Need to see if your shared folder is taking up space on your dropbox 👨💻? Find out how to check here.
Forum Discussion
David C.118
9 years agoExplorer | Level 4
Dual booting with shared DB drive possible?
I am looking in to buying a new laptop and will need to dual boot Windows and Ubuntu. I am planning three SSD's - one for Windows, one for Ubuntu and one as a shared data drive. Is it possible to...
- 9 years ago
It's very possible, just not supported or recommended.
Install Dropbox and use the Advanced Options to specify the location for your Dropbox folder. Allow it to sync completely. Boot into the other operating system and install Dropbox, again using Advanced Options to specify the same Dropbox folder. Dropbox will index your files when the installation is complete, but shouldn't need to sync anything unless there have been changes (though it may appear to be syncing, just let it work).
It is extremely important that you DO NOT USE SELECTIVE SYNC from either operating system when running in this configuration. If you do, you WILL lose files.
I would also suggest never booting into the other operating system until you're certain that the current one is fully synced. Also, as always, keep your own backups of your data.
chasDSO
8 years agoHelpful | Level 5
I attempted this today, I think this thread is outdated. It looks like the dropbox desktop client for Linux no longer supports ntfs formatted volumes (requires ext4 formatted partition). Thus, it seems now impossible to boot between linux and windows and share dropbox files between them (Windows can not read ext4 formatted partition) - you must have two different dropbox installations - this is from the system requirements page on dropbox:
Linux: Ubuntu 14.04 or higher, Fedora 21 or higher
- The Dropbox folder will need to be on an ext4-formatted hard drive or partition
- Note: ecryptfs is not supported, but Dropbox will continue to sync with supported file systems that are encrypted via full disk encryption (e.g. LUKS)
So I have a question though. Does anyone know, if I'm booted in Linux, I can see and mount the ntfs drive - so I can open and modify files in the ntfs mounted drive within the dropbox folders for the Windows install. If I modify those files, next time I boot into Windows and the dropbox client runs - will it see the files have changed and synch them?
I'm terribly disappointed that dropbox doesn't support a dual boot scenario and will be investigating alternative storage services now.
BlackBat24
8 years agoNew member | Level 2
I'm in the same boat as chasDSO. I had been using only one NTFS data drive in my dualboot (win10, ubuntu 18.04 --originally 16.04) for a while now. I'm a PhD student and I run simulations in linux-based clusters, so it's easier to use ubuntu's command line tools, but there's a few things that are better done in windows. DB was one of my backup solutions, and my way of syncing my work (ubuntu), home (dual-boot) and laptop (ubuntu) computers.
I've tried ext2fsd on windows, and while I can read my drive, windows refuses to give me write permissions on an "insecure file system".
Short of duplicating my 1TB DB folder, I see no good solution to this.
- paloi8 years agoExplorer | Level 4
I feel the same pain. I have 170 Gb in my Dropbox, therefore I am a paying user.
Counting the Dropbox folder plus the .cache folder plus the DBs ..., goes beyond 200 Gb at my hard disk ...
It looks awkward and wasteful to have 200Gb in a windows partition and again another 200Gb in the Linux partition.
It is rather unaffordable, if you mostly work with laptops, and you expect to have fast SSD drives, as basically a 512 GB SSD which is not cheap will not be enough and then I will need a 1TB SSD drive which is quite expensive.
This thread started with someone trying to eliminate the duplication of the DB, and has evolved into confirming duplication of both, DB and files.
For me, this blow up the competitive advantage that Dropbox has over Google Drive and OneDrive, as until now they were performing quite poorly on Linux (to be gentle, because they do not have Linux client), ... so now this places Dropbox to some short of similar side, where it is only able to work in one of the two OS of my Dual boot laptops.
I can understand the complexity of this, and accept that the indexing is done every-time we switch of OS, and that in the worst case scenario the DB is duplicated ... but having several hundreds of GBs duplicated is not an option for me and most of the dual boot Dropbox clients ...- TripleS7 years agoNew member | Level 2
I'm using window 10 and ubuntu 18. I tried to use the same folder for windows and ubuntu however dropbox says:
"To sync your dropbox move your drobox folder to partition with a compariable file system,.. Drop box is compariable with ext4"
Since this thread is outdated, are there any updates?
- chasDSO7 years agoHelpful | Level 5
'..There is no common format that is supported on each operating system....'
That post doesn't make sense. You don't need compat formats on the drive system. Dropbox should just be copying down folders and files to the file system irrespective of what format. Any of those will support the same files - for instance, you can dload .docx or linux text files just fine to any format - disk format is irrelevent.
There is no technology reason why Dropbox decided to end support for this option - they supported it in the past I believe but functionality was removed.
About Create, upload, and share
Find help to solve issues with creating, uploading, and sharing files and folders in Dropbox. Get support and advice from the Dropbox Community.
The Dropbox Community team is active from Monday to Friday. We try to respond to you as soon as we can, usually within 2 hours.
If you need more help you can view your support options (expected response time for an email or ticket is 24 hours), or contact us on X, Facebook or Instagram.
For more info on available support options for your Dropbox plan, see this article.
If you found the answer to your question in this Community thread, please 'like' the post to say thanks and to let us know it was useful!