# This is a sample HOSTS file used by Microsoft TCP/IP for Windows. # Copyright (c) 1993-2009 Microsoft Corp. So barring anything unusual about your Chrome settings – and assuming that Syncthing is actually running – will work. All lines that start with a # are comments so only the last line 127.0.0.1 localhost is actually used. The contents of your C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts file below looks fine. Nether of the suggested URLs are now working on either systemįollowing is what I see in the host file on both systems Gadget - I’m using Chrome as my browser on both systems This confused me, I then cut that section out of the reply and it then worked. ![]() In the original post I attempted to include include the Syncthing Console but I click on the reply button in the draft reply I get error stating as a new user I cannot include 2 links. I was about 50GB larger but I recently archived a large portion of it. The Documents library is about 92GB in size. I desire to keep the two Documents folders/libraries in sync and if I add another PC I’d like to add it into the syncing. The D drive on a partition on the boot SSD (1TB) on my laptop and is NOT shared out. The R drive is a 14TB drive in my desktop and has full share to anybody that is on my network. I want to sync my Documents folder on my desktop (R:\Libraries\Documents) to the Documents folder on my laptop (D:\Libraries\Documents). I realize that this is necessary but I don’t know now to do the setup. I assume that it fails because I have not set it up. I do have SyncTrayzor installed, when I click on “Start Syncthing” it fails. I was attempting to setup Syncthing and thought I had to do it through web interface. When I attempt to post in the forum I keep getting “An error occurred: Sorry, new users can only put 2 links in a post.” IMHO this seems totally wrong and very unfriendly. Sorry to be such a dummy but I’m totally lost. ![]() Please start Syncthing” however I have not setup what is to be synced in Syncthing and thought that I had to do the setup through the web interface. In the settings of ST it states “Folders unavailable. I understand this is necessary, I just don’t know how to do it in Syncthing. ![]() In the video I was watching it mentioned that that I have to identify what folders I want to sync. The drive D is a partition on the SSD boot drive (1TB) in the laptop The drive R is a 14TB drive on my desktop and has all of my Libraries I attempted to paste the Syncthing Console contents in this reply but the darn forum will not let me post it. Following is what I see in the Syncthing Console on my desktop. I assume that it fails because it is correctly setup (I’m lost at this point and don’t know how to set it up. On both systems I can click the start button type syncthing and a syncthing window opens when I click on start syncing on either window I can see that it is attempting to run and then I get message that it failed. On Windows, check the “hosts” text file: C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hostsĮrrors can also occur when a web browser’s DNS lookup is misconfigured or a web browser is configured to only search for valid domain let’s consider this a dumb user error. Not all computers have a proper network configuration, so “localhost” might not resolve to “127.0.0.1”. So on most operating systems, the following two URLs are functionally equivalent: It’s actually an alias for the internal network IP address Localhost:8384 is interpreted by a web browser as being short for However, “localhost” isn’t normally a valid domain name. Most web browsers will let users enter just “ ” and then try multiple variations of the remaining parts until success or failure. ![]() So the following URLs are functionally equivalent: If it isn’t specified, it defaults to 80 for http and 443 for https. The optional portion is the network port number. / refers to the “document root” (the highest point in the document tree the branch that contains all other documents on the server).is the server address (aka., website “domain name”).The familiar web browser address such as is known as a URL (Uniform Resource Locator):
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