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Forum Discussion
holf
6 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Syncing is stuck on my Linux devices, what can I do?
It seems I have the same problem as mentioned in above posts. I am running Dropbox on a pc and laptop, both having Linux-Lubuntu as the os. After a "one time update" on both systems, Dropbox is stuck...
- 6 years ago
Hi holf,
At the beginning you can try fix possible permission errors:
sudo chown -R "$USER" "$HOME/Dropbox" sudo chattr -R -i "$HOME/Dropbox" chmod -R u+rw ~/Dropbox
Also, existing symbolic links could be found using:
ls -alR ~/Dropbox | grep " -> "
If no any change, check the needs for watchable entries:
i=0; IFS=$'\n'; for a in `ls -R1 ~/Dropbox`; do ((++i)); done; echo $i
The above will give you some estimation. The current upper border could be received using:
sysctl fs.inotify.max_user_watches
If the estimation above don't fit in last result, try extend the border using something like:
sudo sysctl -w fs.inotify.max_user_watches=100000
Tune the value according your needs (with some reserve, of course).
If nothing helps yet, try to find out the exact files making troubles (which will give you chance investigate further), using something like:
(IFS=$'\n';for i in `ls -R1 ~/Dropbox`; do if [[ "$i" =~ ":" ]]; then cd `echo "$i" | sed "y/:/\//"`; echo -n "In folder: "; pwd; dropbox filestatus; fi; done) | grep -vi "up to date" | grep -vi ".dropbox:" | grep -vi ".dropbox.cache:"
Last command assume you have installed properly 'dropbox' command, either using debian package or by hand. Otherwise "command not found" will be signaled. Will be enumerated all folders in Dropbox and signaled problematic files inside, if any. Be patient, could take some time, depending on your content size. Once found out problematic entries, you can use different techniques for investigate, like see current file's classic attributes (the simplest one):
ls -l ~/Dropbox/Troublesome/file.ext
Good luck. :wink:
ipejasinovic
6 years agoNew member | Level 2
I've suffered same issue, when I upgraded my Ubuntu to latest version few days ago. Changing max_user_watches solved problem. Thanks guys.
profkruse
6 years agoNew member | Level 2
Same here - the max_user_watches setting on my Linux Mint was 8192 "out of the box", I have 128k files on Dropbox - a bit of a mismatch. Set it to 250,000 for now and Dropbox resumed syncing.
- profkruse6 years agoNew member | Level 2
Btw, the way I set up that change consistent with the design of Debian config files is to create a file "local.conf" in /etc/sysctl.d with the content "fs.inotify.max_user_watches=250000". Something like
sudo echo "fs.inotify.max_user_watches=250000" >> /etc/sysctl.d/local.conf
should do the trick. (Or sudo to root and use your favorite editor, which is what I did).
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