![]() It managed to bring my sync-1 repository in sync between 4 nodes in no time at all. I downgraded to 1.3.109, and all was fantastic. ![]() This was quite frustrating, to say the least. However, I after upgrading to 1.4 I soon ran into theītsync-simply-refuses-to-sync-and-there’s-nothing-you-can-do-about-it problem Multiple gigabytes of files can be spread really really quickly through your mesh network. I only have experience with pre-2.0 btsync.ītsync is really fantastically fast. ![]() Touted as a great dropbox replacement, and is also the one I started using This peer-to-peer personal syncing solution, also called btsync, is often This means that I want to work on some source code in a git repo, then go home without having to commit and push just because I’m going home, and continue working at home on a different computer, perhaps committing and pushing from there when I’m good and ready with my changes. Importantly, it should be relatively easy to roll-back inadvertent changes and deletions.įinally, an important use case for me is syncing git repos that I’m working on. Preferably, the tool should support delta-syncing (owncloud does not do this, for example), deduplication and LAN sync, because I live an a bandwidth-starved part of the world. The client software should support Linux, because that’s what I mostly use. I should be able to close one laptop, and continue working on my desktop on the same files, without having to think too much about it. 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.) ![]()
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