Its stupid fast, reliable, and rarely has any conflicts. If it does it seems to work them out without intervention. I’ve tried Nextcloud including the AIO image and its just so clunky and slow. I was getting sync errors just on the simple Notes apps. Repeatedly. I mean I get why people like it, it can do way more than Seafile. But for a pure Dropbox replacement, I love it.

The fact I can reach any file on any device from any other device without syncing EVERYTHING is fantastic. I know Syncthing is also popular, but seems to require more manual settings if you want to be selective on what syncs.

I will say, I’ve tried and failed numerous times to get Collabora CODE and S3 storage integration to work with Seafile and that is a nightmare, at least for me. I cannot get my head around it. But standing Seafile up itself was fairly easy.

Does anyone else use it? If so, have you tried the CODE and/or multiple storage backend integrations?

  • poVoq@slrpnk.net
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    1 year ago

    Their non-standard way of storing files, which makes them basically inaccessible without Seafile, is a disaster waiting to happen. With Nextcloud at least I can do normal filesystem level backups and access the files like any others if I really need to.

      • Father_Redbeard@lemmy.mlOP
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        1 year ago

        I really want to use Syncthing for something. I just haven’t figured out what yet. Only thing I can think of is to sync games saves from my Steam Deck for non-Steam games, since they don’t have cloud saves.

        • PoisonedPrisonPanda@discuss.tchncs.de
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          1 year ago

          I use it for working with my smartphone.

          sorting pictures in my pc, have them right in my gallery on my phone. fetched a pdf when doomscrolling why commuting, have it instantly on my pc when Im back home.

          I am currently migrating away from tiddlywiki as I want to have my notes integrated into my plain file life as well.

          • Father_Redbeard@lemmy.mlOP
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            1 year ago

            I have a Mealie instance running on a VPS. It has a backup function built in, but it just dumps a .zip locally. I could leverage Syncthing to send that over to my server. Other than that, what you described is exactly how I use Seafile. I have my documents folders on all PCs and my phone synced. Had to print something off downstairs and didn’t want to go get the laptop upstairs to either send to myself or print from the laptop, so seafile just let me reach to the server and pull it down via my Linux desktop client.

            • PoisonedPrisonPanda@discuss.tchncs.de
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              1 year ago

              yeah I see, however in my use case I dont have all the time access to my server (which is also the case wifh syncthimg) plus the mentioned culprit that the seafile datastructure is not able to retrieve the files without seafile.

              • Father_Redbeard@lemmy.mlOP
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                1 year ago

                I mentioned it in another comment but you can use rclone to mount the seafile data structure. And at least in my testing it works really well. I’ll have to test with more data and of course remote data. If I ever get the Backblaze B2 backend working then I could more easily test a use case where I didn’t have access to the server like you’re talking about. I have had great success with rclone mount with Dropbox, but those are not chunked files. :)

                I do wonder if folks who are hesitant to use it because of the chunked files are also not using apps like Borg backup or Duplicacy. Both of which also chunk the data. I believe in both cases you can still leverage rclone to mount them as whole files for retrieval.