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> Do you mind explaining why it's so trivial versus setting up traditional ftp?

    nohup /usr/bin/rclone serve ftp --addr MYIP:2121 $PWD &>/dev/null &
No configuration needed (beyond rclone's per-cloud-storage-account config (noting that serving local dirs this way does not require any cloud storage config)) and some variation of that can be added to crontab like:

    @reboot /usr/bin/sleep 30 && ...the above command...
Noting that $PWD can be a cloud drive identifier (part of the rclone config) so it can proxy a remote cloud service this same way. So, for example:

    rclone serve ftp --addr MYIP:2121 mydropbox:
assuming "mydropbox" is the locally-configured name for your rclone dropbox connection, that will serve your whole dropbox.



Just write a systemd unit. These commands are not any easier to support and are far worse from the purely technical point of view. You'll get:

- startup only when the network is up

- proper logging

- automatic restarts on failure

- optional protection for your ssh keys and other data if there's a breach (refer to `systemd-analyze security`)

Run:

  $ systemctl --user edit --full --force rclone-ftp.service
this opens a text editor; paste these lines:

  [Unit]
  After=network-online.target
  Wants=network-online.target

  [Install]
  WantedBy=default.target

  [Service]
  ExecStart=/usr/bin/rclone --your-flags /directory
and then enable and start the service:

  $ systemctl --user enable --now rclone-ftp


Seriously yes. Crontab isn't meant to keep your services up. We have a proper service manager now, out with the hacks.


People go out of their way to build their own crappy version of systemd.

systemd is far from perfect, and Poettering is radically anti-user. But it's the best we got and it serves us well


> Poettering is radically anti-user

What does that mean?


One of the authors of systemd


I know who he is but don't understand how he's supposed to be "anti-user".




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