674fc566bb
1. Removes separate relay lists and relay clients/services, just makes it a listen address 2. Easier plugging-in of other transports 3. Allows "hot" disabling and enabling NAT services 4. Allows "hot" listen address changes 5. Changes listen address list with a preferable "default" value just like for discovery 6. Debounces global discovery announcements as external addresses change (which it might alot upon starting) 7. Stops this whole "pick other peers relay by latency". This information is no longer available, but I don't think it matters as most of the time other peer only has one relay. 8. Rename ListenAddress to ListenAddresses, as well as in javascript land. 9. Stop serializing deprecated values to JSON GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/2982 |
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assets | ||
cmd | ||
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etc | ||
gui | ||
lib | ||
man | ||
script | ||
test | ||
vendor | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.mailmap | ||
AUTHORS | ||
build.go | ||
build.sh | ||
CONDUCT.md | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
ISSUE_TEMPLATE.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
NICKS | ||
PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md | ||
README.md |
Syncthing
This is the Syncthing project which pursues the following goals:
-
Define a protocol for synchronization of a folder between a number of collaborating devices. This protocol should be well defined, unambiguous, easily understood, free to use, efficient, secure and language neutral. This is called the Block Exchange Protocol.
-
Provide the reference implementation to demonstrate the usability of said protocol. This is the
syncthing
utility. We hope that alternative, compatible implementations of the protocol will arise.
The two are evolving together; the protocol is not to be considered stable until Syncthing 1.0 is released, at which point it is locked down for incompatible changes.
Getting Started
Take a look at the getting started guide.
There are a few examples for keeping Syncthing running in the background on your system in the etc directory. There are also several GUI implementations for Windows, Mac and Linux.
Getting in Touch
The first and best point of contact is the Forum. There is also an IRC
channel, #syncthing
on freenode (with a web client), for talking
directly to developers and users. If you've found something that is clearly a
bug, feel free to report it in the GitHub issue tracker.
Building
Building Syncthing from source is easy, and there's a guide that describes it for both Unix and Windows systems.
Signed Releases
As of v0.10.15 and onwards release binaries are GPG signed with the key D26E6ED000654A3E, available from https://syncthing.net/security.html and most key servers.
There is also a built in automatic upgrade mechanism (disabled in some distribution channels) which uses a compiled in ECDSA signature. Mac OS X binaries are also properly code signed.
Documentation
Please see the Syncthing documentation site.
All code is licensed under the MPLv2 License.