![]() If that is the case, is there any way I could do so without installing a desktop environment on the server? I’m new to this, so I apologise if I’m misguided or not doing something correctly. Instead, there is a tarball archive of the program available. Other Other Linux distributions, for the most part do not have packages available. Download and build it for Arch to get it running. I’m wondering if there would be any possible performance gain (in general, not specifically in regards to Syncthing) in using the main desktop client to mount my vault using FUSE rather than WebDAV. The Syncthing server/web UI tool is available in the Arch Linux User Repository. In comparison, pulling the encrypted vault down over LAN using rclone takes about 15 minutes (from which I can then use a local copy to pull the unencrypted contents). Enter the Device ID of the second device you want to sync with manually if it is not automatically detected. On the local network, it automatically detects the Syncthing-installed devices. However, it appears that performance is pretty abysmal in this setup I have approximately 130 GB in unencrypted files to sync with more than one client and currently syncing may take well over a day, per client. Click the Add Remote Device button in the bottom right corner of the Syncthing WebUI to add a device. Point Syncthing to the unencrypted contents mounted at ~/sync/vault. ![]() Mount vault to local path with echo "REDACTED" | sudo -S mount -t davfs -o uid=$(id -u),username="" ~/sync/vault.Unlock vault and start WebDAV using java -jar cryptomator-cli-0.3.1.jar -vault vault=REDACTED -passwordfile vault=REDACTED -bind localhost -port 9995 Step 2 Install Syncthing on Both Servers By default, Syncthing is not available in the Ubuntu 18.I’ve been attempting to use the cli version of Cryptomator on Ubuntu Server 18.04 in the following scheme:
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