![]() Whoever has access to such a syncing address is totally up to the user. Maybe this is a stupid idea, I was just wondering if that would be a solution for sharing notebooks? I know this means you are really sharing through the cloud provider, but I think that is the best solution anyway since Joplin doesn’t offer it’s own server for syncing notes (which I think is good! Focus on the app, not having to run your own server for syncing and all work that comes with that).Ī solution I would prefer is to the ability to assign individual syncing addresses to individual notebooks (or groups of notebooks). And in the app, it would divide the two accounts like an email app sets up different accounts by giving you two different headers too visit. using NextCloud /webdav/App/JoplinPersonal/ and I add a second “account” called /webdav/App/JoplinShared/.įor the second one I could still have E2E (but need to share the password with the person I want to share the notebook with). And that syncing would only be for sharing. Say that you optionally could add a second way of syncing (another webdav address, or another folder on dropbox called something different, etc.). Wouldn’t it be possible to “split” the app in two. I know this is an old thread, but I was wondering last night over something with this. So basically it’s not sure yet what’s the best way to do all this. Mainly, it relies on the cloud platform own sync client, it won’t work on mobile, it indeed can’t work with E2EE, and if two clients read/write to the same Live Folder, various conflicts could happen. ![]() There are quite a few drawbacks to this approach though, which is why I haven’t done it yet. Then it will be possible to share and view the data more easily. the Dropbox directory on the user’s computer, and Dropbox Sync will take care of syncing that to the cloud. Those files and folders will be placed in eg. The Live Folder will be updated whenever something change in Joplin or whenever one file is modified or added. What I’ve been thinking of is develop a client that will create a user-friendly copy of the data in a folder (called a “Live Folder”), with a folder per notebook, and each. ![]() Yes, most cloud platforms have a way to share files, however the issue is that Joplin’s data is not in a user-friendly format (it’s basically a database meant for performance), so it makes it hard to find the file you want to share, and for the recipient the file will look strange with metadata appended at the bottom. ![]()
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