You might see that the Dropbox Community team have been busy working on some major updates to the Community itself! So, here is some info on what’s changed, what’s staying the same and what you can expect from the Dropbox Community overall.

Forum Discussion

Lucian F.1's avatar
Lucian F.1
Helpful | Level 5
8 years ago

Write to a Dropbox folder on NTFS from linux

Hello all,

 

I need some help with a syncing problem:

 

I plan to dual-boot linux and windows 10 (which is currently my main OS) and was wonderring if I can install dropbox in linux and get it to sync the Dropbox folder that resides on a NTFS partition. The idea is not to have the same data twice (once on the NTFS partition and second time on a linux only partition).

 

Thank you

 

Lucian

  • Scott M.58's avatar
    Scott M.58
    Helpful | Level 6

    I'm dual booting Windows (yuck) and Linux - have to put Dropbox on a shared NTFS partition to work, which is does.

     

    I sounds like I won't be able to use this NTFS partition for my Dropbox files come November?

     

    If so, Dropbox - cancel my renewal this coming October.

    • Rich's avatar
      Rich
      Icon for Super User II rankSuper User II

      As Mark stated above, to keep the discussion in a single location, please use this thread to discuss the upcoming changes related to partition types supported by Dropbox.

       

      This thread is now closed.

  • Rich's avatar
    Rich
    Icon for Super User II rankSuper User II

    Make sure that your existing Dropbox folder is in a location that both operating systems can access. If needed, use Dropbox to move the Dropbox folder to the a location. Once Dropbox is in a common location, install Dropbox on the second OS. Towards the end of the install process you'll see an Advanced Options link. Click that and you'll have the option of specifying a new location for the Dropbox folder. Make sure you select the folder ABOVE the existing Dropbox folder, and not the Dropbox folder itself. If you select the existing Dropbox folder you'll end up making a second copy within the first.

    Note: It's EXTREMELY important that you DO NOT USE Selective Sync on either OS when you use Dropbox like this. If you were to use Selective Sync to remove a local copy of a folder while logged into Windows, the folder would be removed locally and remain in the cloud as expected. However, when Dropbox on Linux indexes the files the next time you log in, it will see that a folder is missing, think that it was deleted, and it will delete the copy stored in the cloud.

    • Lucian F.1's avatar
      Lucian F.1
      Helpful | Level 5

      Thank you Rich for you detailed response! My intended use was just as you described:

       

      The Dropbox folder resides on an NTFS partition in order to be accesible from windows too (my main OS) which will be mounted at boot in linux. I have double checked that linux can write to an NTFS partition without issues.

       

      In linux, I will install dropbox and have it point to the Dropbox folder on the NTFS partition without a selective sync. That was my intention from the beginning, I just didn't know if it was possible/safe to do.

       

       

    • seandarcy's avatar
      seandarcy
      New member | Level 2

      I'm following the advice in this thread for installing dropbox on a dual boot W10/Fedora box. I have an NTFS partition that I use for data on both OS's, formatted  NTFS. I'm installing Dropbox on Fedora. When I try to move the Dropbox folder I get an error that the Dropbox folder  _has_ to be EXT4.

      How do I get the Dropbox folder to the common NTFS partition ?