syncthing/README.md
2020-04-17 09:34:31 +02:00

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# Syncthing Tech UI
## Usage
This is a very bare bones read-only GUI for viewing the status of large
setups. Download a [release
zip](https://github.com/kastelo/syncthing-tech-ui/releases) and unpack it
into the GUI override directory (assuming default Linux setup):
```
$ cd ~/.config/syncthing
$ mkdir -p gui/default
$ cd gui/default
$ unzip ~/tech-ui-v1.0.0.zip
```
Then load the GUI via http://localhost:8384/tech-ui/ or similar. You should see something like this:
![Screenshot](screenshot.png)
## Development server
Run `npm run serve` for a dev server. Navigate to `http://localhost:4200/`. The
app will automatically reload if you change any of the source files.
## Production server
In production we serve the UI through Syncthing itself. The easiest way to
do that is to simply put the built assets in the `gui` subdirectory of
Syncthing's config directory.
```
$ npm run build -- --prod
$ rsync -va --delete dist/tech-ui/ ~/.config/syncthing/gui/default/tech-ui/
```
Adjust for your actual Syncthing config dir if different. Navigate to
`http://localhost:8384/tech-ui/`.
Another option is to start Syncthing with the STGUIASSETS environment
variable pointing to the distribution directory.
```
$ npm run build -- --prod
$ ln -sf . dist/default
$ export STGUIASSETS=$(pwd)/dist
$ syncthing
```
The magic is symlink is because Syncthing will look for the GUI in the
`default` subdirectory. Navigate to `http://localhost:8384/tech-ui/`.
## Code scaffolding
Run `ng generate component component-name` to generate a new component. You
can also use `ng generate
directive|pipe|service|class|guard|interface|enum|module`.
## License
MPLv2
## Copyright
Copyright (c) 2020 Kastelo Inc.