So where is this file? The screenshot above shows that it has a folderid of 871638551. I can’t imagine I would have created such a filename intentionally. The filename contained an “*” (asterisk) in the filename which doesn’t feel right. ![]() I noticed that no inode, timestamps or deviceid were given starting at a certain id. It contains a list of all files that should be synced, with their id, folder, parentfolder, inode … Contents of the localfolder table. The “ localfolder” table turned out to be what I was looking for. The “browse data” tab allows you to check the contents of the tables. It is a SQLite database, so install sqlitebrowser to open it, then execute The database is called “data.db”, a file in your “~/.pcloud” folder. In the end I found the database where I found some clues as to what was wrong. ![]() Having no logs to go by (and less than useful technical support on their end), it took me quite a while to find the issue. I had this crappy issue with with the pCloud Linux (AppImage) client (version linux-圆4-prod-v1.9.7).It would get stuck syncing a “Local sync” folder, where Preferences screen as well as the CLI would hang at a certain amount of files and size to be uploaded.
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