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Posts posted by DirtyHippy
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Have to agree with the majority of responses, that the community has been one of the greatest assets.
Hm... DEFCON, COMICON, with enough of a user base how about UnRAID'CON? Vegas anyone?
Oh. My vote also is for multi cache pools as well.
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Seems that there are a handful of beer/homebrewing enthusiasts in the mix (me included.)
I'd opt for a community driven - open sourced 5 gallon recipe while we're at it. 🍺
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9 hours ago, Mysticle31 said:
I'm having this same permissions issue.
I just ran DockerSafeNewPerms which fixed all the files created by syncthing, however, I can't modify new files created by syncthing. Can I somehow pass to the docker to create the files as 777 or some such thing?
Worst off maybe schedule DockerSafeNewPerms to run daily at night... not an ideal solution.
FYI my speed seems fine. I had to turn off everything but local discovery, and changed my server's ip from dynamic to it's actual ip. Things go much faster now, although still slower than transferring files in windows explorer.
Still digging around and since Resilio operates in a similar fashion and we have a thread based on that. There was a mention (thanks to SelfSD) suggesting a variable of UMASK_SET with initially a 0777 but others utilized a 0000 with a good result. Check up on the following responses after that initial post, seemed to work well for them.
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On 5/11/2018 at 7:05 AM, NewKrewLinux said:
I managed to get this to sync with my devices perfectly over LAN using the info I provided below.
But I still have one problem. I am unable to directly add a file to a folder via Windows Explorer on my SMB share. That is, I cannot drag and drop a photo into the
//Server/Storage/sync/My_Folder directory to be sent to my other devices. It says "permission denied" in Windows. How do I fix this?_________________________________________________________
Just letting you guys know. I had to swap my interface from "Bridge" to "br0" for this to work properly. Otherwise I also got the issue with it not connecting ever again after 15 mins. Also disabled the relay on all of my devices to first properly work out the LAN issues I was having, because if after a certain time a LAN connection can't be made it'll just move to using a relay and it's sort of hard to work out if it's using the relay (gotta scour the log, or look at the slow speed etc). In addition to that I added the port "22010" to the port mappings before installing the Docker app. Then I changed the listen address in the app to "TCP 22010" because having it set as "default" causes a "connected to myself, not supposed to happen" error every 60 seconds.
Then I set the listen address on each of my devices as follows TCP 22011, 22012 etc. and port forwarded these over my router. Not sure if I had to do these 2 steps but I did it anyway.
After this I re-enabled the relay so my files can sync when I am away from home. Over LAN I'm able to get just up to 50MB/s transfer speeds (Smartphone is the bottleneck) which is much, much higher than Nextcloud which used to only get me about 10MB/s. Probably due to less overhead and not having to write to a DB etc.
Hope this helps someone and thanks for providing this app.
Regarding the 'permission denied' issue. The resolution on this side kicked in after running the /Tools/DockerSafeNewPerms which corrected the directories and their permissions.
(update)
Buuuuut. It does seem that anything new/created such as syncing a new folder will inherit the original permissions upon creation and the 'permission denied' kicks in again.
Mea Culpa and Apology
in Announcements
Posted
Arrived late to the party. Love the software, enjoy the community, and respect for all involved.
Only thing I can throw out there is an old saying, "Start with the end."
Without getting too much on the granola bandwagon.
Simply picturing being at the ideal destination and plotting backwards of the steps which were taken to get there may provide some potential insight.
Very similar to the previous post(s) it does seem that we have distinct layers (management/community developers/users).
If projected 1 year out in the best case scenario, how would that look for each layer?