March 27, 20224 yr Long story blah blah..Trying to get Nextcloud to run faster. My appdata is ALL on SSD cache. I ran across someone on reddit saying for NC, Db and maybe reverse proxy to change "user" path to "cache" in their docker settings so that it "shfs service doesn't have to manage which drive content should be/is stored on... Anyways, what's being said makes sense but are there any drawbacks or inherent risks in doing this? (see below)
March 27, 20224 yr Author WOAH, I changed JUST Nextcloud from "user" to "cache." I have been irked Nextcloud takes literal 3-5 minutes to boot FOREVER. I changed it to "cache" and now Nextcloud goes from stopped to fully up and running in less than 20 seconds. Woah. Not sure; it reminds me of a late night infomercial: if it's too good to be true it is?
March 28, 20224 yr Community Expert Just be careful. You are now using a disk share (cache) rather than a user share. If you do any file management operations, be sure that they are not between that disk share and the user share. See here for a more complete description of the issue: https://forums.unraid.net/topic/32836-user-share-copy-bug/#comment-316512
March 28, 20224 yr Author 1 minute ago, Frank1940 said: Just be careful. You are now using a disk share (cache) rather than a user share. If you do any file management operations, be sure that they are not between that disk share and the user share. See here for a more complete description of the issue: https://forums.unraid.net/topic/32836-user-share-copy-bug/#comment-316512 All the thank you mate! I am totally blown away with how Nextcloud handled change from "user" to "cache." Thank you for the link; i'll do some reading and decide if Risk=>Reward
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