Last I checked, syncthing does not (did not) preserve ACLs, and instead
overwrote permissions as the executing user.
Since it is meant to be a user-space program (like bittorrent?  I'm out of
the loop), it assumes that the syncthing user should own everything
transferred.  You can still run as root, but ACLs are mangled appropriately.
I think Tranquil IT gets around it by running sysvolreset as a posthook,
but YMMV.  Personally, I try to avoid sysvolreset if not necessary.
-Kris
klou at themusiclink.net
On Sun, Dec 29, 2019 at 8:16 AM Rowland penny via samba <
samba at lists.samba.org> wrote:
> On 29/12/2019 15:46, Dirk Heinrichs via samba wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > did anybody try this already? Seems to be the easiest to set up, esp.
> > when more than two DC's are involved.
> >
> > Bye...
> >
> >     Dirk
>
> Tranquil IT had a try at this, see here:
>
> https://github.com/tranquilit/tis-sysvolsync
>
> Rowland
>
>
>
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