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- Syncthing
Configure and monitor Syncthing via a responsive and powerful interface accessible via your browser Works on macOS, Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris, OpenBSD, and many others
- Downloads - Syncthing
Syncthing is available out-of-the-box as part of many Linux distributions, though often not with the most up-to-date version We also maintain packages and installation instructions for Debian Ubuntu at apt syncthing net
- Getting Started — Syncthing documentation
Currently all community flavors run the same Syncthing core underneath, so don’t worry about changing your flavor at a later point in time The remainder of this page will explain how to set up two devices with the core Syncthing flavor
- Welcome to Syncthing’s documentation!
Welcome to Syncthing’s documentation! ¶ As a new user, the getting started guide is a good place to start, then perhaps moving on to the FAQ If you run into trouble getting devices to connect to each other, the page about firewall setup explains the networking necessary to get it to work
- Command Line Operation — Syncthing documentation
Syncthing lets you synchronize your files bidirectionally across multiple devices This means the creation, modification or deletion of files on one machine will automatically be replicated to your other devices
- Getting Started — Syncthing v0. 11 documentation
Currently all community flavors run the same Syncthing core underneath, so don’t worry about changing your flavor at a later point in time The remainder of this page will explain how to set up two devices with the core Syncthing flavor
- FAQ — Syncthing documentation
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 or Unison
- Understanding Synchronization — Syncthing documentation
Syncthing keeps track of several versions of each file - the version that it currently has on disk, called the local version, the versions announced by all other connected devices, and the “best” (usually the most recent) version of the file
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