I know my way around DSM well enough to set permissions (I think) but doing anything via SSH. I was able to temporarily fix the issue by following these instructions here: Filebot via Docker on Synology - AMC copies but can't move - FileBotīut now the issue has returned. Your data is your data alone and you deserve to choose where it is stored, whether it is shared with some third party, and how it's transmitted over the internet. It synchronizes files between two or more computers in real time, safely protected from prying eyes. I have set the users for both Filebot and Syncthing to have the same read/write permissions on the "sync" folder in DSM, to no avail. Description Syncthing is a continuous file synchronization program. Setting it to "move" results in a permission error: Setting Filebot to "copy" files works fine, but that's not ideal as I then need to manually clean them up. To be able to access the web GUI from other computers, you need to change the GUI Listen Address setting from the default 127.0.0.1:8384 to 0.0.0.0:8384. The other is my "sync" folder, which is where downloads go to and Filebot monitors to rename and move them. Similarly there is also a syncthing-gui service. Syncthing started failing because it didn't have permission anymore to create certificates, but I seem to have sorted this out. I have two directories that have been having issues: "docker" which stores all my Docker config files. But syncthing just says stat /path/.stfolder: permission denied. Execing as the user running syncthing (1009: syncthing) I can rm, mkdir and also stat the.
#SYNCTHING DOCKER FULL#
That's when my problems started!įilebot and Syncthing seem to be "fighting" over permissions. But nothing besides giving syncthing full ownership of all shares folders works And I just don’t get it. You get both backup and file synchronization without pesky servers just using the computer capacity you probably already have laying around. This was all working fine before, but I decided to migrate to Filebot via Docker instead of an APK. Syncthing is a way to keep things up-to-date across machines without going through any 3rd party servers. I'm using my DS218+ mainly as a media center, and recently I've set up Docker and I'm running Syncthing (amazing!) to sync files from a remote seedbox to my NAS, and then Filebot to rename and move the files to my Plex directories.