- cross-posted to:
- selfhosted@lemmy.world
- selfhosted@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- selfhosted@lemmy.world
- selfhosted@lemmy.world
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36410134
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36348624
I am running grapheneos and got nc from fdroid if it matters. I also use nc on my local network only.
So I could not find logs that pointed to any specific file giving the errors. Still I took the advice that it might have to do with file names. That made me suspect it had to do with my music folder which has some foreign music, so i renamed files with a special character. So far it seems that was it. This was odd because those files have been there and synced for a while, but the message was not happening until recently. Still wanted to update in case someone else has this issue there is some resolution that might be helpful.
So I couldn’t really find what are the offending filenames, but they were from the music folder. I guess I didn’t mention that that was the most recent folder I set as a two way sync. I get most of my music from yt-dl and naturally wanted to have it on both my laptop and phone. I since have discovered Power Ampache 2 . It is a music player and it can just stream and download your music on your Next Cloud. So far it works well and I have no more errors regarding filenames as I no longer need the Next Cloud app to do a two way sync.
Nextcloud is awesome, you should definitely still use it. It’s really big and has its issues when upgrading, but it’s still one of—if not the—best for file sync and share.
Easy Docker solutions:
My two cents: try it yourself but don’t start using their app store until you’ve gotten a better feel for things. They have some great app store apps, but it makes you dependent on Nextcloud.
Nextcloud is by far the worst piece of software I have ever had the misfortune of deploying. From tech stack, to performance, documentation, stability, modernity it’s catastrophic
I’ve never used it but it always seems to me like they’re trying to be an everything app.
That’s kinda their schtick though. They’ve been that way since before they split off from Owncloud.
You can either be good at a few things or mediocre at a lot of things. For convenience I’m sure it’s great, but I wonder about the quality and sustainability of it all.
But compared to Google and not owning your data? It’s SO much better, not that it’s really a fair comparison.
Sorry your experience has been so bad. I’m using the LinuxServer.io version. I’ve had to run some OCC commands when upgrading and it’s sometimes slow, but for me it syncs my files and does version control + sharing well.