cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/44815211
Two-way file sync, no remote agent needed
Today Synchi is finally public! It’s designed for syncing files between two locations (local or over SSH). It detects conflicts, and lets you decide what to do.
Why not rsync/Unison/Syncthing?
- rsync has no memory between runs and is one-way
- Unison needs to be installed on both sides
- Syncthing requires always-on daemons
Synchi runs on demand, works over SSH, and only transfers what actually changed.
I use it daily for syncing a shared folder between my machines and an android phone. Works great in combination with Tailscale/WireGuard so that you can sync files remotely.
I love the concept for this. Syncthing is pretty good but it is annoying to have it running all the time on Android.
I’d love to use something like this to sync my Obsidian md files between computer and phone just when needed. I suspect this could be baked into to an Obsidian plugin to make it pretty seemless for folks.
This is exactly how I use Synchi! Same idea but I use Logseq instead of Obsidian (very similar open-source alternative, worth checking out). Works great for syncing markdown notes between computers and my phone on demand. Of course I need to remember to sync before switching devices, but I prefer this then constant running in the background.
Haven’t thought about an Obsidian/Logseq plugin but honestly that sounds like a great idea… For now it’s CLI only, but I can definitely see the value.
Speed conpared to rsync? Hash speed and cpu load compared? Need shell access for ssh? What about two devices across firewalls and internet which you can’t control? I think one of the usecase is only sync when you have WiFi. Still want android apk for my lazy ass. Good project
Thanks! I’ve done some testing, nothing scientific, but I can tell you it transfers at about the same speed as other tools I tested, usually limited by network speed. I spent quite some time optimizing how small files are packaged together for transfer, so there’s no slowdown even with many small files compared to a single file of the same total size. Android APK idea is not bad though! I’ve published 2 Android apps before so will definitely look into it. Current Termux terminal approach is definitely not very user friendly.
Syncthing is pretty unmaintained now, community worries about it get abandoned multiple times. Stick around and introduce your app to those future post and your app will shine. If you are into serious backup, i would look at bareos,but it is way overkill for most ppl and old too, but very good backup pro sumer lvl open source solution. I once tried hard to shop around
Thanks for the kind words! To be fair, Syncthing itself is still actively maintained (they just released 2.0), it was the official Android app that got discontinued due to Google Play issues. Community forks still exist on F-Droid though.
But yeah, Syncthing and Synchi have different workflow. Syncthing needs daemons on all devices and can’t sync to a mounted drive, NAS path, or local folders on the same machine. Synchi is on-demand and doesn’t care where the two roots are. This is also why I started working on it. I used syncthing for a few years before that.
That’s what I got confused. Thanks for clearing thing up.
This might be good on Steam Deck for multiple games that have carry-over data. Just mirror the save data folder of one proton directory into that of the follow-up game’s directory. I assume you can go back to the first game to unlock more stuff to carry over, and not have to manually copy-paste the save folder each time. Just run a sync.
I’m not too familiar with Steam Deck, but that sounds like it would work! As long as you can point Synchi at both save directories, it would keep them in sync and save you the manual copy-paste.
Syncthing was made for this and has been around for almost a decade now.
I used Syncthing for years, it’s great (if you use it and you are happy, then you dont need to switch), but they are quite different. Syncthing requires daemons on all devices and can’t sync two local folders on the same machine. Synchi is on-demand, runs only on one side, and doesn’t care where the two root folders are.
I wrote a more detailed comparison here: https://jakobkreft.github.io/synchi/why.html




