this post was submitted on 24 Nov 2024
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PC Master Race

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[–] Limonene@lemmy.world 15 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I'm using it in a business setting, and hate it. Our company has lost about a thousand hours of work from OneDrive corrupting git repos. Everyone at the company is aware that you must NEVER allow OneDrive to touch a git repo, but OneDrive keeps adding directories without consent or notification, so people's git repos keep getting corrupted.

Maybe it's the IT department, or maybe Onedrive just sucks.

[–] greybeard@lemmy.one 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

OneDrive doesn't take over directories without being told to. And specifically, it's "Known Folders Move" system, only does Documents, Desktop, and Pictures. If KFM is being turned on without user consent, that is IT's fault. If it is including folders outside those 3? Also IT's fault.

It corrupting git repos? Not sure on that one. It doesn't feel like OneDrive should be doing that, but it does struggle with unusual read/write patterns, so I'm guessing the way git is working doesn't resemble a standard file saving, and Microsoft being full of developers and owning github should probably be accounting for that use case.

[–] actually@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago

My experience with Dropbox suggests to me that any network file sharing systems should not be mixed with git.

[–] coronach@lemmy.sdf.org 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

On an only-slightly related note, I knew someone that synced their git repos on nextcloud as well. Surprisingly, no shit hit the fan. This went on for a good long time.

[–] wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Lol, while Git does a shit ton more than just file syncing, you're effectively complaining that mixing two methods of syncing files causes problems.

I feel like that's kind of obvious that it would be a bad idea.


Also, how in the hell are you using Git that it could even be possible to lose thousands of hours of work? Sounds like you guy weren't properly checking in/out code and using branches well. There shouldn't be that much work put in between sending it back to the repo on the server. Make a branch, check in every few hours even if it's not compiling or finished. When it's finally done you can use the end result. No need to make big "complete" commits when you can just shove all the messy in progress ones into a branch and merge the whole thing when it's done and ready.


As far as OneDrive arbitrarily taking over folders? That should never happen. I'm not aware of a configuration that would make that possible (not saying there isn't one, just that you'd have to go looking for it if you really wanted to fuck this up like that).

The normal setting is for it to sync the Documents, Pictures, and Desktop folders (including any sub files and folders recursively). So just store your repos outside of those folders and you shouldn't have any problems.


To be fair, I've also seen OneDrive cause problems with PowerShell modules installed under the user (the default install location when using Install-Module). That tosses them in a subfolder under Documents, and "download files on demand" doesn't mix well with "load this entire code library of multiple files". So either use a custom install path, or install on your machine in the AllUsers scope (putting them in the Progams folder I believe).