No Description

Audrius Butkevicius c891999e1d Move filename conversion into osutil 11 years ago
Godeps 68399601ce Update goleveldb 11 years ago
assets 97b4a6553b Logo update 11 years ago
cmd af08567f24 Add directory separator to autocomplete. Fixes #984 11 years ago
gui aa637fd942 Translation update 11 years ago
internal c891999e1d Move filename conversion into osutil 11 years ago
protocol fdf8ee7015 Manual fixup 11 years ago
test edcfc32b1a Add integration test (disabled) for file->dir and dir->file replacement (ref #580) 11 years ago
.gitignore c57656e4c3 Do honest test coverage analysis in Jenkins 11 years ago
AUTHORS 82c6caef85 Use more inclusive copyright header 11 years ago
CONTRIBUTING.md bbe7e6525d Finalize s/CONTRIBUTORS/AUTHORS/ 11 years ago
LICENSE 9edce23e76 Relicense to GPL 11 years ago
README.md 9edce23e76 Relicense to GPL 11 years ago
build.go 45917f278a Also -no-upgrade with any command 11 years ago
build.sh 34f72ecf8f OpenBSD support (fixes #878) 11 years ago
check-contrib.sh bbe7e6525d Finalize s/CONTRIBUTORS/AUTHORS/ 11 years ago

README.md

syncthing

Latest Build API Documentation GPL License

This is the syncthing project. The following are the project goals:

  1. Define a protocol for synchronization of a folder between a number of collaborating devices. The protocol should be well defined, unambiguous, easily understood, free to use, efficient, secure and language neutral. This is the Block Exchange Protocol.

  2. Provide the reference implementation to demonstrate the usability of said protocol. This is the syncthing utility. It is the hope that alternative, compatible implementations of the protocol will come to exist.

The two are evolving together; the protocol is not to be considered stable until syncthing 1.0 is released, at which point it is locked down for incompatible changes.

Getting Started

Take a look at the getting started guide.

Building

Building Syncthing from source is easy, and there's a guide that describes it for both Unix and Windows.

Signed Releases

As of v0.7.0 and onwards, git tags and release binaries are GPG signed with the key BCE524C7 (http://nym.se/gpg.txt). For release binaries, MD5 and SHA1 checksums are calculated and signed, available in the md5sum.txt.asc and sha1sum.txt.asc files.

Documentation

The syncthing documentation is on the discourse site.

License

All documentation and protocol specifications are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

All code is licensed under the GPL, v3 or later.