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If that does not work, you can start the Dropbox sync client along with your window manager by adding /usr/bin/dropbox & to your xinitrc (or ~/.config/openbox/autostart, depending on your setup). Starting Dropbox with systemd works, running in background, but there is is no icon on systray due to some Cinnamon bugs ( #481, #2846).
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Similarly for Xfce users, Dropbox will be restarted automatically next time you login since the sktop file has been placed in ~/.config/autostart.įor Cinnamon users, it is recommended to start Dropbox client by configuring Startup Applications with a little delay (Cinnamon issue #4396). If that does not work, uncheck the box and use one of the following methods instead:įor KDE users, no further steps are required, as KDE saves running applications when logging out and restarts them automatically. Try checking this box and seeing if Dropbox starts automatically.
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In the Dropbox preferences, under the "General" tab there should be a "Start Dropbox on system startup" checkbox. This appears to be necessary for modern Dropbox clients to operate successfully from systemd on arch.Īlso see the relevant Dropbox forum post.
#Dropbox linux update
The service then attempts to hand over control to this binary and dies, causing systemd to re-start the service, generating a conflict and an endless loop of log-filling, CPU-eating misery.Ī workaround is to prevent Dropbox from downloading the automatic update by creating the ~/.dropbox-dist/ folder and making it read-only: Since at least version 2.4.6 (see comments around on AUR), Dropbox has had an auto-update capability which downloads a new binary to the ~/.dropbox-dist/ folder. You need an X panel with a system tray or a standalone system tray application for that. Note that in order to access the GUI and the settings, the only way is via a tray icon. For some reason, dropbox AUR has not marked this package as a required dependency but it is still such. Otherwise, the program is unable to sign the binaries and verify the signatures, when it is started the next time.
#Dropbox linux install
As a last resort, the Dropbox website has instructions for a headless install via command line.
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