Forum Discussion
Sync Problems, again, and again, and again
Is there any such thing as a stable sync client? We have to resync from at least one users PC every week, often more.
Even on brand new PCs we are getting continuous sync problems requiring repair and resync. Whilst this works, it scares me how unstable this is.
As one user said - "365 Group Files Sync - like Dropbox but sh*t"
Is this a common problem and are MS trying to make it better - it is totally unreliable currently.
Are you deploying the next-gen sync client to users? This is much more reliable, and supports both OneDrive for Business and Team Sites / Office 365 Groups.
Instructions for IT admins to deploy, are here:
Steve
- Keith AndersonCopper Contributor
Yes we are. One group we are using only has three members. If one person makes changes, we can almost guarantee that we will encounter sync problems within a day on the other PCs. Not having a formal notification that it has not synced does not help either - you have to go into your systray to check if it looks OK every day.
The repair works, but just leaves us with many folders in the "Sync Problems" area which requries us to go and evaluate what has gone wrong. Spent almost a whole day with MS support a few weeks back - ended up replacing all three PC's.
I am actually amazed at how shocking the whole process is - Dropbox has not failed - once. And Sharepoint/One drive for business appears to be failing almost daily. Business grade file sharing this is not.
It is quite possibly the worst piece of software I have ever seen. We actually press save and pray that it will not crash.
I would be very keen to know if this is a common experience - MS cannot find any reason having almost rebuilt our dll's in the process of trying to bottom it out.
We now take daily backups to Dropbox of the Sharepoint folders - just in case - it really is that flaky.
- I would agree that if you were to deploy OneDrive for Business as part of Office 2013 or even 2016, this could be your experience. It's fair to say that someone using the MSI version of Office 2013 or the standalone, unpatched old OneDrive for Business application would have an experience like this.
I'd rather confidently say that with the new, next gen sync client - No, it is *not* that unreliable. It's the same engine as consumer OneDrive sync, and our experience has been it is very solid.
If you say it's " the worst piece of software I have ever seen" then I'd agree that that might have been the sentiment of many with the old OneDrive for Business client, unpatched - but I would not agree with that for the next gen one; so much so that I would encourage you to double check which version you are running; especially as unless you enable Site sync in the next gen client, it will use the old engine for SharePoint sites.
I am not defending Microsoft here - it's pretty darn confusing to have TWO clients, one that ships as part of Office and is not very good, and one that is a standalone update to Windows that is good - but needs to be separately enabled to sync things like team sites. It makes sense from a enterprise change management perspective that there is control and process - but none from a user experience point of view.
As an example - I used to have exactly the kind of problems you face and gave up syncing team sites at work. They would, even with the latest updates break every week with the OLD sync client, and files I worked on would sometimes appear days later as machine-prefixed updates that I thought I had saved.
I've been running the next gen sync client on team sites since preview (and bear in mind, it's only GA over the last few weeks for team sites) and I don't have those problems.
I use Office 365 E3 at home as well - and the next gen sync client is the first version that I've been confident to use for sync of the amount of data I used to sync to other services. For example, I synced 220GB of photos to OneDrive for Business - and had no sync errors.
So I really would encourage you to check exactly which version is to blame here.