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Forum Discussion
Grant W.1
7 years agoNew member | Level 2
Smart Sync and removing local files
Hello,
I'm attempting to convert my dropbox folder on my desktop to smart sync, so that I'm not storing any local files on my harddrive in order to save space. Currently, my folder has some local ...
- 7 years ago
Hi Grant W.1
So first and foremost, Dropbox is a sync solution, not a backup. When sync is turned on, it sync the local file to the cloud. If you delete the local file, it will also destroy the cloud copy. You can directly upload your files for storage using the web client https://www.dropbox.com/home and then that will be stored independently of your local files.
As for the status, if you click on the little dropbox logo in the system tray, it should give you the current sync status of your files.
atccodex
7 years agoSuper User alumni
Hi Grant W.1
So first and foremost, Dropbox is a sync solution, not a backup. When sync is turned on, it sync the local file to the cloud. If you delete the local file, it will also destroy the cloud copy. You can directly upload your files for storage using the web client https://www.dropbox.com/home and then that will be stored independently of your local files.
As for the status, if you click on the little dropbox logo in the system tray, it should give you the current sync status of your files.
- tne2046 years agoNew member | Level 2
You didn't actually answer the OP's question.
The question, again is: after enabling smartsync where the selected folder is cloud only (meaning, it will not sync between cloud & local), how does one delete those files from local without it rolling back to cloud.
It's a pretty poorly designed feature, because once smartsync is enabled on a folder to be cloud only, deleting that folder SHOULD NOT roll back to the cloud, per the setting. Yet it does roll back, and prompts you that it will do this when deleting or moving the local folder/file. So you end up with no clear way to remove those local files.
I suppose you could delete the local folder, then restore it in cloud Dropbox and it shouldn't re-sync locally. But if you're dealing with a folder that has TONS of files, it's really not an attractive proposition with the unknown of what it will take to restore the underlying files on Dropbox.com. Can you restore an entire folder at once? Or do you need to restore file by file.
Huge design flaw imo. Let me know if anyone can properly answer this question on how to manage.
- MikeTyrrell6 years agoNew member | Level 2
I agree, smart sync is dumb. The answer is not an answer. I expected it to work like this:
1) turn smart sync on for a folder
2) delete the local folder to save space on your local system
Instead you turn on smart sync and it seems like nothing changed. You try and delete your local folder and it wants to delete your online folder - dumb.
Also, dropbox isn't a backup solution?? It's a sync solution?
THAT makes me nervous as hell - so really we shouldn't count on our files being safe in dropbox because it's not really a backup solution.
Hmmmm, I guess I should start hunting for an alternative service. :-(
- Grambles126 years agoNew member | Level 2
I'm experiencing the same problem with Smart Sync. I switched over select folders to Online Only over 10 days ago and the local versions of the files are not automatically freeing up disk space. For example, A 10GB video file in the Online Only folder is still showing up on my hard drive locally as taking up 10GB of space. Thank you.
- Daphne6 years agoDropbox Staff
Hey there tne204,
When you use smart sync to make a file "online only", it reduces the space the file takes on your hard drive to a negligible amount. Smart sync is useful for those who don't want the files to take space on their hard drive, but still see their entire folder structure and easily access files on their desktop.
If you don't want to see certain folders at all after uploading them to your Dropbox account then you can use selective sync instead. The files can be accessed online and won't sync to the desktop at all. Please just make sure the files are fully synced before removing them on your computer with selective sync, which you can do by checking the sync status is "Up to date".
I hope this helps to clarify the matter - Thanks!
- tracymcgravy5 years agoNew member | Level 2
This isn't true at all. It is not a neglible amount, I still have "smart sync" files that take of GB of space. It's extremely frustrating.
- clbchase46 years agoNew member | Level 2
So if sync is turned on and I have not uploaded my local dropbox contents for backup and if I restore from backup all folders/directories/files except my local Dropbox folder (files) - then all my local dropbox files are forever gone, unless I still have them on a external backup drive for restore. Correct?
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