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Bert M.
11 years agoNew member | Level 1
Desktop app is stuck 'Starting' when it loads up and doesn't sync
I am a paying customer and very frustrated with Dropbox. I am ready to drop DropBox and look for other alternatives.
Since Friday of last week it has been trying to sync 100Gb in files and it is taking an eternity. Now is stuck in "Starting."
I have rebooted the Mac (10.6.8). I am using Dropbox 3.0.3. I have tried going to Preferences, holding the option key and "Fixing Permission." I also read in the Internet about deleting the hidden cache folder but I have not done it yet since I don't know what to expect.
Any assistance is appreciated.
- Reading through this thread, everyone seems to be experiencing similar and yet slightly different issues, so I’ll go through the general troubleshooting steps to fix all of them.Feel free to stop whenever your app begins to sync normally, not all steps are needed.Install the stable version:
The first thing we need is to be sure you’re running the stable version of the Dropbox desktop application, and not the beta.
To do so uncheck the box next to "Early releases" here. Then, do an advanced reinstall to ensure that all beta functions are removed fully.Instead of the download link on that page, I recommend using the offline installers for this purpose:Confirm there are no symlinks
Secondly, if your app is fine, but it’s still starting, then it could be stuck in a loop trying to parse your symlinks.
What are these? Long story short for those not in the know, these are files or folder that refer to another file or folder in your Dropbox account, or even outside the Dropbox folder.This can include, but is not limited to, iPhoto/Photos library on Mac, system folders such as Documents/Pictures/Music/Downloads, databases, programming code, and many more.Removing these symlinks is vital since they can cause these issues, high CPU usage, and permissions problems.Follow step 7 on this article in order to detect the symlinks in your computer and remove any from your Dropbox folder. Generally, moving the specific files or folders to another location should remove the links.Check your internet connection
Hilariously, this is more common than you think. You have a stable WiFi/ethernet connection to the web, other sites work, and yet the app isn’t connecting.If multiple users are having this problem on the same network, there is a possibility that a proxy, VPN, firewall, security software, or even ISP/router issues that could be restricting traffic to the Dropbox domains.We can’t really narrow things down for you, since you need to check this out yourself as there are so many programs out there.We’ve had cases more often than not about built in security software on routers for home internet users, meant to protect users and children, but in doing so preventing the Dropbox desktop application from loading.Using a remote login
Getting a black or white screen on the Dropbox app when you’re trying to sign in is a different issue.
This usually occurs when using a remote login or even a virtual machine to another device. The graphics for remote logins are usually reduced in quality, and since the Dropbox desktop application connects to the Dropbox site to sign you in, it won’t render the login page in the app while on a remote login.Best thing to do would be to access the machine directly to login from there.---Overall, there are many reasons for this cause, however hopefully this post should help in resolving most of the issues![This thread is now closed. If you have a similar or new question, you can ask here.]
96 Replies
Replies have been turned off for this discussion
- Paul A.258 years agoCollaborator | Level 9I too have Dropbox stuck on "Starting" in Kubuntu 14.04. But what's worse is that my machine (HP Pavilion) soon gets wedged altogether -- so wedged that I can't even start a virtual console with Alt-Ctl-F2. That might or might not have anything to do with Dropbox, but it seems to happen only during Dropbox startup. I've installed Dropbox on other laptops, and although it sometimes takes a few minutes to start and a day or to to finish syncing, this seems much worse.
- Jim B.458 years agoCollaborator | Level 8
"let's see into this together!"
Cut the patronizing crap. I've been writing software for over 50 years and can "see into this" just fine.
"As per your last query"
Which you didn't read. Again:
"Dropbox has said for years that performance "declines" if you have more than 300,000 files ... they have never explained why and have never fixed this. Properly designed sync clients don't have this limitation. Dropbox's "solution" is selective sync, which is no solution at all. And selective sync deletes the local files (but not all of them!). There's no way to move the files elsewhere, turn on selective sync, then move them back and sync ... Dropbox insists on reloading everything. Properly designed sync systems don't work like that."
So don't go telling me yet again to use "selective sync", which is just another way of saying "don't sync all your files". I want to sync all my files. Properly designed sync systems don't have these problems. People have been complaining about this "soft limit" for years, but Dropbox has never explained why it has so much trouble with large numbers of files. And don't go explaining "This limit is related to the number of files, not to their size" as if I were some imbecile. The problem isn't with me, it's with Dropbox.
"what is going on here"
I told you what is going on here ... the client is buggy crap. It should not fall to pieces when there are lots of files, and it should never sit there for hours with a tooltip that says "6,000 KB/sec, 17 sec left" with no data being transferred.
After several restarts and a relink, Dropbox finally decided to start transferring my files, but I have no faith in it continuing to function, and will be switching to another sync service.
Walter - Paul A.258 years agoCollaborator | Level 9
It seems to have gottrrn unstuck, although the transfer is going painfully slowly (maybe 100 files an hour). And that's to my primary HDD.
- Sanchez8 years ago
Dropbox Community Moderator
Hey Paul A.25,I hope it works out for you, but if this persists, go ahead and write in to our team so we can take a closer look.Have a great week ahead! - Paul A.258 years agoCollaborator | Level 9
Dropbox has gotten unstuck, but it's restoring my local Dropbox image very slowly -- at a rate of about 8 kilobytes/sec. This is likely due to a bad interaction between my particular laptop and Dropbox. I've also had lockups during the attempted restoration that forced me to reboot. On the other hand, I've installed Dropbox on several other machines, and although it often took a full day of computation to finish, it always ran smoothly.
At the moment I'm letting the restoration proceed without anything else going on. Once it's completed I'll be able to investigate any other difficulties withouth having to contend with Dropbox restoring files in the background.
- Walter8 years ago
Dropbox Community Moderator
You can speed this process up by changing your bandwidth settings if you like Paul A.25!
Remember that Dropbox doesn't use all of your bandwidth normally. Nevertheless, you can change that by manually setting the upload/download speed following the steps outlined here.
Just keep in mind that setting your Upload to Don't Limit or a higher number than your connection is capable of could possibly cause all other Internet activity on your network to slow significantly.
Cheers!
- Paul A.258 years agoCollaborator | Level 9
I'm running Dropbox under Kubuntu 14.04. I too am stuck on Starting, but with a nasty extra twist. As Dropbox runs, the resident memory it's using (I monitor it with top) gradually increases. At the moment it's up to 4.7GB. Eventually the system processes are starved for memory and the machine locks up. The trouble is that this happens before the sync has been able to get past Starting.
- Walter8 years ago
Dropbox Community Moderator
Thanks for the additional info Paul - much appreciated.
Since I'd really like to help with this, I ran an internal search and found your support ticket. I have consulted with the agent handling your case and sent you some additional information on your specific case via email. Check your inbox at your earliest convenience and let us know how this goes.
Thanks!
- lallen8 years agoNew member | Level 2
Trying to install drop box on some work machines for a project, but eachand everyone become stuck on "starting" with a black dialog box, ten machines in total. I found the soultion was to simply crash the software on PC. Go into taks manager and End the setup dropbox task. Dropbox starts syning and works.
Clearly a bug in the installer. 10 fresh installs with the same behaviour.
- Jay8 years ago
Dropbox Community Moderator
Reading through this thread, everyone seems to be experiencing similar and yet slightly different issues, so I’ll go through the general troubleshooting steps to fix all of them.Feel free to stop whenever your app begins to sync normally, not all steps are needed.Install the stable version:
The first thing we need is to be sure you’re running the stable version of the Dropbox desktop application, and not the beta.
To do so uncheck the box next to "Early releases" here. Then, do an advanced reinstall to ensure that all beta functions are removed fully.Instead of the download link on that page, I recommend using the offline installers for this purpose:Confirm there are no symlinks
Secondly, if your app is fine, but it’s still starting, then it could be stuck in a loop trying to parse your symlinks.
What are these? Long story short for those not in the know, these are files or folder that refer to another file or folder in your Dropbox account, or even outside the Dropbox folder.This can include, but is not limited to, iPhoto/Photos library on Mac, system folders such as Documents/Pictures/Music/Downloads, databases, programming code, and many more.Removing these symlinks is vital since they can cause these issues, high CPU usage, and permissions problems.Follow step 7 on this article in order to detect the symlinks in your computer and remove any from your Dropbox folder. Generally, moving the specific files or folders to another location should remove the links.Check your internet connection
Hilariously, this is more common than you think. You have a stable WiFi/ethernet connection to the web, other sites work, and yet the app isn’t connecting.If multiple users are having this problem on the same network, there is a possibility that a proxy, VPN, firewall, security software, or even ISP/router issues that could be restricting traffic to the Dropbox domains.We can’t really narrow things down for you, since you need to check this out yourself as there are so many programs out there.We’ve had cases more often than not about built in security software on routers for home internet users, meant to protect users and children, but in doing so preventing the Dropbox desktop application from loading.Using a remote login
Getting a black or white screen on the Dropbox app when you’re trying to sign in is a different issue.
This usually occurs when using a remote login or even a virtual machine to another device. The graphics for remote logins are usually reduced in quality, and since the Dropbox desktop application connects to the Dropbox site to sign you in, it won’t render the login page in the app while on a remote login.Best thing to do would be to access the machine directly to login from there.---Overall, there are many reasons for this cause, however hopefully this post should help in resolving most of the issues![This thread is now closed. If you have a similar or new question, you can ask here.]
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