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c4e8211687
Signed-off-by: Jacob Neplokh <me@jacobneplokh.com>
61 lines
2.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
61 lines
2.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
=========
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Conflicts
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=========
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.. index:: conflicts
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Overview
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--------
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The Nextcloud desktop client uploads local changes and downloads remote changes.
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When a file has changed on the local side and on the remote between synchronization
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runs the client will be unable to resolve the situation on its own. It will
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create a conflict file with the local version, download the remote version and
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notify the user that a conflict occured which needs attention.
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Example
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-------
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Imagine there is a file called ``mydata.txt`` your synchronized folder. It has
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not changed for a while and contains the text "contents" locally and remotely.
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Now, nearly at the same time you update it locally to say "local contents" while
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the file on the server gets updated to contain "remote contents" by someone else.
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When attempting to upload your local changes the desktop client will notice that
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the server version has also changed. It creates a conflict and you will now have
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two files on your local machine:
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- ``mydata.txt`` containing "remote contents"
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- ``mydata (conflicted copy 2018-04-10 093612).txt`` containing "local contents"
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In this situation the file ``mydata.txt`` has the remote changes (and will continue
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to be updated with further remote changes when they happen), but your local
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adjustments have not been sent to the server (unless the server enables conflict
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uploading, see below).
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The desktop client notifies you of this situation via system notifications, the
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system tray icon and a yellow "unresolved conflicts" badge in the account settings
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window. Clicking this badge shows a list that includes the unresolved conflicts
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and clicking one of them opens an explorer window pointing at the relevant file.
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To resolve this conflict, open both files, compare the differences and copy your
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local changes from the "conflicted copy" file into the base file where applicable.
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In this example you might change ``mydata.txt`` to say "local and remote contents"
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and delete the file with "conflicted copy" in its name. With that, the conflict
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is resolved.
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Uploading conflicts (experimental)
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----------------------------------
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By default the conflict file (the file with "conflicted copy" in its name that
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contains your local conflicting changes) is not uploaded to the server. The idea
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is that you, the author of the changes, are the best person for resolving the
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conflict and showing the conflict to other users might create confusion.
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However, in some scenarios it makes a lot of sense to upload these conflicting
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changes such that local work can become visible even if the conflict won't be
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resolved immediately.
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In the future there might be a server-wide switch for this behavior. For now it
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can already be tested by setting the environment variable
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``OWNCLOUD_UPLOAD_CONFLICT_FILES=1``.
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