Provided by: syncthing_1.18.6~ds1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       syncthing-faq - Frequently Asked Questions

       • GeneralWhat is Syncthing?Is it “syncthing”, “Syncthing” or “SyncThing”?What things are synced?Is synchronization fast?How does Syncthing differ from BitTorrent/Resilio Sync?Why is there no iOS client?Should I keep my device IDs secret?TroubleshootingWhere are the Syncthing logs?Why is the sync so slow?Why does it use so much CPU?Why is the setup more complicated than BitTorrent/Resilio Sync?Why do I get “Host check error” in the GUI/API?My Syncthing database is corruptWhy do I see Syncthing twice in task manager?How can I view the history of changes?Does the audit log contain every change?Why does Syncthing connect to this unknown/suspicious address?UsageWhat if there is a conflict?How do I serve a folder from a read only filesystem?I really hate the .stfolder directory, can I remove it?Am I able to nest shared folders in Syncthing?How do I rename/move a synced folder?How do I configure multiple users on a single machine?Does Syncthing support syncing between folders on the same system?When I do have two distinct Syncthing-managed folders on two hosts, how does Syncthing
           handle moving files between them?Is Syncthing my ideal backup application?How can I exclude files with brackets ([]) in the name?How do I access the web GUI from another computer?I don’t like the GUI or the theme. Can it be changed?How do I upgrade Syncthing?Where do I find the latest release?How do I run Syncthing as a daemon process on Linux?How do I increase the inotify limit to get my filesystem watcher to work?How do I reset the GUI password?

GENERAL

   What is Syncthing?
       Syncthing is an application that lets you synchronize your files across multiple  devices.
       This  means  the  creation,  modification  or  deletion  of  files  on  one  machine  will
       automatically be replicated to your other devices. We believe your data is your data alone
       and  you  deserve  to  choose where it is stored. Therefore Syncthing does not upload your
       data to the cloud but exchanges your data across your machines as soon as they are  online
       at the same time.

   Is it “syncthing”, “Syncthing” or “SyncThing”?
       It’s  Syncthing, although the command and source repository is spelled syncthing so it may
       be referred to in that way as  well.  It’s  definitely  not  SyncThing,  even  though  the
       abbreviation st is used in some circumstances and file names.

   What things are synced?
       The following things are always synchronized:

       • File contents

       • File modification times

       The following may be synchronized or not, depending:

       • File  permissions  (when  supported by file system; on Windows only the read only bit is
         synchronized)

       • Symbolic links (synced, except on Windows, but never followed)

       The following are not synchronized;

       • File or directory owners and Groups (not preserved)

       • Directory modification times (not preserved)

       • Hard links and Windows directory junctions (followed, not preserved)

       • Extended attributes, resource forks (not preserved)

       • Windows, POSIX or NFS ACLs (not preserved)

       • Devices, FIFOs, and other specials (ignored)

       • Sparse file sparseness (will become sparse, when supported by the OS & filesystem)

   Is synchronization fast?
       Syncthing segments files into pieces, called blocks, to transfer data from one  device  to
       another.  Therefore, multiple devices can share the synchronization load, in a similar way
       to the torrent protocol. The more devices you have online, the faster an additional device
       will receive the data because small blocks will be fetched from all devices in parallel.

       Syncthing  handles renaming files and updating their metadata in an efficient manner. This
       means that  renaming  a  large  file  will  not  cause  a  retransmission  of  that  file.
       Additionally,  appending  data  to  existing  large files should be handled efficiently as
       well.

       Temporary files are used to store partial data downloaded from  other  devices.  They  are
       automatically  removed whenever a file transfer has been completed or after the configured
       amount of time which is set in the configuration file (24 hours by default).

   How does Syncthing differ from BitTorrent/Resilio Sync?
       The two are different and not related. Syncthing and  BitTorrent/Resilio  Sync  accomplish
       some of the same things, namely syncing files between two or more computers.

       BitTorrent   Sync,   now   called   Resilio  Sync,  is  a  proprietary  peer-to-peer  file
       synchronization tool available for Windows,  Mac,  Linux,  Android,  iOS,  Windows  Phone,
       Amazon Kindle Fire and BSD. [1] Syncthing is an open source file synchronization tool.

       Syncthing  uses  an  open and documented protocol, and likewise the security mechanisms in
       use are well defined and visible in the source code. Resilio Sync  uses  an  undocumented,
       closed protocol with unknown security properties.

       [1]  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resilio_Sync

   Why is there no iOS client?
       There  is  an  alternative  implementation  of Syncthing (using the same network protocol)
       called fsync(). There are no plans by the current Syncthing team to  support  iOS  in  the
       foreseeable  future,  as  the  code  required  to do so would be quite different from what
       Syncthing is today.

   Should I keep my device IDs secret?
       No. The IDs are not sensitive. Given a device ID it’s possible to find the IP address  for
       that  device, if global discovery is enabled on it. Knowing the device ID doesn’t help you
       actually establish a connection to that device or get a list of files, etc.

       For a connection to be established, both devices need to know about the other’s device ID.
       It’s  not  possible  (in practice) to forge a device ID. (To forge a device ID you need to
       create a TLS certificate with that specific SHA-256 hash.  If you can  do  that,  you  can
       spoof any TLS certificate. The world is your oyster!)

       SEE ALSO:
          device-ids

TROUBLESHOOTING

   Where are the Syncthing logs?
       Syncthing  logs  to  stdout  by  default.  On  Windows  Syncthing  by default also creates
       syncthing.log in Syncthing’s home directory (run syncthing -paths to see where  that  is).
       The command line option -logfile can be used to specify a user-defined logfile.

       If  you’re  running  a  process  manager  like systemd, check there. If you’re using a GUI
       wrapper integration, it may keep the logs for you.

   Why is the sync so slow?
       When troubleshooting a slow sync, there are a number of things to check.

       First of all, verify that you are not connected via a relay. In the “Remote Devices”  list
       on  the right side of the GUI, double check that you see “Address: <some address>” and not
       “Relay: <some address>”.  [image]

       If you are connected via a relay, this  is  because  a  direct  connection  could  not  be
       established.  Double  check  and follow the suggestions in firewall-setup to enable direct
       connections.

       Second, if one of the devices is a very low powered machine (a Raspberry Pi, or  a  phone,
       or  a  NAS, or similar) you are likely constrained by the CPU on that device. See the next
       question for reasons Syncthing likes a faster CPU.

       Third, verify that the network connection is OK. Tools such as iperf or just  an  Internet
       speed test can be used to verify the performance here.

   Why does it use so much CPU?
       1. When  new  or  changed files are detected, or Syncthing starts for the first time, your
          files are hashed using SHA-256.

       2. Data that is sent over the network is compressed (optionally) and  encrypted  (always).
          When receiving data it must be decrypted and then (if compressed) decompressed.

       3. There  is  a  certain amount of housekeeping that must be done to track the current and
          available versions of each file in the index database.

       4. By default Syncthing uses periodic scanning every hour when  watching  for  changes  or
          every  minute  if  that’s  disabled  to  detect file changes. This means checking every
          file’s modification time and comparing it to the database. This can cause spikes of CPU
          usage for large folders.

       Hashing,  compression  and  encryption cost CPU time. Also, using the GUI causes a certain
       amount of extra CPU usage to calculate the summary data it  presents.  Note  however  that
       once things are in sync CPU usage should be negligible.

       To  minimize  the  impact  of  this, Syncthing attempts to lower the process priority when
       starting up.

       To further limit the amount of CPU used when syncing and  scanning,  set  the  environment
       variable  GOMAXPROCS  to the maximum number of CPU cores Syncthing should use at any given
       moment. For example, GOMAXPROCS=2 on a machine with four cores will limit Syncthing to  no
       more than half the system’s CPU power.

   Why is the setup more complicated than BitTorrent/Resilio Sync?
       Security  over  convenience.  In  Syncthing  you  have  to setup both sides to connect two
       devices. An attacker can’t do much with a stolen device ID, because you have  to  add  the
       device on the other side too. You have better control where your files are transferred.

       This is an area that we are working to improve in the long term.

   Why do I get “Host check error” in the GUI/API?
       Since  version  0.14.6 Syncthing does an extra security check when the GUI/API is bound to
       localhost - namely that the browser is talking to localhost.  This protects  against  most
       forms  of  DNS  rebinding attack <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNS_rebinding> against the
       GUI.

       To pass this test, ensure that you are accessing the GUI using an  URL  that  begins  with
       http://localhost, http://127.0.0.1 or http://[::1]. HTTPS is fine too, of course.

       If  you  are using a proxy in front of Syncthing you may need to disable this check, after
       ensuring that the proxy provides sufficient authentication to protect against unauthorized
       access. Either:

       • Make sure the proxy sets a Host header containing localhost, or

       • Set insecureSkipHostcheck in the advanced settings, or

       • Bind the GUI/API to a non-localhost listen port.

       In all cases, username/password authentication and HTTPS should be used.

   My Syncthing database is corrupt
       This  is  almost  always  a result of bad RAM, storage device or other hardware.  When the
       index database is found to be corrupt Syncthing cannot operate and will note this  in  the
       logs     and     exit.     To     overcome     this    delete    the    database    folder
       <https://docs.syncthing.net/users/config.html#description>   inside    Syncthing’s    home
       directory  and  re-start  Syncthing. It will then need to perform a full re-hashing of all
       shared folders. You should check your system in case the underlying cause is indeed faulty
       hardware which may put the system at risk of further data loss.

   Why do I see Syncthing twice in task manager?
       One  process  manages the other, to capture logs and manage restarts. This makes it easier
       to handle upgrades from within Syncthing itself, and also ensures that we get a  nice  log
       file to help us narrow down the cause for crashes and other bugs.

   How can I view the history of changes?
       The  web GUI contains a Recent Changes button under the device list which displays changes
       since the last (re)start of Syncthing. With the -audit option you can enable a persistent,
       detailed  log of changes and most activities, which contains a JSON formatted  sequence of
       events in the ~/.config/syncthing/audit-_date_-_time_.log file.

   Does the audit log contain every change?
       The audit log (and the Recent Changes window) sees the changes that your  Syncthing  sees.
       When   Syncthing  is  continuously  connected  it  usually  sees  every  change  happening
       immediately and thus knows which node initiated the change.  When topology gets complex or
       when  your  node  reconnects  after  some  time  offline,  Syncthing synchronises with its
       neighbours: It gets the latest synchronised state from the neighbour, which is the  result
       of  all  the changes between the last known state (before disconnect or network delay) and
       the current state  at  the  neighbour,  and  if  there  were  updates,  deletes,  creates,
       conflicts,  which  were  overlapping  we  only  see  the latest change for a given file or
       directory (and the node where that latest change occurred). When we  connect  to  multiple
       neighbours  Syncthing  decides  which  neighbour  has  the  latest state, or if the states
       conflict it initiates the conflict resolution procedure, which in the  end  results  in  a
       consistent up-to-date state with all the neighbours.

   Why does Syncthing connect to this unknown/suspicious address?
       If  you  see  outgoing  connections  to odd and unexpected addresses these are most likely
       connections to relay servers. Relay servers are run by volunteers all over the world. They
       usually  listen  on  ports 443 or 22067, though this is controlled by the user running it.
       You can compare the address you are concernced about  with  the  current  list  of  active
       relays  <https://relays.syncthing.net>. Relays do not and can not see the data transmitted
       via them.

USAGE

   What if there is a conflict?
       SEE ALSO:
          conflict-handling

   How do I serve a folder from a read only filesystem?
       Syncthing requires a “folder marker” to indicate that the folder is present  and  healthy.
       By  default  this  is  a  directory called .stfolder that is created by Syncthing when the
       folder is added. If this folder can’t be created (you are  serving  files  from  a  CD  or
       something) you can instead set the advanced config Marker Name to the name of some file or
       folder that you know will always exist in the folder.

   I really hate the .stfolder directory, can I remove it?
       See the previous question.

   Am I able to nest shared folders in Syncthing?
       Sharing a folder that is within an already shared folder  is  possible,  but  it  has  its
       caveats.  What  you  must  absolutely avoid are circular shares. This is just one example,
       there may be other undesired effects. Nesting shared folders is not supported, recommended
       or  coded  for, but it can be done successfully when you know what you’re doing - you have
       been warned.

   How do I rename/move a synced folder?
       Syncthing doesn’t have a direct way to do this, as it’s potentially dangerous to do so  if
       you’re  not  careful  - it may result in data loss if something goes wrong during the move
       and is synchronized to your other devices.

       The easy way to rename or move a synced folder on the local system is to remove the folder
       in the Syncthing UI, move it on disk, then re-add it using the new path.

       It’s  best  to  do  this when the folder is already in sync between your devices, as it is
       otherwise unpredictable which changes will “win” after the move.  Changes  made  on  other
       devices  may  be overwritten, or changes made locally may be overwritten by those on other
       devices.

       An alternative way is to shut down Syncthing, move  the  folder  on  disk  (including  the
       .stfolder  marker),  edit the path directly in config.xml in the configuration folder (see
       config) and then start Syncthing again.

   How do I configure multiple users on a single machine?
       Each user should run their own Syncthing  instance.  Be  aware  that  you  might  need  to
       configure listening ports such that they do not overlap (see config).

   Does Syncthing support syncing between folders on the same system?
       No.  Syncthing is not designed to sync locally and the overhead involved in doing so using
       Syncthing’s method would be wasteful. There are better programs to achieve  this  such  as
       rsync <https://rsync.samba.org/> or Unison <https://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison>.

   When  I do have two distinct Syncthing-managed folders on two hosts, how does Syncthing handle
       moving files between them?
       Syncthing does not specially handle this  case,  and  most  files  will  most  likely  get
       re-downloaded.

       In  detail,  the behavior depends on the scan order. If you have folders A and B, and move
       files from A to B, if A gets scanned first, it will announce the removal of the  files  to
       others  who  will  then remove the files. As you rescan B, B will announce the addition of
       new files, and other peers will have nowhere to get them from  apart  from  re-downloading
       them.

       If  B  gets  rescanned  first, B will announce additions first, and remote peers will then
       reconstruct the files (not rename, more like copying block by block) from A, and then as A
       gets rescanned, it will remove the files from A.

       A workaround would be to copy first from A to B, rescan B, wait for B to copy the files on
       the remote side, and then delete from A.

   Is Syncthing my ideal backup application?
       No. Syncthing is not a  great  backup  application  because  all  changes  to  your  files
       (modifications,  deletions,  etc.)  will be propagated to all your devices. You can enable
       versioning, but we encourage you to use other tools to keep your data safe from  your  (or
       our) mistakes.

   How can I exclude files with brackets ([]) in the name?
       The  patterns  in .stignore are glob patterns, where brackets are used to denote character
       ranges. That is, the pattern q[abc]x will match the files qax, qbx and qcx.

       To match an actual file called q[abc]x the pattern needs to “escape”  the  brackets,  like
       so: q\[abc\]x.

       On  Windows,  escaping special characters is not supported as the \ character is used as a
       path separator.

   How do I access the web GUI from another computer?
       The default listening address is 127.0.0.1:8384, so you can only access the GUI  from  the
       same  machine.  This is for security reasons. To access the web GUI from another computer,
       change the GUI listen address through the web UI from 127.0.0.1:8384  to  0.0.0.0:8384  or
       change the config.xml:

          <gui enabled="true" tls="false">
            <address>127.0.0.1:8384</address>

       to

          <gui enabled="true" tls="false">
            <address>0.0.0.0:8384</address>

       Then  the  GUI  is  accessible from everywhere. You should set a password and enable HTTPS
       with this configuration. You can do this from inside the GUI.

       If both your computers are Unix-like (Linux,  Mac,  etc.)  you  can  also  leave  the  GUI
       settings at default and use an ssh port forward to access it. For example,

          $ ssh -L 9090:127.0.0.1:8384 user@othercomputer.example.com

       will  log  you  into  othercomputer.example.com,  and  present the remote Syncthing GUI on
       http://localhost:9090 on your local computer.

       If you only want to access the remote gui and don’t want the terminal  session,  use  this
       example,

          $ ssh -N -L 9090:127.0.0.1:8384 user@othercomputer.example.com

       If only your remote computer is Unix-like, you can still access it with ssh from Windows.

       Under  Windows  10  (64  bit)  you can use the same ssh command if you install the Windows
       Subsystem for Linux <https://docs.microsoft.com/windows/wsl/install-win10>.

       Another   Windows   way   to   run   ssh   is   to   install   gow   (Gnu   On    Windows)
       <https://github.com/bmatzelle/gow>.  The easiest way to install gow is with the chocolatey
       <https://chocolatey.org/> package manager.

   I don’t like the GUI or the theme. Can it be changed?
       You can change the theme in the settings. Syncthing  ships  with  other  themes  than  the
       default.

       If  you  want  a  custom  theme  or  a completely different GUI, you can add your own.  By
       default, Syncthing will look for a directory gui inside  the  Syncthing  home  folder.  To
       change  the  directory  to  look  for  themes, you need to set the STGUIASSETS environment
       variable. To get the concrete directory, run syncthing with the -paths parameter. It  will
       print all the relevant paths, including the “GUI override directory”.

       To  add  e.g. a red theme, you can create the file red/assets/css/theme.css inside the GUI
       override directory to override the default CSS styles.

       To   create   a    whole    new    GUI,    you    should    checkout    the    files    at
       https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/tree/main/gui/default  to  get  an  idea  how to do
       that.

   How do I upgrade Syncthing?
       If you use a package manager such as  Debian’s  apt-get,  you  should  upgrade  using  the
       package  manager.  If  you  use the binary packages linked from Syncthing.net, you can use
       Syncthing’s built-in automatic upgrade functionality.

       • If automatic upgrades is enabled (which is the default), Syncthing will  upgrade  itself
         automatically within 24 hours of a new release.

       • The upgrade button appears in the web GUI when a new version has been released. Pressing
         it will perform an upgrade.

       • To force an upgrade from the command line, run syncthing -upgrade.

       Note that your system  should  have  CA  certificates  installed  which  allows  a  secure
       connection to GitHub (e.g. FreeBSD requires sudo pkg install ca_root_nss). If curl or wget
       works with normal HTTPS sites, then so should Syncthing.

   Where do I find the latest release?
       We release new versions through GitHub. The latest release is always found on the  release
       page  <https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/releases/latest>.  Unfortunately GitHub does
       not provide a single URL to automatically download the latest version. We suggest  to  use
       the   GitHub  API  <https://api.github.com/repos/syncthing/syncthing/releases/latest>  and
       parsing the JSON response.

   How do I run Syncthing as a daemon process on Linux?
       If  you’re  using  systemd,  runit,   or   upstart,   we   ship   example   configurations
       <https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/tree/main/etc>.

       If  however  you’re  not  using one of these tools, you have a couple of options.  If your
       system has a tool called start-stop-daemon installed (that’s the name of the command,  not
       the  package),  look into the local documentation for that, it will almost certainly cover
       100% of what you want to do.  If you don’t have start-stop-daemon, there are  a  bunch  of
       other  software  packages  you  could  use  to  do  this.   The  most well known is called
       daemontools, and can be found in the standard package repositories for almost every modern
       Linux  distribution.   Other  popular  tools with similar functionality include S6 and the
       aforementioned runit.

   How do I increase the inotify limit to get my filesystem watcher to work?
       You are probably reading this  because  you  encountered  the  following  error  with  the
       filesystem watcher on linux:
          Failed  to  start  filesystem  watcher  for  folder yourLabel (yourID): failed to setup
          inotify      handler.       Please       increase       inotify       limits,       see
          https://docs.syncthing.net/users/faq.html#inotify-limits

       Linux  typically  restricts  the  amount of watches per user (usually 8192). When you have
       more directories you need to adjust that number.

       On many Linux distributions you can run the following to fix it:

          echo "fs.inotify.max_user_watches=204800" | sudo tee -a /etc/sysctl.conf

       On Arch Linux and potentially others it is preferred to write this line  into  a  separate
       file, i.e. you should run:

          echo "fs.inotify.max_user_watches=204800" | sudo tee -a /etc/sysctl.d/90-override.conf

       This only takes effect after a reboot. To adjust the limit immediately, run:

          echo 204800 | sudo tee /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_watches

   How do I reset the GUI password?
       If  you’ve  forgotten/lost  the GUI password, you can remove it by deleting the <user> and
       <password> XML tags from the <gui> block in file config.xml. This  should  be  done  while
       Syncthing  is  not running. The location of the file depends on the OS and is described in
       the configuration documentation.

       For example, the two emphasized lines below would be removed from the file.

          <gui enabled="true" tls="false" debugging="false">
             <address>127.0.0.1:8384</address>
             <user>syncguy</user>
             <password>$2a$10$s9wWHOQe...Cq7GPye69</password>
             <apikey>9RCKohqCAyrj5RjpyZdR2wXmQ9PyQFeN</apikey>
             <theme>default</theme>
          </gui>

AUTHOR

       The Syncthing Authors

COPYRIGHT

       2014-2019, The Syncthing Authors