nextcloud-desktop/doc/visualtour.rst
Morris Jobke fe102f359c
Build current documentation
Signed-off-by: Morris Jobke <hey@morrisjobke.de>
2018-01-29 01:19:47 +01:00

8.3 KiB
Raw Blame History

Visual Tour

visual tour, usage

Icon

The Nextcloud Client remains in the background and is visible as an icon in the system tray (Windows, KDE), status bar (MAC OS X), or notification area (Ubuntu).

image

Menu

image

A right click on the icon (left click on Ubuntu and Mac OS X) provides the following menu:

  • Open Nextcloud in browser: Opens the Nextcloud web interface
  • Open folder 'Nextcloud': Opens the local folder. If multiple sync targets have been defined, an entry will exist for each local folder.
  • Disk space indicator: Shows how much space is used on the server.
  • Operation indicator: Shows the status of the current sync process, or Up to date if server and client are in sync.
  • Recent Changes: shows the last six files modified by sync operations, and provides access to the Sync status, which lists all changes since the last restart of Nextcloud Client.
  • Settings...: provides access to the settings menu.
  • Help: Opens a browser to display this help.
  • Log out: Logs the client out of the server.
  • Quit Nextcloud: Quits Nextcloud Client, ending a currently running sync run.

Settings

Account Settings

account settings, user, password, Server URL

The Account Settings tab provides an executive summary about the synced folders in the account and gives the ability to modify them.

Where:

  • Connected to <Nextcloud instance> as <user>: Indicates the Nextcloud server which the client is syncing with and the user account on that server.
  • Add Folder Sync Connection...: Provides the ability to add another folder to the sync (see Adding a folder sync connection).
  • Pause/Resume: Will pause the current sync or prevent the client from starting a new sync. Resume will resume the sync process.
  • Remove: Will remove the selected folder from being synced. This is used, for instance, when there is a desire to sync only a few folders and not the root. First, remove the root from sync, then add the folders to sync as desired.
  • Storage Usage: Provides further details on the storage utilization on the Nextcloud server.
  • Edit Ignored Files: Provides a list of files which will be ignored, i.e., will not sync between the client and server. The ignored files editor allows adding patterns for files or directories that should be excluded from the sync process. Besides normal characters, wild cards may be used, an asterisk * indicating multiple characters, or a question mark ? indicating a single character.
  • Modify Account: Allows the user to change the Nextcloud server being synced to. It brings up the Setting up an Account (see above) windows.

image

Adding a Folder Sync Connection

Adding a new sync is initiated by clicking Add Folder Sync Connection in the Account settings.

image

The Directory and alias name must be unique.

image

Select the folder on the server to sync with. It is important to note that, a server folder can only sync to the client one time. So, in the above example, the sync is to the server root directory and thus it is not possible to select another folder under the root to sync.

Activity

activity, recent changes, sync activity

The Activity window, which can be invoked either from the main menu (Recent Changes -> Details…) or the Activity tab on the left side of the settings window, provides an in-depth account of the recent sync activity. It will show files that have not been synced because they are on the ignored files list, or because they cannot be synced in a cross-platform manner due to containing special characters that cannot be stored on certain file systems.

image

General

general settings, auto start, startup, desktop notifications

The tab provides several useful options:

image

  • Launch on System Startup: This option is automatically activated once a user has conimaged his account. Un-checking the box will cause Nextcloud client to not launch on startup for a particular user.
  • Show Desktop Nofications: When checked, bubble notifications when a set of sync operations has been performed are provided.
  • Use Monochrome Icons: Use less obtrusive icons. Especially useful on Mac OS X.
  • About: provides information about authors as well as build conditions. This information is valuable when submitting a support request.

Network

proxy settings, SOCKS, bandwith, throttling, limiting

This tab consolidates Proxy Settings and Bandwith Limiting:

image

Proxy Settings

  • No Proxy: Check this if Nextcloud Client should circumvent the default proxy conimaged on the system.
  • Use system proxy: Default, will follow the systems proxy settings. On Linux, this will only pick up the value of the variable http_proxy.
  • Specify proxy manually as: Allows to specify custom proxy settings. If you require to go through a HTTP(S) proxy server such as Squid or Microsoft Forefront TMG, pick HTTP(S). SOCKSv5 on the other hand is particularly useful in special company LAN setups, or in combination with the OpenSSH dynamic application level forwarding feature (see ssh -D).
  • Host: Enter the host name or IP address of your proxy server, followed by the port number. HTTP proxies usually listen on Ports 8080 (default) or
    1. SOCKS server usually listen on port 1080.
  • Proxy Server requires authentication: Should be checked if the proxy server does not allow anonymous usage. If checked, a username and password must be provided.

Bandwidth Limiting

The Download Bandwidth can be either unlimited (default) or limited to a custom value. This is the bandwidth available for data flowing from the Nextcloud Server to the client.

The Upload Bandwidth, the bandwidth available or data flowing from the Nextcloud client to the server, has an additional option to limit automatically.

When this option is checked, the Nextcloud client will surrender available bandwidth to other applications. Use this option if there are issues with real time communication in conjunction with the Nextcloud Client.

The Ignored Files Editor

ignored files, exclude files, pattern

Nextcloud Client has the ability to exclude files from the sync process. The ignored files editor allows editing of custom patterns for files or directories that should be excluded from the sync process.

There is a system wide list of default ignore patterns. These global defaults cannot be directly modified within the editor. Hovering with the mouse will reveal the location of the global exclude definition file.

image

Each line contains an ignore pattern string. Next to normal characters, wildcards can be used to match an arbitrary number of characters, designated by an asterisk (*) or a single character, designated by a question mark (?). If a pattern ends with a slash character (/) the pattern is only applied to directory components of the path to check.

If the checkbox is checked for a pattern in the editor it means that files which are matched by this pattern are fleeting metadata which the client will remove.

Note

Modifying the global exclude definition file might render the client unusable or cause undesired behavior.

Note

Custom entries are currently not validated for syntactical correctness by the editor, but might fail to load correctly.

In addition to this list, Nextcloud Client always excludes files with characters that cannot be synced to other file systems.

With version 1.5.0 it also ignores files that caused individual errors while syncing for a three times. These are listed in the activity view. There also is a button to retry the sync for another three times.

For more detailed information see ignored-files-label.