Advanced Usage¶
Options¶
You have the option of starting your ownCloud desktop client with the
owncloud command. The following options are supported:
owncloud -horowncloud --help- Displays all command options.
The other options are:
--logwindow- Opens a window displaying log output.
--logfile<filename>- Write log output to the file specified. To write to stdout, specify - as the filename.
--logdir<name>- Writes each synchronization log output in a new file in the specified directory.
--logexpire<hours>- Removes logs older than the value specified (in hours). This command is
used with
--logdir. --logflush- Clears (flushes) the log file after each write action.
--confdir<dirname>- Uses the specified configuration directory.
Configuration File¶
The ownCloud Client reads a configuration file. You can locate this configuration file as follows:
- On Linux distributions:
$HOME/.local/share/data/ownCloud/owncloud.cfg- On Microsoft Windows systems:
%LOCALAPPDATA%\ownCloud\owncloud.cfg- On MAC OS X systems:
$HOME/Library/Application Support/ownCloud
The configuration file contains settings using the Microsoft Windows .ini file format. You can overwrite changes using the ownCloud configuration dialog.
Note
Use caution when making changes to the ownCloud Client configuration file. Incorrect settings can produce unintended results.
You can change the following configuration settings (must be under the [ownCloud] section)
remotePollInterval(default:30000) – Specifies the poll time for the remote repository in milliseconds.maxLogLines(default:20000) – Specifies the maximum number of log lines displayed in the log window.
ownCloud Command Line Client¶
The ownCloud Client packages contain a command line client, owncloudcmd, that can
be used to synchronize ownCloud files to client machines.
owncloudcmd performs a single sync run and then exits the synchronization
process. In this manner, owncloudcmd processes the differences between
client and server directories and propagates the files to bring both
repositories to the same state. Contrary to the GUI-based client,
owncloudcmd does not repeat synchronizations on its own. It also does not
monitor for file system changes.
To invoke owncloudcmd, you must provide the local and the remote repository
URL using the following command:
owncloudcmd [OPTIONS...] sourcedir owncloudurl
where sourcedir is the local directory and owncloudurl is
the server URL.
Other command line switches supported by owncloudcmd include the following:
--user,-u[user]- Use
useras the login name. --password,-p[password]- Use
passwordas the password. -n- Use
netrc (5)for login. --non-interactive- Do not prompt for questions.
--silent,--s- Inhibits verbose log output.
--trust- Trust any SSL certificate, including invalid ones.
--httpproxy http://[user@pass:]<server>:<port>- Uses
serveras HTTP proxy. --nonshib- Uses Non Shibboleth WebDAV Authentication
--davpath [path]- Overrides the WebDAV Path with
path --exclude [file]- Exclude list file
--unsyncedfolders [file]- File containing the list of unsynced folders (selective sync)
--max-sync-retries [n]- Retries maximum n times (defaults to 3)
-h- Sync hidden files,do not ignore them
Credential Handling¶
owncloudcmd uses the credentials of the GUI synchronization client.
If no client is configured, or if you choose to use a different user to synchronize,
you can specify the user
password setting with the usual URL pattern. For example:
$ owncloudcmd / https://carla:secret@server/owncloud/remote.php/webdav/
To synchronize the ownCloud directory Music to the local directory
media/music, through a proxy listening on port 8080, and on a gateway
machine using IP address 192.168.178.1, the command line would be:
$ owncloudcmd --httpproxy http://192.168.178.1:8080 \
$HOME/media/music \
https://server/owncloud/remote.php/webdav/Music
owncloudcmd will prompt for the user name and password, unless they have
been specified on the command line or -n has been passed.