That’s a good call out. My user case allows me to terminate the phone app after it syncs, and battery doesn’t seem to be hit hard even if I forget. But it’s important to look at, and it might not work for you.
Comment on Best phone sync
bandwidthcrisis@lemmy.world 1 month agoI’d like to use resilio, I even bought a license to support it as I use it for all my pc syncing. But it’s currently showing 41% battery use for today on my phone for 2 minutes screen time 11.5 hours background. Lenny Voyager shows 7% for 1.5 hour screen time. So something is not good with the phone app. Maybe the Android battery info display is misleading somehow (it confuses me because it shows a percentage of the time-interval you’re viewing, not a percentage of the total battery drain(.
Tramort@programming.dev 1 month ago
BearOfaTime@lemm.ee 1 month ago
Yea, I like Resilio, but it’s a battery and ram hog.
Syncthing should work fine for you.
Does you ohine have some custom battery management? Some vendors do that, and it causes issues.
bandwidthcrisis@lemmy.world 1 month ago
The only setting I see is “allow background usage”, which is on (I’m using it on a Pixel 7 and 8).
BearOfaTime@lemm.ee 1 month ago
Pixel is clean, from a battery saver perspective, so that’s probably not your issue.
Not sure what to do next. I’ve used it for about 10 years now, and keep gobs of stuff in sync with it.
I do recommend Syncthing-Fork for Android, it moves the sync conditions into the individual since folders, so you get finer control.
Do you get any errors on the desktop console? On Android, if you launch the web client you get much more info and configuration capability (Menu - Web GUI). Once there, click the gear at the top right, and open Logs. Maybe there’s something there that can help.
bandwidthcrisis@lemmy.world 1 month ago
I’m trying the fork now, thanks. So far, it’s behaving. Thanks for the pointer to the logs, I’ll take a look if it happens again.