Inside PhotoroomStories from the team

Mutagen tutorial: syncing files easily with a remote server

What if you could enjoy the computing power of a remote server in the comfort of your laptop? In this article, I'll show you how to use Mutagen to enable bidirectional sync between your local computer and a remote server. Every time you edit a file on either computer, it'll be synced to the other.

To get this running, we only need to install Mutagen on our local machine. Installations instructions are available here, for Mac OS for instance:

brew install mutagen-io/mutagen/mutagen

Starting a sync

To start a sync, simply run:

mutagen sync create --name=backend ~/Documents/backend [email protected]:/home/user/backend

To monitor sync constantly you can use:

mutagen sync monitor

Sync conflicts can occur from time to time. To resolve them simply delete the file from the host or the target. You can list conflicts by running

mutagen sync list

Creating a config file

By default, Mutagen will sync everything. While you can run it with arguments, I'd suggest using a config file. Create a file in ~/.mutagen.yml and add the following content:

sync:
    defaults:
        ignore:
            vcs: true
        paths:
            - "node_modules"
            - "*.ckpt"
            - ".DS_Store"
            - "__pycache__"
            - ".idea"
            - ".ipynb_checkpoints"

This way, you'll be able to handle version control on your local machine and you'll avoid sync conflicts with git files.

Eliot AndresCo-founder & CTO @ Photoroom
次の素晴らしいイメージをデザイン

次の素晴らしいイメージをデザイン

販売,宣伝,投稿など,どんなことであっても目立つデザインでアイデアを実現します。

Keep reading

Photoroom launches 3 new AI tools for product photography
Aisha Owolabi
What's new in product: July 2024
Jeanette Sha
What's new in product: March 2024
Jeanette Sha
What's new in product: September 2023
Jeanette Sha
The Hunt for Cheap Deep Learning GPUs
Eliot Andres
How we divided our server latency by 3 by switching from T4 GPUs to A10g
Matthieu Toulemont
What's new in product: February 2024
Jeanette Sha
Redesigning an Android UI used by millions
Aurelien Hubert
The Photoroom 2024 diversity report: Beyond the DEI backlash
Lyline Lim
What 9,000 community votes taught us about our background remover
Thomas Bordier