Which syncthing app is recommended nowadays? Does anyone know their trade-offs? The screenshot is from F-Droid, with the first three on the list updated quite recently.
I’m mostly interested in reputation, stability and no additional security overhead compared to upstream Syncthing project. (But still auto-disabled sync when on low battery, or without WiFi.)
And a reminder. The old Syncthing Android is out-of-date for 17 months now. Repeating this a little bit in case someone didn’t notice yet.
Syncthing-fork is the fork of discontinued official app. I use it, and it’s nice. SyncUp also looks good.
UPD: actually, after considering @trem@lemmy.blahaj.zone’s points here, I’ve realized that BasicSync really appeals to me. It’s a minimal layer above the main Syncthing project. The web interface is good enough for me (I actually really like it!)
Thanks! Looks like a solid oprltion based on the comments so far.
// I’ve actually tried Termux-based solution first, but quickly realised it’s not meant for non-technical people. And I like compatibility and shared knowledge with that group, so for now it’s Syncthing-fork for me.
I’m using Syncthing-fork. Works fine for me.
I switched to BasicSync a few days ago. No idea about reputation.
It’s a thin wrapper around Syncthing, which just gives you access to the web-UI, and can pause syncing depending on different conditions, like whether you’re on battery or a mobile connection.Just feels like a sensible approach to me. I don’t need a native UI for setting up the syncing once in a blue moon. Obviously, you still don’t know that it isn’t malware, but I don’t need to trust the author as much that they’ll keep maintaining it, because it’s magnitudes less work to do so. And it’s just as well easier for a fork to succeed, should the author disappear.
Adding to your points, it’s also 27 Mb, instead of 64 Mb Syncthing-fork 🤔
(As in, most phones would handle +37 Megabytes, but less code = less things going mysteriously wrong and less attack surface.)
Alternatively, run Syncthing in Termux.
Used to use fork, it works.
Honestly, grab Termux and install the official Linux version.
Still using Syncthing-Fork.
@vas I’ve been mostly happy with:
Thanks for the attempted help! Though this post is all about the Android story. The FOSS-oriented F-Droid, those four forks, etc.
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