Comment on Uncommon Syncthing usecases
zaphod@lemmy.ca 11 months agoAgain, Syncthing supports one-way sync so allowing paperless to delete them and having that delete sync back to the phone is entirely optional.
Comment on Uncommon Syncthing usecases
zaphod@lemmy.ca 11 months agoAgain, Syncthing supports one-way sync so allowing paperless to delete them and having that delete sync back to the phone is entirely optional.
lemmyvore@feddit.nl 11 months ago
I mean, how does Syncthing know not to copy a file again if it copied it once and paperless deleted it?
zaphod@lemmy.ca 11 months ago
The client on the sender side knows it sent the file. It doesn’t care if the receiver side changed or deleted it. That’s why the mode is called “Send Only”.
lemmyvore@feddit.nl 11 months ago
The phone sync client would have to remember all the files it ever sends, which could be thousands. I’ve never seen a sync client that works like that, they usually compare the files that are in the source and destination folders. If syncthing can do this that’s really interesting.
zaphod@lemmy.ca 11 months ago
No it doesn’t.
Syncthing only needs to remember the current state of the files/folders it’s syncing. Not everything it’s every sync’d.
It does that by either periodically scanning the filesystem to look for changes since it last scanned (based on the file creation and modification dates that are stored in the filesystem), or it registers with the operating system to receive events when files are created, modified, or deleted.
When Syncthing notices a create, update, or delete, it pushes those changes to the receiver.
It also pushes whole files, not deltas. So it doesn’t care how the files changed, only that they did.
Even with hundreds of thousands of files to sync this is a relatively small amount of state as it’s just file paths and their create/modify dates.