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dolphinuser426
2 years agoExplorer | Level 3
Ubuntu Linux: Website says it supports xfs file system, but Dropbox demands Ext4 or NTFS?
Hello,
I have an Ubuntu virtual machine running on Unraid. I have mapped one of the hard drives in the server and mounted it inside the virtual machine. Ubuntu reports the filesystem of this share as xfs.
https://help.dropbox.com/installs/system-requirements
According to this page, on 64bit Linux installations, xfs is supported....yet when I install the latest Dropbox and try and set that share as the location to store the Dropbox files, it demands either an Ext4 or NTFS file system.
What am I missing?
Thanks
- ЗдравкоLegendary | Level 20
Hi dolphinuser426,
To be sure what Dropbox application sees, check your configuration with following command in terminal:
stat -f ~
What is reported as FS? 🧐
By the way NTFS is not supported by Dropbox on Linux and it should be something Dropbox never asks for. Where do you see such demands? That would be something strange (and something I personally wouldn't complain for) if not your mistake! Can you post a screenshot of the exact message where the Dropbox application asks for NTFS?
- dolphinuser426Explorer | Level 3
Hello,
Thank you for your response.
Firstly, I was mistaken re: the NTFS on Linux thing - it asks for Ext4 only. I was thinking of what I had read elsewhere. I had thought until a few days ago that Dropbox only worked with NTFS or Ext4 file systems - but then read at the link in my original post that it actually supports other file systems such as xfs and zfs.
This is a screenshot on Imgur of what stat -f ~ shows for me.
Thanks
- ЗдравкоLegendary | Level 20
dolphinuser426, As I suspected, your partition where Dropbox is supposed to exists is neither xfs nor ext4 (nor other expected). As can be seen there is ext3. 🤷 That's it. Unfortunately Dropbox is very pretentious.
If I have to bet, you have correct FS, but mounted on incorrect place. Check this and fix your system - Dropbox folder appears in your home folder initially and in this context your home has to match the requirements (by now it doesn't). You can move the location later, but unfortunately on Linux Dropbox does NOT support this to be done in advance. 😕
Hope this gives direction.
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