FreeFileSync has a number of special purpose settings that can only be accessed
directly via the global configuration file GlobalSettings.xml.
Note that this file is read once when FreeFileSync starts and saved when it closes. Therefore apply changes only while FreeFileSync is not running.
To locate this file on Windows enter %appdata%\FreeFileSync in the Windows Explorer address bar or go to the FreeFileSync
installation folder if you are using the portable installation.
On Linux you can find the file in ~/.FreeFileSync for the Launchpad release and in the installation folder for the portable version.
On OS X go to ~/Library/Application Support/FreeFileSync.
FileTimeTolerance:
By default file modification times
are allowed to have a 2 second difference while still being
considered equal. This is required by FAT/FAT32 file systems which
store file times only with a 2-second precision.
FolderAccessTimeout:
When testing if a particular folder path exists FreeFileSync will time out
after the specified number of seconds if the operating system does not respond (e.g. non-reachable network share).
RunWithBackgroundPriority:
While synchronization is running, other applications that are accessing the same
data locations may experience a noticeable slowdown. Enable this
setting to lower FreeFileSync's resource consumption at the cost of a
significantly slower synchronization speed.
LockDirectoriesDuringSync:
In order to avoid race conditions of multiple FreeFileSync instances
writing to the same folder at the same time, synchronization tasks are serialized
with lock files (sync.ffs_lock).
The lock files are only recognized by FreeFileSync and make sure that only a single instance
can read and write a shared folder while other instances are queued to wait.
This is primarily intended for network synchronization scenarios where
multiple users may run FreeFileSync concurrently against a common network folder.
VerifyCopiedFiles:
If active, FreeFileSync will binary-compare source and target files after
copying and report verification errors. Note that this may double
file copy times and is no guarantee that data has not already been
corrupted prior to copying. Additionally corruption may be hidden by
deceptively reading valid data from various buffers in the
application and hardware stack:
Does
the CopyFile function verify that the data reached its final destination successfully?
LastSyncsLogSizeMax:
The progress logs of the most recent synchronizations (for both GUI and batch jobs) are collected automatically in the file LastSyncs.log.
The maximum size of this log file can be set here.
NotificationSound:
Select a sound file from the FreeFileSync installation directory to be played after synchronization. Set an empty name if no sound should be played.