exchanges your data across
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your machines as soon as they are online at the same time.
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.SS Is it “syncthing”, “Syncthing” or “SyncThing”?
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.sp
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It’s \fBSyncthing\fP, although the command and source repository is spelled
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\fBsyncthing\fP so it may be referred to in that way as well. It’s definitely not
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SyncThing, even though the abbreviation \fBst\fP is used in some
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circumstances and file names.
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.SS What things are synced?
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.sp
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The following things are \fIalways\fP synchronized:
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.INDENT 0.0
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.IP \(bu 2
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File contents
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.IP \(bu 2
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File modification times
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.UNINDENT
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.sp
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The following may be synchronized or not, depending:
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.INDENT 0.0
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.IP \(bu 2
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File permissions (when supported by file system; on Windows only the
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read only bit is synchronized)
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.IP \(bu 2
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Symbolic links (synced, except on Windows, but never followed)
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.UNINDENT
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.sp
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The following are \fInot\fP synchronized;
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.INDENT 0.0
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.IP \(bu 2
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File or directory owners and Groups (not preserved)
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.IP \(bu 2
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Directory modification times (not preserved)
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.IP \(bu 2
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Hard links and Windows directory junctions (followed, not preserved)
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.IP \(bu 2
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Extended attributes, resource forks (not preserved)
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.IP \(bu 2
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Windows, POSIX or NFS ACLs (not preserved)
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.IP \(bu 2
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Devices, FIFOs, and other specials (ignored)
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.IP \(bu 2
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Sparse file sparseness (will become sparse, when supported by the OS & filesystem)
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.UNINDENT
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.SS Is synchronization fast?
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.sp
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Syncthing segments files into pieces, called blocks, to transfer data from one
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device to another. Therefore, multiple devices can share the synchronization
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load, in a similar way to the torrent protocol. The more devices you have online,
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the faster an additional device will receive the data
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because small blocks will be fetched from all devices in parallel.
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.sp
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Syncthing handles renaming files and updating their metadata in an efficient
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manner. This means that renaming a large file will not cause a retransmission of
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that file. Additionally, appending data to existing large files should be
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handled efficiently as well.
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.sp
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Temporary files are used to store partial data
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downloaded from other devices. They are automatically removed whenever a file
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transfer has been completed or after the configured amount of time which is set
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in the configuration file (24 hours by default).
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.SS How does Syncthing differ from BitTorrent/Resilio Sync?
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.sp
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The two are different and not related. Syncthing and BitTorrent/Resilio Sync accomplish
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some of the same things, namely syncing files between two or more computers.
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.sp
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BitTorrent Sync, now called Resilio Sync, is a proprietary peer\-to\-peer file
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synchronization tool available for Windows, Mac, Linux, Android, iOS, Windows
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Phone, Amazon Kindle Fire and BSD. [1] Syncthing is an open source file
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synchronization tool.
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.sp
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Syncthing uses an open and documented protocol, and likewise the security
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mechanisms in use are well defined and visible in the source code. Resilio
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Sync uses an undocumented, closed protocol with unknown security properties.
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.IP [1] 5
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\fI\%https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resilio_Sync\fP
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.SS Why is there no iOS client?
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.sp
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There is an alternative implementation of Syncthing (using the same network
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protocol) called \fBfsync()\fP\&. There are no plans by the current Syncthing
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team to support iOS in the foreseeable future, as the code required to do so
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would be quite different from what Syncthing is today.
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.SS Should I keep my device IDs secret?
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.sp
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No. The IDs are not sensitive. Given a device ID it’s possible to find the IP
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address for that device, if global discovery is enabled on it. Knowing the device
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ID doesn’t help you actually establish a connection to that device or get a list
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of files, etc.
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.sp
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For a connection to be established, both devices need to know about the other’s
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device ID. It’s not possible (in practice) to forge a device ID. (To forge a
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device ID you need to create a TLS certificate with that specific SHA\-256 hash.
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If you can do that, you can spoof any TLS certificate. The world is your
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oyster!)
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.sp
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\fBSEE ALSO:\fP
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.INDENT 0.0
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.INDENT 3.5
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device\-ids
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.UNINDENT
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.UNINDENT
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.SH TROUBLESHOOTING
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.SS Where are the Syncthing logs?
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.sp
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Syncthing logs to stdout by default. On Windows Syncthing by default also
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creates \fBsyncthing.log\fP in Syncthing’s home directory (run \fBsyncthing
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\-paths\fP to see where that is). The command line option \fB\-logfile\fP can be
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used to specify a user\-defined logfile.
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.sp
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If you’re running a process manager like systemd, check there. If you’re
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using a GUI wrapper integration, it may keep the logs for you.
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.SS Why is the sync so slow?
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.sp
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When troubleshooting a slow sync, there are a number of things to check.
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.sp
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First of all, verify that you are not connected via a relay. In the “Remote
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Devices” list on the right side of the GUI, double check that you see
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“Address: <some address>” and \fInot\fP “Relay: <some address>”.
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[image]
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.sp
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If you are connected via a relay, this is because a direct connection could
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not be established. Double check and follow the suggestions in
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firewall\-setup to enable direct connections.
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.sp
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Second, if one of the devices is a very low powered machine (a Raspberry Pi,
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or a phone, or a NAS, or similar) you are likely constrained by the CPU on
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that device. See the next question for reasons Syncthing likes a faster CPU.
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.sp
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Third, verify that the network connection is OK. Tools such as iperf or just
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an Internet speed test can be used to verify the performance here.
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.SS Why does it use so much CPU?
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.INDENT 0.0
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.IP 1. 3
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When new or changed files are detected, or Syncthing starts for the
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first time, your files are hashed using SHA\-256.
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.IP 2. 3
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Data that is sent over the network is compressed (optionally) and
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encrypted (always). When receiving data it must be decrypted and then (if
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compressed) decompressed.
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.IP 3. 3
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There is a certain amount of housekeeping that must be done to track the
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current and available versions of each file in the index database.
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.IP 4. 3
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By default Syncthing uses periodic scanning every hour when watching for
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changes or every minute if that’s disabled to detect
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file changes. This means checking every file’s modification time and
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comparing it to the database. This can cause spikes of CPU usage for large
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folders.
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.UNINDENT
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.sp
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Hashing, compression and encryption cost CPU time. Also, using the GUI
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causes a certain amount of extra CPU usage to calculate the summary data it
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presents. Note however that once things are \fIin sync\fP CPU usage should be
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negligible.
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.sp
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To minimize the impact of this, Syncthing attempts to lower the
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process priority when starting up.
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.sp
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To further limit the amount of CPU used when syncing and scanning, set the
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environment variable \fBGOMAXPROCS\fP to the maximum number of CPU cores
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Syncthing should use at any given moment. For example, \fBGOMAXPROCS=2\fP on a
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machine with four cores will limit Syncthing to no more than half the
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system’s CPU power.
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.SS Why is the setup more complicated than BitTorrent/Resilio Sync?
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.sp
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Security over convenience. In Syncthing you have to setup both sides to
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connect two devices. An attacker can’t do much with a stolen device ID, because
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you have to add the device on the other side too. You have better control
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where your files are transferred.
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.sp
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This is an area that we are working to improve in the long term.
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.SS Why do I get “Host check error” in the GUI/API?
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.sp
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Since version 0.14.6 Syncthing does an extra security check when the GUI/API
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is bound to localhost \- namely that the browser is talking to localhost.
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This protects against most forms of \fI\%DNS rebinding attack\fP <\fBhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNS_rebinding\fP> against the GUI.
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.sp
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To pass this test, ensure that you are accessing the GUI using an URL that
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begins with \fIhttp://localhost\fP, \fIhttp://127.0.0.1\fP or \fIhttp://[::1]\fP\&. HTTPS
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is fine too, of course.
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.sp
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If you are using a proxy in front of Syncthing you may need to disable this
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check, after ensuring that the proxy provides sufficient authentication to
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protect against unauthorized access. Either:
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.INDENT 0.0
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.IP \(bu 2
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Make sure the proxy sets a \fIHost\fP header containing \fIlocalhost\fP, or
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.IP \(bu 2
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Set \fIinsecureSkipHostcheck\fP in the advanced settings, or
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.IP \(bu 2
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Bind the GUI/API to a non\-localhost listen port.
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.UNINDENT
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.sp
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In all cases, username/password authentication and HTTPS should be used.
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.SS My Syncthing database is corrupt
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.sp
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This is almost always a result of bad RAM, storage device or other hardware.
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When the index database is found to be corrupt Syncthing cannot operate and
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will note this in the logs and exit. To overcome this delete the \fI\%database
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folder\fP <\fBhttps://docs.syncthing.net/users/config.html#description\fP> inside
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Syncthing’s home directory and re\-start Syncthing. It will then need to
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perform a full re\-hashing of all shared folders. You should check your
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system in case the underlying cause is indeed faulty hardware which may put
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the system at risk of further data loss.
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.SS Why do I see Syncthing twice in task manager?
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.sp
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One process manages the other, to capture logs and manage restarts. This
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makes it easier to handle upgrades from within Syncthing itself, and also
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ensures that we get a nice log file to help us narrow down the cause for
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crashes and other bugs.
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.SS How can I view the history of changes?
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.sp
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The web GUI contains a \fBRecent Changes\fP button under the device list which
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displays changes since the last (re)start of Syncthing. With the \fB\-audit\fP
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option you can enable a persistent, detailed log of changes and most
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activities, which contains a \fBJSON\fP formatted sequence of events in the
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\fB~/.config/syncthing/audit\-_date_\-_time_.log\fP file.
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.SS Does the audit log contain every change?
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.sp
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The audit log (and the \fBRecent Changes\fP window) sees the changes that your
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Syncthing sees. When Syncthing is continuously connected it usually sees every change
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happening immediately and thus knows which node initiated the change.
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When topology gets complex or when your node reconnects after some time offline,
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Syncthing synchronises with its neighbours: It gets the latest synchronised state
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from the neighbour, which is the \fIresult\fP of all the changes between the last
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known state (before disconnect or network delay) and the current state at the
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neighbour, and if there were updates, deletes, creates, conflicts, which were
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overlapping we only see the \fIlatest change\fP for a given file or directory (and
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the node where that latest change occurred). When we connect to multiple neighbours
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Syncthing decides which neighbour has the latest state, or if the states conflict
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it initiates the conflict resolution procedure, which in the end results in a consistent
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up\-to\-date state with all the neighbours.
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.SS Why does Syncthing connect to this unknown/suspicious address?
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.sp
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If you see outgoing connections to odd and unexpected addresses these are
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most likely connections to relay servers\&. Relay servers
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are run by volunteers all over the world. They usually listen on ports 443 or
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22067, though this is controlled by the user running it. You can compare the
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address you are concernced about with \fI\%the current list of active relays\fP <\fBhttps://relays.syncthing.net\fP>\&. Relays do not and can not see the data
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transmitted via them.
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.SH USAGE
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.SS What if there is a conflict?
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.sp
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\fBSEE ALSO:\fP
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||
.INDENT 0.0
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.INDENT 3.5
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||
conflict\-handling
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.UNINDENT
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||
.UNINDENT
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||
.SS How do I serve a folder from a read only filesystem?
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.sp
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Syncthing requires a “folder marker” to indicate that the folder is present
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and healthy. By default this is a directory called \fB\&.stfolder\fP that is
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created by Syncthing when the folder is added. If this folder can’t be
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created (you are serving files from a CD or something) you can instead set
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the advanced config \fBMarker Name\fP to the name of some file or folder that
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you know will always exist in the folder.
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.SS I really hate the \fB\&.stfolder\fP directory, can I remove it?
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.sp
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See the previous question.
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.SS Am I able to nest shared folders in Syncthing?
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||
.sp
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Sharing a folder that is within an already shared folder is possible, but it has
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its caveats. What you must absolutely avoid are circular shares. This is just
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one example, there may be other undesired effects. Nesting shared folders is not
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supported, recommended or coded for, but it can be done successfully when you
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know what you’re doing \- you have been warned.
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.SS How do I rename/move a synced folder?
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.sp
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Syncthing doesn’t have a direct way to do this, as it’s potentially
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dangerous to do so if you’re not careful \- it may result in data loss if
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something goes wrong during the move and is synchronized to your other
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devices.
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.sp
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||
The easy way to rename or move a synced folder on the local system is to
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remove the folder in the Syncthing UI, move it on disk, then re\-add it using
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the new path.
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.sp
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||
It’s best to do this when the folder is already in sync between your
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devices, as it is otherwise unpredictable which changes will “win” after the
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move. Changes made on other devices may be overwritten, or changes made
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locally may be overwritten by those on other devices.
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.sp
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An alternative way is to shut down Syncthing, move the folder on disk (including
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the \fB\&.stfolder\fP marker), edit the path directly in \fBconfig.xml\fP in the
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configuration folder (see config) and then start Syncthing again.
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.SS How do I configure multiple users on a single machine?
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||
.sp
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||
Each user should run their own Syncthing instance. Be aware that you might need
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||
to configure listening ports such that they do not overlap (see config).
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||
.SS Does Syncthing support syncing between folders on the same system?
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||
.sp
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||
No. Syncthing is not designed to sync locally and the overhead involved in
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doing so using Syncthing’s method would be wasteful. There are better
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||
programs to achieve this such as \fI\%rsync\fP <\fBhttps://rsync.samba.org/\fP> or
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\fI\%Unison\fP <\fBhttps://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison\fP>\&.
|
||
.SS When I do have two distinct Syncthing\-managed folders on two hosts, how does Syncthing handle moving files between them?
|
||
.sp
|
||
Syncthing does not specially handle this case, and most files will most likely get
|
||
re\-downloaded.
|
||
.sp
|
||
In detail, the behavior depends on the scan order. If you have folders A and B,
|
||
and move files from A to B, if A gets scanned first, it will announce the removal of
|
||
the files to others who will then remove the files. As you rescan B, B will
|
||
announce the addition of new files, and other peers will have nowhere to get
|
||
them from apart from re\-downloading them.
|
||
.sp
|
||
If B gets rescanned first, B will announce additions first, and remote
|
||
peers will then reconstruct the files (not rename, more like copying block by
|
||
block) from A, and then as A gets rescanned, it will remove the files from A.
|
||
.sp
|
||
A workaround would be to copy first from A to B, rescan B, wait for B to
|
||
copy the files on the remote side, and then delete from A.
|
||
.SS Is Syncthing my ideal backup application?
|
||
.sp
|
||
No. Syncthing is not a great backup application because all changes to your
|
||
files (modifications, deletions, etc.) will be propagated to all your
|
||
devices. You can enable versioning, but we encourage you to use other tools
|
||
to keep your data safe from your (or our) mistakes.
|
||
.SS How can I exclude files with brackets (\fB[]\fP) in the name?
|
||
.sp
|
||
The patterns in .stignore are glob patterns, where brackets are used to
|
||
denote character ranges. That is, the pattern \fBq[abc]x\fP will match the
|
||
files \fBqax\fP, \fBqbx\fP and \fBqcx\fP\&.
|
||
.sp
|
||
To match an actual file \fIcalled\fP \fBq[abc]x\fP the pattern needs to “escape”
|
||
the brackets, like so: \fBq\e[abc\e]x\fP\&.
|
||
.sp
|
||
On Windows, escaping special characters is not supported as the \fB\e\fP
|
||
character is used as a path separator.
|
||
.SS How do I access the web GUI from another computer?
|
||
.sp
|
||
The default listening address is 127.0.0.1:8384, so you can only access the
|
||
GUI from the same machine. This is for security reasons. To access the web
|
||
GUI from another computer, change the \fBGUI listen address\fP through the web
|
||
UI from \fB127.0.0.1:8384\fP to
|
||
\fB0.0.0.0:8384\fP or change the config.xml:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
<gui enabled="true" tls="false">
|
||
<address>127.0.0.1:8384</address>
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
to
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
<gui enabled="true" tls="false">
|
||
<address>0.0.0.0:8384</address>
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
Then the GUI is accessible from everywhere. You should set a password and
|
||
enable HTTPS with this configuration. You can do this from inside the GUI.
|
||
.sp
|
||
If both your computers are Unix\-like (Linux, Mac, etc.) you can also leave the
|
||
GUI settings at default and use an ssh port forward to access it. For
|
||
example,
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
$ ssh \-L 9090:127.0.0.1:8384 user@othercomputer.example.com
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
will log you into othercomputer.example.com, and present the \fIremote\fP
|
||
Syncthing GUI on \fI\%http://localhost:9090\fP on your \fIlocal\fP computer.
|
||
.sp
|
||
If you only want to access the remote gui and don’t want the terminal
|
||
session, use this example,
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
$ ssh \-N \-L 9090:127.0.0.1:8384 user@othercomputer.example.com
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
If only your remote computer is Unix\-like,
|
||
you can still access it with ssh from Windows.
|
||
.sp
|
||
Under Windows 10 (64 bit) you can use the same ssh command if you install
|
||
the \fI\%Windows Subsystem for Linux\fP <\fBhttps://docs.microsoft.com/windows/wsl/install-win10\fP>\&.
|
||
.sp
|
||
Another Windows way to run ssh is to install \fI\%gow (Gnu On Windows)\fP <\fBhttps://github.com/bmatzelle/gow\fP>\&. The easiest way to install gow is with the \fI\%chocolatey\fP <\fBhttps://chocolatey.org/\fP> package manager.
|
||
.SS I don’t like the GUI or the theme. Can it be changed?
|
||
.sp
|
||
You can change the theme in the settings. Syncthing ships with other themes
|
||
than the default.
|
||
.sp
|
||
If you want a custom theme or a completely different GUI, you can add your
|
||
own.
|
||
By default, Syncthing will look for a directory \fBgui\fP inside the Syncthing
|
||
home folder. To change the directory to look for themes, you need to set the
|
||
STGUIASSETS environment variable. To get the concrete directory, run
|
||
syncthing with the \fB\-paths\fP parameter. It will print all the relevant paths,
|
||
including the “GUI override directory”.
|
||
.sp
|
||
To add e.g. a red theme, you can create the file \fBred/assets/css/theme.css\fP
|
||
inside the GUI override directory to override the default CSS styles.
|
||
.sp
|
||
To create a whole new GUI, you should checkout the files at
|
||
\fI\%https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/tree/main/gui/default\fP
|
||
to get an idea how to do that.
|
||
.SS How do I upgrade Syncthing?
|
||
.sp
|
||
If you use a package manager such as Debian’s apt\-get, you should upgrade
|
||
using the package manager. If you use the binary packages linked from
|
||
Syncthing.net, you can use Syncthing’s built\-in automatic upgrade functionality.
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
If automatic upgrades is enabled (which is the default), Syncthing will
|
||
upgrade itself automatically within 24 hours of a new release.
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
The upgrade button appears in the web GUI when a new version has been
|
||
released. Pressing it will perform an upgrade.
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
To force an upgrade from the command line, run \fBsyncthing \-upgrade\fP\&.
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
Note that your system should have CA certificates installed which allows a
|
||
secure connection to GitHub (e.g. FreeBSD requires \fBsudo pkg install
|
||
ca_root_nss\fP). If \fBcurl\fP or \fBwget\fP works with normal HTTPS sites, then
|
||
so should Syncthing.
|
||
.SS Where do I find the latest release?
|
||
.sp
|
||
We release new versions through GitHub. The latest release is always found
|
||
\fI\%on the release page\fP <\fBhttps://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/releases/latest\fP>\&. Unfortunately
|
||
GitHub does not provide a single URL to automatically download the latest
|
||
version. We suggest to use the \fI\%GitHub API\fP <\fBhttps://api.github.com/repos/syncthing/syncthing/releases/latest\fP> and parsing
|
||
the JSON response.
|
||
.SS How do I run Syncthing as a daemon process on Linux?
|
||
.sp
|
||
If you’re using systemd, runit, or upstart, we ship \fI\%example configurations\fP <\fBhttps://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/tree/main/etc\fP>\&.
|
||
.sp
|
||
If however you’re not using one of these tools, you have a couple of options.
|
||
If your system has a tool called \fBstart\-stop\-daemon\fP installed (that’s the name
|
||
of the command, not the package), look into the local documentation for that, it
|
||
will almost certainly cover 100% of what you want to do. If you don’t have
|
||
\fBstart\-stop\-daemon\fP, there are a bunch of other software packages you could use
|
||
to do this. The most well known is called daemontools, and can be found in the
|
||
standard package repositories for almost every modern Linux distribution.
|
||
Other popular tools with similar functionality include S6 and the aforementioned
|
||
runit.
|
||
.SS How do I increase the inotify limit to get my filesystem watcher to work?
|
||
.sp
|
||
You are probably reading this because you encountered the following error with
|
||
the filesystem watcher on linux:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
Failed to start filesystem watcher for folder yourLabel (yourID): failed to
|
||
setup inotify handler. Please increase inotify limits, see \fI\%https://docs.syncthing.net/users/faq.html#inotify\-limits\fP
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
Linux typically restricts the amount of watches per user (usually 8192). When
|
||
you have more directories you need to adjust that number.
|
||
.sp
|
||
On many Linux distributions you can run the following to fix it:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
echo "fs.inotify.max_user_watches=204800" | sudo tee \-a /etc/sysctl.conf
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
On Arch Linux and potentially others it is preferred to write this line into a
|
||
separate file, i.e. you should run:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
echo "fs.inotify.max_user_watches=204800" | sudo tee \-a /etc/sysctl.d/90\-override.conf
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
This only takes effect after a reboot. To adjust the limit immediately, run:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
echo 204800 | sudo tee /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_watches
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.SS How do I reset the GUI password?
|
||
.sp
|
||
If you’ve forgotten/lost the GUI password, you can remove it by deleting the \fB<user>\fP and \fB<password>\fP XML tags from the \fB<gui>\fP block in file \fBconfig.xml\fP\&. This should be done while Syncthing is not running. The location of the file depends on the OS and is described in the configuration documentation.
|
||
.sp
|
||
For example, the two emphasized lines below would be removed from the file.
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
<gui enabled="true" tls="false" debugging="false">
|
||
<address>127.0.0.1:8384</address>
|
||
<user>syncguy</user>
|
||
<password>$2a$10$s9wWHOQe...Cq7GPye69</password>
|
||
<apikey>9RCKohqCAyrj5RjpyZdR2wXmQ9PyQFeN</apikey>
|
||
<theme>default</theme>
|
||
</gui>
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.SH AUTHOR
|
||
The Syncthing Authors
|
||
.SH COPYRIGHT
|
||
2014-2019, The Syncthing Authors
|
||
.\" Generated by docutils manpage writer.
|
||
.
|