That's interesting, you don't happen to know what was that file in the "tmp" folder that was 15 GB? Now I'm thinking that may be related to OCR. Do you have this feature enabled?
Evernote user since 2011 with a lot of data, I'm considering switching to Joplin but need reassuranc
Haha..
I have the exact same configuration. An SSD with 1 TB of storage and 32 GB of RAM. It gives me plenty of room to run virtualbox with Linux in it and also take advantage of WSL.
I had problems again today. So I created a support post ici:
Damn, I didn't look. If it happens again I'll be careful.
I don't use OCR, at least I don't think so, I haven't touched much, I had just imported all my Evernote data. It can't be related to the import?
Hi,
- as an external editor I use MarkText (I'm on Mac): I'm ok with it but there is surely a better and more up to date editor ;
- I have 18k notes, 6k resources and 9k revisions (keeping 365 days), on Macbook pro ("Apple M1 Pro" chip) and syncing with Joplin Server (both with Joplin Cloud, those are excellent options I suggest +++)
- some additions again :
*3 plugins I couldn't live without : Rich Markdown (nice effects in markdown view), Favorites (static tabs), Note Tabs (dynamic tabs) ;
*3 plugins that I'm happy to have, even if I don't use them daily: backup, outline, math mode
Bruno
How old is your PC?
Hi
I've heard quite a bit about this publisher. It was essential for me to have separate windows, but with Note Tabs and other plugins, + the fact that I'm starting to appreciate Markdown, I'm not so sure I need it anymore, even I I find it hard to believe ;). I took note of all the suggested editors in any case.
I haven't started synchronization yet but I think I'm going to use WebDav on my Synology with the Synology WebDav, following the advice I got. It would probably be fast (more than Dropbox for example) and easy to set up.
Following the advice given here and on Reddit, I also use Favorites and Note Tabs, it's great, and it's also what will perhaps save me from doing without separate windows.
I'll take a look at Rich Markdown, you're not the first to tell me about it.
I will study the backups later but I still already have my SSD which is backed up daily, I imagine that saving the joplin-desktop folder allows me to restore everything in case of problems, I hope
On the other hand I'm going to try outline, it looks great, thanks. For now I have discovered the ${toc}
code which I love!
I bought it at the end of 2015: Notebook DELL E7240
CPU Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4310U
RAM 8,00 Go
SSD Micron M600 MTFDDAT256MBF
GPU Interl HD 4400
I just bought a new memory stick to go from 8 GB to 12 GB, it will do it some good...
We Don't Talk About Bruno
yes a clean backup of the joplin-desktop folder is enough in case failure
I'm sure 12Gb will help
I just wanted to stress out this aspect of the import process. Before you delete your Evernote account, make sure to run an "untitled note" search in Joplin at some point. In my case, I had to manually rename quite a few important notes of which I would have lost their title's meaning.
Also, I figured that some notebooks containing one note only got a wrong title once imported in Joplin (no big deal as the title was still was a relevant one).
I dare to say, after yesterday's manual revision... my migration process is now truly completed!
Thanks for the advice.
I actually have 78 “Note sans titre” (in French) in Joplin.
I checked on Evernote and they are also in Evernote, so it's not an export-import problem
My Evernote renewal is in 4 days. I at least thought about switching the annual renewal to a monthly one, but I'm almost hesitant to stop everything. Otherwise, that leaves me another month with Evernote, maybe it's wiser...
Do you know if once the subscription is deleted, access to the notes is still possible as long as the application is not uninstalled? If not on v10, maybe on Legacy at least?
How do you sync from Evernote directly into Joplin?
In my first effort I was exporting from Evernote and then importing to Joplin. In this scenario Evernote would only allow me to export a limited number of notes at a time which was a real problem.
Yes anything using the file system is terribly Slow. I can attest to this. I think as long as you're not doing that Joplin was a fine switch for me from Evernote and I also have a lot of notes
I used evernote-backup to export all my Evernote data, then used Joplin function: Import Enex folder to markdown:
I am surprised that WebDAV keeps getting recommended. On my desktop I sync to the local file system and in the beginning I used a NextCloud client to filesync to a Nextcloud-server and it was agonizingly slow; not surprising since Joplin has lots of very small files, and WebDAV basically is HTTP and thus not particularly well suited for lots of small files afaik.
After I exchanged the file sync from WebDAV to Dropbox using their Linux client it seems a great deal faster to me.
Am I missing something here, or is this something specific to Android?
Regards,
kai.
It may depend on your setup but generally self-hosted WebDAV is going to be faster than Dropbox simply because you won't throttle your own connection, unlike Dropbox.
But Nextcloud WebDAV is notoriously slow, unless maybe you spend a lot of time optimising it. When I asked a Nextcloud developer why it was slow the answer was essentially RTFM and tune the server, but I don't think it can ever be very fast because it's too complex.
Something like Nginx would be faster since they don't do any extra processing on each request.
I was commenting on other threads to you, and just commenting here as well... While I used Evernote daily, my note count is in the 1,750 range/75ish notebooks; not your level of notes. I read this whole thread and your Joplin results are looking promising. Is it faster than Evernote 10 yet? Plus I am only currently syncing a few notes currently through Dropbox, but after reading here, may migrate eventually to hosting on my Synology NAS. So far it's been quick, but I'm certainly on the learning curve still.
I'm glad you mentioned this, I didn't realize there were different options. Fascinating to read. I have a Synology so this could work great for me.
No, no, no, no!
Is Nginx one of your favs? There are so many nowadays I get "paralysis of analysis" with them. Is it faster than Synology Webdav or Joplin Server on Synology? Or similar?
For WebDAV something like Nginx, maybe Apache too, would perform better than Nextcloud because they do plain WebDAV and nothing else. Nextcloud does a lot more, like versioning, logging, trash support, etc and that's why there's a significant overhead per request. It's all php too while the Nginx module is a native one I believe.
That being said a lot of people use Nextcloud with Joplin without any problem - it probably depends on how many notes you have and how powerful is your server.
If you want to install something specific for Joplin though then Joplin Server will still be faster since it's optimised for it.
I think it would be helpful to point this out in the Joplin help
Since I have a Synology NAS, I am considering using the Synology WebDAV server, is this a good option?
For me, Joplin is faster than Evernote 10 which had become practically unusable. I'm having just a random slowdown issue but that doesn't Fortunately, it doesn't happen too often.
I would say yes. I use the Synology WebDAV Service for my Joplin since years with a total of 39000 Joplin items on various clients (3x Windows,
2x IOS and 2x Android) and I had never a problem.
A normal sync takes 7-12 Seconds when nothing is to synchronize.
A new synchronization on a new device (On my last Android it was round about 4-5 hours) takes some time, but I have never had any problems there either and have never had to reinstall Joplin several times or delete data.
Thanks for the quick reply.
To be precise: I do not run my own WebDAV-server, I use a Nextcloud implementation from my internet provider, so I have no influence on or knowledge of their setup. For my non-Joplin data I use the Nextcloud desktop client for syncing, and that works fine. (That the servers are based in Europe is probably a fringe benefit, too.)
So from your experience so far: would you still recommend that I stick to WebDAV instead of Dropbox? We're talking about ca. 1500 notes ...
Regards,
kai.
For that number of notes, both Dropbox and Nextcloud would be fine, so it's really up to you, whether you're experiencing issues with Nextcloud or not. Normally both options should be very similar in your case.
Hi @laurent ,
Do you have an opinion on the Synology WebDAV server?