![]() Here is the final Set Up with Bad Piggy included. Now that all is ready and running, you have yourself an excellent back up and file sharing system. Now every time the Pi starts it knows how to mount your drive. UUID=MYUUID /mnt/MYHD exfat defaults,auto,umask=000,users,rw 0 0 Assuming you are mounting MYUUID on MYHD I used the same defaults as the article suggests: Now you can use sudo nano /ect/fstab to add your partition to automount. I copy it below for the sake of brevity.įirst run sudo blkid, it will return a list of devices and their UUIDs. I found a good reference at miqu blog for exactly that purpose. You could test if it mounts with mount /dev/sda2 /mnt and dmesg to see the mounting process.Īssuming everything works OK and you can mount your device you probably want to mount it automatically every time it boots. Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes ![]() Installation is pretty straightforward from their apt packages.ĭisk /dev/sda: 931.5 GiB, 1000170586112 bytes, 1953458176 sectors ![]() In the case of Resilio its biggest strength was the iOS app for synchronizing pictures, but that didn’t make up for the fact that it is a proprietary software (thus little better than alternative cloud services) and, even more important, quite unstable and resource hungry on the Raspberry Pi. In general, Syncthing strengths are the lower footprint both in CPU and memory, the fact that is Open Source and thus can more easily be debugged and scrutinized, and the fact that it has been consistently stable. I will explain below the installation of both since some of you are directed here when looking for Resilio’s installation too. For that reason I am currently using and recommend using Syncthing instead, which is an open-source alternative to Resilio. Update (15-02-2017): Switching to SyncthingĪfter using Resilio for about a month I have found it to be a bit unreliable and buggy on the Raspberry. This time I chose Raspbian as it is the default distro and possibly has more support. Raspberry 3 comes with a handy New Out Of the Box Software NOOBS which, despite the name, even more experience users use to install Raspberry’s OS. Mine came with 16GB and would have been enough. Finally, they also provide encryption, which is handy in the corporate environment.įirst step is getting a Raspberry 3 (I had a spare one at the office) and perhaps an external hard drive, although an SD card might be sufficient for you. If you have a NAS, you can also back it up there and sync the files between your computer and NAS. I remembered Bittorrent Sync from few years back and found out two versions of it: Resilio and Syncthing.īoth allow you to back up files of your computer on any other device or share a large folder among friends or colleagues. However I didn’t want to share my files with everyone but rather I was looking for a DHT overlay of my own devices. I was looking for a P2P-based file storage software that could run over multiple OS. ![]() I want to reduce my dependency on cloud services like Google Drive, Dropbox, etc and I want to have control over what I share. ![]() Syncthing Resilio Raspberry Pi File Synchronization P2P NASĪs a pet project of mine, I have been using a spare Raspberry Pi 3 as a back up system for my files. ![]()
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