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Forum Discussion
x-yuri
3 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Dropbox keeps saying, Downloading 67 files...
Hi,
There's a similar topic, but nothing there works for me. Holding Space doesn't reveal any hidden buttons. I had files owned by root, but I changed the owner to my user (uid 1000) on the "source" laptop, and the problem persists (my uid on both laptops is 1000). There are not many files with spaces, and those that have them, they have them in the middle of a filename. I'm running Arch Linux, dropbox-176.4.5108. The sad thing is, there doesn't seem to be any logs to see what it's doing and what's the problem. I don't even know which files it can't download.
Solved it by temporarily moving the problem directory out of the Dropbox dir:
* on the target machine: stop the daemon and `mv ~/Dropbox/problem/dir ~`
* on the source machine: `mv ~/Dropbox/problem/dir ~` and wait until it syncs
* on the target machine: start the daemon and wait until it syncs
* `mv ~/dir ~/Dropbox/problem` on the source machine and wait until it syncs on both machines
* now ~/dir can be deleted on the target machine
This is in case you know that the target machine has no newer files.
P.S. As shows this discussion Dropbox desperately needs some kind of a log or a way to find out what's causing problems. The lack of it leads to unproductive discussions of a "what if you do this?" (guessing) kind.
13 Replies
Replies have been turned off for this discussion
- x-yuri3 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Hey Hannah, I've just updated the application to 181.4.5678. Still "Downloading 67 files..."
- Jay3 years ago
Dropbox Community Moderator
Hi x-yuri, if the files are visible on the site, can you try adding a test file to one of those directories to see if this somehow helps them to sync down to the machine?
- x-yuri3 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Solved it by temporarily moving the problem directory out of the Dropbox dir:
* on the target machine: stop the daemon and `mv ~/Dropbox/problem/dir ~`
* on the source machine: `mv ~/Dropbox/problem/dir ~` and wait until it syncs
* on the target machine: start the daemon and wait until it syncs
* `mv ~/dir ~/Dropbox/problem` on the source machine and wait until it syncs on both machines
* now ~/dir can be deleted on the target machine
This is in case you know that the target machine has no newer files.
P.S. As shows this discussion Dropbox desperately needs some kind of a log or a way to find out what's causing problems. The lack of it leads to unproductive discussions of a "what if you do this?" (guessing) kind.
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