![]() ![]() Too much time went on for the logging in and the browser searches. Me and my teammates found fighting with time when there was issues with each other's parts and the dissertation kept bouncing off each other's laptop. My dissertation was a mess and had to log in to cloud through the browser to get my part of the work shared to my teammates. Unfortunately I was out of station on another important matters to attend to. Recently, the version of CloudMounter from the Mac App Store switched to a subscription-based pricing model, which may not seem attractive to a lot of potential users (specially when compared to similar alternatives offered in the App Store). ![]() This also depends on things like your computer's specifications, the quality of your internet connection, among other factors.Ģ. If you add a lot of cloud storage accounts, CloudMounter may suffer from instability and unreliability. In my opinion, CloudMounter has two disadvantages:ġ. CloudMounter works immediately after installation, unlike other similar alternatives that require external "helper" programs. Instead of immediately downloading all my files and folders, CloudMounter only gets the ones that I need to work on the others stay in the cloud, waiting for the moment I'll need them. It synchronises only the files that I need to my computer. Since it's only one software running (instead of a different software for each cloud storage vendor), CloudMounter uses just a fraction of the memory and disc space all those individual programs would use.Ĥ. It uses less computer resources (memory and disc space). CloudMounter puts all my files and folders from the cloud right inside the file manager there's no need to deal with different configurations from each cloud storage vendor.ģ. It unifies all the cloud-stored files and folders. Instead of having to install each software from Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive and other vendors, I just need to install CloudMounter, and it gives me access to all those cloud storage accounts.Ģ. It replaces all individual cloud storage clients. It even helps to save space in my computer, since it downloads only the files and folders I need to work on at any given moment.įor me, the main advantages of CloudMounter are:ġ. Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive, and others), directly from my computer's file manager. Be careful with this setting as if you ever decide to switch back to a direct WebDAV or API connection you may end up getting the CloudMounter encrypted files, which Duplicati wouldn’t be able to use (unless you go back to using CloudMounter).Kommentare: CloudMounter allows me to access all files and folders I have in my cloud storage accounts (e.g. Note that CloudMounter mentions encrypting the files on their way to the cloud. So worst case scenario is local disk usage would be the full backup size (as reported in Duplicati) while best case would be temporary local disk usage of maybe a few dblock (archive Volume size) files eventually going to zero. The best case (disk space wise) would be that the local file is MOVED to the cloud, but it’s unclear how long it takes for that to happen after the file is done being written. They’re website says cloud files aren’t stored locally, but I didn’t find anything that covered what happens when the file STARTS locally. 18, 2018 commit with the “UserAgent” header change?Īs for local disk space impact when using CloudMounter, you might need to contact them directly. For now, I’ll be testing/using OD4B like this as redundancy, but keeping the main backups to Google Drive just for safety.Īre you using a version of Duplicati that’s new than the Jan. I’m just wondering how much additional local disk space will be impacted with this, because I believe using official online storage providers’ API, duplicati won’t write new files until the last written file is uploaded, somewhat sequential. It seems to be working fine, backup jobs are done quickly mainly because there is no waiting for the upload stage, as duplicati just write files to local path and CloudMounter will automatically upload. I believe this is the exact same issue reported here.Įdit: I’m on macOS and testing CloudMounter to mount OneDrive (for Business) as a network drive, then I can setup duplicati using it as local folder (folder location is kinda hidden). Does it means that this bug is fixed, but Onedrive for Business (provided by Education, in my case) won’t work with current Duplicati beta release? And I saw that added a “UserAgent” header code to canary version. After spending some time discovering how to connect (using edu OneDrive account here), it connected and wrote the files, but it can’t read, so it freeze in “Verifying” step “forever”.įound an open issue at github. Did you get this working? Here it is always blocking on the list/verify. ![]()
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