sync-2: 35 gigabytes spread over 80 thousand files.(At the start of the adventures described below, this repo was 15G spread over 150 thousand files.) sync-1: 13 gigabytes spread over 100 thousand files.I have a Synology DS213j low-power home NAS that can also be used as part of syncing solutions that support it. I need a system that is able to keep my two main working repositories of files in sync across two laptops and two workstations. Warning: There is no real winner, but there is quiteĪn amount of hopefully useful information. Seafile, CloudStation, SpiderOak, Wuala, Dropbox and unison. My four computers, I’ve spent some quality time with btsync, syncthing, TL DR In searching for a Dropbox-level solution to synchronise my files between During each period, I actuallyĬommitted to the relevant syncing system as my main and only sycing tool and Past two years, I have used seven different Dropbox alternatives on my primaryįile collections (just under 50G in total). Left by the hundreds of vacuous reviews following the template above. I hope the notes in this post can fill a tiny little bit of the giant sinkhole Look, it seems to be syncing these threeįiles I put in there. Hey, look, here’s a new service that’s a dropbox killer / dropboxĪlternatives / disruptive in the sync space. Most sync software reviews can be summarised as: It’s quite hard finding reviews online that go deeper than the very So it has something to do with the group statement. rvice: Main process exited, code=exited, status=216/GROUP rvice: Failed at step GROUP spawning /var/home/trakker/SpiderOak/startup-script/S> rvice: Failed to determine supplementary groups: Operation not permitted Still nothing happened but when I looked at the logs I found this: I made the folders systemd and user and moved the service file there. I found this webpage and created a simple desktop file with the following content:Įxec=/var/home/trakker/SpiderOak/startup-script/SpiderOakONE.shĪnd that was it! I logged out and logged back in and yes: SpiderOakOne was started!!īefore I created the desktop file I also tried your solution. After that I searched on the internet how to write a desktop file. To find what would happen when I added an application with Tweaks -> Startup applications, I added Firefox and saw that a. config! I looked in this directory and saw that it was empty. Not only that: I also found out there is a folder called autostart in the directory. I wanted to move the file rvice to the folder ~/.config/systemd/user/ but when I did this I found out that that folder doesn’t exist. I solved it! But a little bit differently then you described. Does anybody know what the reason could be? I’m not an expert on systemd so I don’t now why it’s not working. Now the bad news: when I enable and start this systemd service/script nothing happens. etc/systemd/system/rvice ĮxecStart=/var/home/trakker/SpiderOak/startup-script/SpiderOakONE.sh I created the following systemd service/script: Maybe because I installed SpiderOakOne without privileges? I thought that in the past there also was an option in ‘Tweak → Startup applications’ to add a script but that’s somehow also gone?īecause there is now GUI-way anymore to solve this problem I started searching and found this solution to create a systemd startup script. In the past there was an option in SpiderOakOne to enable this but for some reason the option is removed or is just not shown. However I have on little problem: the backup service SpiderOakOne doesn’t start automatically anymore at boot time. Today I installed Fedora Silverblue 31 and, after some work, everything works fine! Hello Silverblue developers and administrators!
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