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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I attempted this today, I think this thread is outdated.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.
David C.118
8 years agoExplorer | Level 4
I had it working seamlesly, however, DB no longer supports NTFS under Linux and so this no longer works.
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