Forum Discussion
Update: Microsoft One Drive for Business Restrictions
Hi Stephen Rose, thanks for your responses.
Stephen Rose wrote:Also, I notice that OneDrive for Business (NGSC) still doesn’t support differential sync, while it has been promised (but not announced, though).
Office 2016 supports differential sync.
Hence, non-Office files do not get differential sync, while Office documents get differential sync, but only if the relevant setting in the OneDrive client settings is enabled. Correct?
Stephen Rose wrote:Finally, in the previous version of the article, it was stated that libraries with IRM enabled would have been synchronized as read-only (just as libraries with checkout enabled). This has disappeared from the new version. Has that limitation been removed?
What article are you refering to?
I am referring to the previous version of the article https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/3125202/restrictions-and-limitations-when-you-sync-files-and-folders.
I also noticed that now I can sync OneNote file also. Earlier I was not able sync to OneNote file.
Any Idea or my understanding is incorrect?
- Salvatore BiscariMay 03, 2017Silver Contributor
Not sure about what you mean...
To be clear:
- For each notebook, OneNote creates actually a hierarchy of folders and files, not a single file.
- As stated in the support article, OneNote notebooks have their own sync mechanism, and hence they should not be synced by the OneDrive client. This means that you should not create through OneNote a local notebook (i.e. inside the local OneDrive folder), but you should rather save through OneNote your OneNote notebook directly to ODfB (i.e. directly in the cloud).
- If you do so, for each notebook saved to the cloud, you will see a stub file (and not the full hierarchy of folders and files) in your local OneDrive sync folder. Such stub file is not an actual synchronized file, but only a sort of "placeholder".