Revisión de ExpanDrive 6 - Mejoras y advertencias

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ExpanDrive LogoAs you may have read in my previous blog post on ExpanDrive 5, it had some great features, but some significant caveats. Now, ExpanDrive 6 is here, released almost 6 months ago (July 5, 2017) it’s had some time to release minor updates and bug fixes. So as a traveller looking to keep my local storage at a minimum while having everything backed up and readily available in the cloud, I’m excited to see what version 6 brings to the table. It comes with claims of being 500% faster and the addition of offline-sync mode. It also adds two new cloud platforms, BackBlaze B2 and Google Team Drive as well as a new user interface.

The question is, does real-life usage actually match the claims? I’d love to hear your experiences. Let me know in the comments at the end of this post! Meanwhile, here is what I’ve found.

There is very little information about the v6 release on their website or Twitter. Even now, months on from its release, the changes are not entirely clear so most of the information in this article will be based on the newsletter they sent out announcing the version 6 update as per the two lists below (also published on their blog aquí).

All new User Interface

  • Fast server-side search
  • View old file versions
  • Easily get shared links
  • Built-in file browser
  • Integrated context menus and transfer badges

Super-fast Strongsync transfers

  • Multi-threaded transfer, up to 500% faster
  • Sync files and folders for offline access
  • Google Team Drive & BackBlaze B2
  • All-new SFTP & FTP engine
  • Support for SMB/Windows file sharing

My main complaints with ExpanDrive 5 on a Mac were it’s inability to handle large files and large multi-file transfers, and the fact that it froze all the time. So has this been solved?

At the time of writing, ExpanDrive continues to offer a free 7-day trial. Once the trial expires, the pricing remains the same as version 5 meaning you can purchase a single-user license for USD 49.95 or with lifetime upgrades for USD 74.90. Additional discounts for multiple licenses and for educational or non-profit users are also still available.

The core features remain the same:

  • Conéctese a múltiples plataformas de almacenamiento a la vez, incluidas las plataformas más comunes, con una sola aplicación.
  • Background file transfers for small files and real-time transfers for large files.
  • Native file access just like an externally attached drive.

Supported storage platforms

Dropbox
Amazonas Unidad de nube
Google Drive
Google Cloud Storage
Google Team Drive
Caja
Amazonas S3
OneDrive
OneDrive for Business
OwnCloud
OpenStack
Archivos de la nube de RackSpace
Objetos de ensueño
Backblaze B2
Microsoft Sharepoint Online
HubiC
WebDav
FTP
SFTP
FTPS
SMB/CIFS

From the list above, HP Helion has been dropped, understandably since it’s no longer being offered by HP, and four new platforms have been added: OneDrive for Business, Backblaze B2, Google Team Drive and SMB/CIFS.

So after using it for 7 days, I’ve covered off all the things I did in my previous tests of ExpanDrive 5 and Odrive that I would do on a regular basis.

Lo que encontré es:

Preparar

Like it’s predecessor, ExpanDrive 6 has a straightforward installer. It’s to the point and doesn’t mess around. During the installation, you can connect your first storage location if you wish, and once it’s installed, the usual ExpanDrive taskbar icon becomes available. Any clouds you have connected during setup should now appear as external drives on your Mac, and you can access them just like you would a USB drive. I did note though as I had connected Dropbox during setup that it seemed to have forgotten my connection and I had to reconnect it after installation. Having only installed it with Dropbox and adding other clouds later, I’m not sure if this is a Dropbox specific issue or an ExpanDrive one. I have noticed throughout my testing though that the Dropbox connection does seem to drop out and need reconnecting frequently. It occasionally happens with other cloud drives but far less often.

ExpanDrive 6 Settings
Configuración de ExpanDrive 6

From the taskbar icon, you have similar functionality to ExpanDrive 5, with the ability to control your connections and monitor what they are doing, including the new background sync function. You can add or remove cloud connections, eject and reconnect storage locations (useful if they failed to connect for some reason), you can edit the connection settings, you can see any transfers that are currently running, and check for updates.

Add a cloud drive in ExpanDrive 6
Agregar una unidad en la nube en ExpanDrive 6

The interface has had some cosmetic updates that do improve the appearance,  but it’s nothing major and doesn’t significantly enhance usability in my opinion. The main thing it adds is the ability to see what files are currently being transferred, giving you an idea of what is happening in the background.

The ExpanDrive 6 dialogue showing active background transfers
El diálogo ExpanDrive 6 que muestra transferencias activas en segundo plano

Transferencias de archivos

Files mostly seem to upload or download just as fast as Dropbox, Google Drive and Amazonas Drive’s own applications. Previously, in ExpanDrive 5, it behaved solely like a native file copy. So on a Mac, your Finder file transfer dialogue is open telling you how long there is left and so on. Now though, there are some differences. The new StrongSync engine is meant to synchronise files up to 500x faster than ExpanDrive 5, which would be a massive performance improvement. It also adds offline file sync support.

Now, I was hoping that this offline file sync support and new sync engine might resolve large file and multi-file transfer drop-outs. In my first tests, it didn’t. In fact, I was going to write it down as worse. Initially, I couldn’t get anything more than about 200mb to sync successfully through ExpanDrive 6. I got the same errors as in ExpanDrive 5 that indicates “some data can’t be read or written” for single file transfers or “one or more required items can’t be found” for multiple file transfers. I found the error even occurred with folders containing just 5 files that were about 5mb each. I tested this moving data from the local hard drive as well as from an external drive on a connection with 40Mbps upload speeds and encountered the same errors. This meant it would still be really unusable for me.

ExpanDrive transfer failed because some data can't be read or written.
ExpanDrive transfer failed because some data can’t be read or written.

However, after the ExpanDrive 6.1.3 update on October 12, 2017, I noticed that I can now sync much larger files. There is no mention of anything related to this in the release notes, but I was even successfully synchronising video files over 6gb each. The caveat though, is that this is achieved using the recommendation I made in my previous review to have a local file cache that is used to synchronise in the background. So if you throw gigabytes worth of files in, they’ll copy quickly and smoothly. However, it will take time to sync in the background, and until that synchronisation is complete, there will be gigabytes taken up on your OS X drive. It’s a monolithic improvement. I can’t even begin to describe how brilliant it is. It just means being aware of how it functions to ensure you don’t fill up your Mac hard drive accidentally.

One other thing I noticed is that when working with smaller files directly on ExpanDrive 6, it worked much better than in version 5. For example, I was able to open a 12mb PSD file and edit it in Photoshop without waiting long and without it causing the entire computer to freeze. Instead, just Photoshop freezes while it waits. Offline sync can also help with this by synchronising the needed files first.

In my experiments, I did notice that uploads sometimes seem to show in the new transfer section of the ExpanDrive dialogue as transferring for a long time. I suspect that since there are no options to control the bandwidth usage, this may be to automatically balance transfers so that they don’t significantly impact the internet for other usages, something cloud drives can do if they are left to use unlimited bandwidth.

In ExpanDrive 5, I noted that an ‘untitled folder’ often occurred when creating a new folder on a cloud drive and renaming it. I also noticed deleted files often reappeared. This does seem to occur much less in ExpanDrive 6. However, I’ve noticed that when working with files directly on a cloud server, the files change. You get files occurring on say Dropbox that have unusual names. Sometimes these files are completely inaccessible and appear corrupt. Other times they are perfectly accessible with Finder generating previews for them. Yet ExpanDrive indicates those files are completely synchronised. My first thoughts were that they were being corrupted, however, after further testing, it turns out that these files eventually appear as normal on Dropbox. So I assume it’s part of how ExpanDrive locks the files while they are in use and until they are entirely synchronised back to Dropbox.

A preview of an oddly named file that ExpanDrive 6 sent to Dropbox
A preview of an oddly named file that ExpanDrive 6 sent to Dropbox. Finder was able to preview this one.

It’s a little concerning initially, but it is important to remember that ExpanDrive is meant to replace the cloud provider’s own software, not be used alongside it. In that scenario, it is unlikely you would ever encounter these temporary partially synchronised files.

Acceso a archivos

Within applications, file and folder access is native as it was in ExpanDrive 5, so in case you haven’t read my previous post, this means that, for example, in Photoshop I could navigate into my drive and select a location to save my graphic. I could also open a graphics file from the drive, just as if it were a USB stick. The caveat here though is, logically, the speed is impacted by your internet connection. So loading a large file, especially on a slow connection would take a while. Similarly saving a large file can take a while. Why? Because it behaves just like a physically attached drive, so there is no visible temporary files or anything like that it is straight to the cloud, or at least, to the local cache and then the cloud. This is another area that becomes a problem with real-time access, especially since there is a risk your large save will fail.

It is excellent, for small files. In practice though for large files, I found in ExpanDrive 5 that I was waiting for a while for it to open and even longer for it to save before continuing on with what I was doing. Even in Finder when opening a folder I had not opened before that ExpanDrive had not cached, it seemed to cause Finder to hang until it loaded the contents.

This freezing of Finder and other applications when opening and saving files was a real headache and seems to have been a significant focus of the ExpanDrive 6 improvements. Previously, I found it can cause Finder and other applications to hang and become unusable for a few minutes, the longest, while I was testing was about 8 minutes on a 40Mbps connection while I was accessing a Dropbox folder containing a couple of thousand photos. The freezing also occurred when first single-clicking a file. In Finder, a single click would result in loading a preview icon for it. So when clicking a larger file, say a 20mb raw photo, Finder would be frozen until it finished creating the preview which of course requires accessing the entire file. This again depends on the file size and the speed of the internet connection. My main comment here on ExpanDrive 5 was that it wouldn’t matter quite so much if there were a delay except that Finder hangs, meaning you can’t use it for anything else in a different window. You just have to wait.

I can’t even begin to tell you how pleased I am that this has been partially addressed in ExpanDrive 6! When opening uncached folders, I find they now load much faster than they did in ExpanDrive 5. I’m talking almost instantly, except for some folders with huge numbers of sub-directories or files. Those ones do still take a bit longer. However, most importantly, the delay waiting for the directory contents to load is not a big deal because Finder no longer freezes while you wait. You can keep using Finder freely! That is a vast improvement and makes ExpanDrive 6 vastly more usable than ExpanDrive 5.

The other improvement is that ExpanDrive 6 now seems to bypass preview generation. This means that when you click a file, Finder no longer freezes while it accesses the entire file to generate a preview. It just shows you the filetype icon instead. This is also a vast improvement on usability. It also appears that a timeout has been put on file access, meaning if it takes too long to download, it will generate an error message. This means you aren’t stuck waiting for that file to process, particularly if it’s a massive file. The downside of this though is that if you are on a slow connection, it can be near impossible to open anything.

I tested this particular function while our internet connection was capped at 256/256Kbps. I know a lot of people are running faster than this all the time, and in Australia, as more people migrate over to the NBN, they are getting unlimited connections, but these low speeds are still a real-world scenario that has to be tackled. Especially if you are planning to use ExpanDrive for cloud access while travelling and never know what the quality of your internet connection will be like. So this is what I found on 256/256Kbps while not doing anything else on the internet:

I could not open a 300kb file from OneDrive or Dropbox.

It just threw an error over and over after every attempt.

In translation, the timeout means that ExpanDrive is not usable on a very slow connection except with the absolute tiniest of files.

Desincronización

As ExpanDrive 6 has added a local sync option, allowing you to download files to your local computer for offline access, you need to be able to remove them as well. This is done in much the same way as the Smart Sync function that Dropbox introduced early this year.

ExpanDrive 6's new icons to represent files in the cloud.
ExpanDrive 6’s new icons to represent files in the cloud.

When using ExpanDrive, right click on the file or folder you would like to synchronise. Go to the “Offline Sync” sub-menu and select “Local” to make the file available offline. If you don’t need offline files anymore, repeat the same steps but select “Online only” instead.

The new offline sync context menu in ExpanDrive 6
El nuevo menú contextual de sincronización sin conexión en ExpanDrive 6

Cifrado

Back when I reviewed ExpanDrive 5, the team there indicated encryption is something in the works for a later version:

However, that does not appear to have found its way into ExpanDrive 6 as yet. So in the meantime, you will still need to continue to pair ExpanDrive with another tool like Cryptor to make use of encryption.

Uso de memoria y CPU

With only 7 days in the trial, it does not give much time to test memory and CPU usage, however, ExpanDrive 6 seemed to remain faithful to what I noticed in my tests of ExpanDrive 5. In fact, it’s even better, during transfers, particularly of big files or lots of data I did not notice ExpanDrive using large amounts of RAM and CPU time. It seemed to remain quite reasonable all the time and never seemed to exceed the percentages used by the Dropbox application with similar data.

En general

I have to say, ExpanDrive has jumped ahead by leaps and bounds. As an application it is excellent. It’s still so simple to get started, easy to use, and it just works as though it was always a part of the operating system. It’s great to be able to access all my files across all my cloud platforms as though they are a locally connected storage drive. Even better, it has virtually no footprint on my local storage except while files are being synchronised, or are locally synchronised. So I have access to terabytes of data with a few clicks of the mouse.

The application freezes are not something that can quickly be dealt with as that comes back to actually opening files. If they have to be downloaded, it is going to take longer to open. Fortunately, Finder no longer freezes so this is a vast improvement. For large files, you really need to synchronise them locally first. This makes them totally usable compared to ExpanDrive 5. The downside is that there is no way to specify where these local files are stored, so you have to make it work on your local drive. If you are travelling and don’t want an external drive, then this is perfect anyway. If you have a lot of large files that take a while to upload or a lot of big files that you need to access locally, then this can quickly chew up your local drive. So it’s going to be a balance depending on the kinds of files you are keeping in the cloud and when or where you need to be able to access them.

If you are using the free versions of various cloud platforms to get more space, you could purchase ExpanDrive to bring them all into one application. It works well in that scenario. In my situation where I have 3 terabytes in Dropbox, 1 terabyte in Amazonas Drive and another terabyte in OneDrive, comprised of many large files as well as small ones, ExpanDrive 5 was useless. I’m pleased to now be able to say that with ExpanDrive 6, it now works very well and I can use it smoothly across a lot of cloud platforms. The only downside I can see is not being able to specify where to store the local cache. Encryption would also be great, but not a big deal for me.

Awesome work ExpanDrive, awesome work!

No te olvides

I’d love to hear your experiences with the latest release of ExpanDrive. Let me know in the comments below.

Lee mas

  1. Odrive or ExpanDrive? A comparison of specifications and supported clouds.
  2. 30 days of Odrive Cloud Unification – Review

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20 comentarios en “ExpanDrive 6 Review – Improvements and Caveats”

  1. Excellent article, thank you for taking the time to provide this information! We have a multi terabyte document repository (in Box). Most of these files are quite large (600MB to 1GB). We have the need to move, rename and edit these files (PDFs mostly). Storing the files locally has proven to be impossible of course. Would you recommend ExpandDrive in this case? Anything to watch out for? It *seems* the large file issues you’ve noted before are solved?

    Responder
    • Hi Brian, it definitely seems the large file issues are resolved. In the particular scenario you are talking about, the way ExpanDrive will work (based on what I’ve tried with Dropbox and OneDrive) is as follows:
      1. Moving – within one cloud drive it doesn’t appear that the file has to be downloaded and then uploaded but is moved directly on the server. It will rename the files without downloading them.
      2. Renaming – It should rename the files without needing to download/upload them.
      3. Editing – It will download the files to a local cache for editing. Once saved, it will save to the local cache and begin uploading the changes. Once the file is closed and the changes are completely uploaded it will at some point be removed from the local cache. It’s unclear to me exactly whether it is removed as soon as the upload is complete, or if it is retained for any period of time.

      So in your scenario it’s important to note I haven’t tested with Box, but the main impact I see is for editing, the files will need to be downloaded before editing. This will have some delay on editing large files. You could local sync the files you expect to need regularly though which would improve the usability. The other thing to watch out for is that it can take a while to upload changes to large files. So if you have multiple users, you may end up with file clashes. Depending on how many files get edited, a user could also in theory end up with a large cache of files being uploaded. The cache location is on the system drive and can’t be moved, so it has the potential to use up a lot of space if it grows faster than it can upload changes. These things are also going to be affected by your internet connection upload speed. Otherwise, I don’t see any other issues. I hope that helps!

      Responder
  2. Just purchased and installed ExpanDrive on a couple of Macs here. The staff at ExpanDrive were reposoosive and helpful from the very first contact. And the app is seamless, smooth and fast. It really has solved our requirement to access SharePoint like a file server. Thanks for your helpful reviews!

    Responder
  3. Hi Matt, thanks for the article above. I am using ExpanDrive now across 3 Macs, as I work at different locations across various cloud based drives. I love the idea of ExpanDrive and it does work, but I am finding a couple of things an issue for em and wondered if you had a workaround for these, or if others are experiencing this?

    1. After syncing a folder as Local, say an packaged InDesign folder – I would be working and InDesign has crashed a few times. I thought it might have been InDesign but after placed the folder on my desktop and working from that, no issues. ExpanDrive is the only thing that had changed in this process.

    2. I find that when I am syncing files as Local, it works quote well but you know the little cloud icon that changed to a tick when downloaded…well it often will disappear after my Mac goes to sleep. So I don’t know what is and isn’t synced. The only way I could make them reappear was to reboot. Ideas?

    3. After I reboot I have also found that some of my Local files have changed back to Online Only and I have to re-download them.

    4. I am experiencing the Dropbox folders dropping out fairly often, normally after my computer has been not in use for a little while.

    Thanks Matt

    Responder
    • Hi Kath, thanks for the comment. You’ve reminded me that I need to add some extra things I’ve noticed since I wrote this article.

      Regarding 1, I have noticed some apps require ongoing access to files, Expandrive tries to sync them when a change occurs though and locks the file, this in turn causes a crash. I haven’t noticed it with InDesign myself, but I have with some other applications, including Lightroom while exporting a photo. Expandrive caught it part way through the export and wouldn’t let a
      Lightroom finish with it as far as I could tell. It seems the only way around it is to copy it out of Expandrive while working on it and back when done.

      Regarding 2. I’ve always had a problem with this kinds of icons with every cloud app on a Mac, including the official Dropbox, OneDrive, and Amazon Drive applications. I believe it’s actually an OS X issue, or so Dropbox would have me believe when I raised it with them regarding their app. I find Expandrive handles it better than others because disconnecting and reconnecting a drive seems to bring the icons back for me without a need for a full reboot. Not sure if you’ve tried that, but I’d be interested to hear if that works for you or not.

      3. Expandrive’s local cache is somewhat elusive. I haven’t been able to find it myself, and I’ve not had any responses from Expandrive as to exactly how long offline files are stored, or where, or if there are other factors such as disk space that might contribute to them being removed. I’ve not noticed things go back to online only though unless I haven’t used them in a while.

      4. If your internet connection drops out or your computer goes to sleep, it does often drop the cloud connection. This may be happening if your computer hasn’t been in use for a while?

      Responder
  4. Expandrive tiene el peor soporte al cliente. Esta es la segunda vez que trato con ellos y en lugar de decir que no tienen solución, te dan la vuelta.

    Responder
  5. Tuve el mismo problema con el soporte de Exandrive. Sigo recibiendo mensajes de error al sincronizar con Amazon Drive. Respondieron a mi primer mensaje sobre el tema diciendo que investigarían, pero luego dejaron de responderme. Hacer fantasmas a los clientes pagos no es un buen negocio. Sugiero evitar Expandrive a toda costa. Sus datos merecen la tranquilidad de una empresa que ofrece el soporte adecuado.

    Responder
  6. Excluyendo la capacidad de usar una solución de software para conectarse a múltiples sistemas de almacenamiento en la nube, ¿cuáles son los otros beneficios significativos (la palabra clave aquí es significativa) en comparación con el uso del software cliente nativo de Dropbox o Google Drive?

    Responder
    • El otro beneficio más importante depende del software del proveedor de la nube: liberar espacio local. Por ejemplo, la aplicación para Mac de OneDrive no admite la sincronización bajo demanda (aunque la versión de Windows sí), lo que significa que debe sincronizar manualmente las carpetas que desee. Si tu disco local está lleno, tienes que quitar cosas, y puede convertirse en un juego de malabarismo continuo de sincronizar y desincronizar las cosas que necesitas. En realidad, esto solo es relevante si el software de cliente nativo no lo admite. Dropbox, por ejemplo, admite la sincronización bajo demanda en todos los sistemas operativos.

      Responder
  7. Espero estar equivocado, pero siento que estoy recibiendo el mismo tratamiento fantasma de ExpanDrive como se describe arriba ... compré el software, tuve algunos fallos / congelamientos, les envié registros y ... han pasado días ...

    Responder
  8. Estoy usando v7 para conectarme a Amazon S3 Buckets para una organización benéfica y con los descuentos para el crédito de Amazon es * casi * un sistema perfecto: les permite usar los buckets S3 como una unidad compartida normal desde un servidor y con cada usuario capaz de almacenar en caché las carpetas en las que trabajan más localmente, se ejecuta casi tan rápido como tener un servidor local; desafortunadamente, es un tema recurrente que ExpanDrive simplemente deja de funcionar y la única 'solución' es eliminar y recrear el mapeo, perdiendo cualquier cambio en el archivos en los que han trabajado entre el momento en que dejó de funcionar y el momento en que se dieron cuenta. Su apoyo parece completamente desinteresado en resolver el problema real y no muestran mucha comprensión de por qué perder el trabajo sería un problema.

    Responder
    • Hola Mark,
      También he estado usando v7 por un tiempo, aunque conectado a OneDrive, y he notado lo mismo. Funciona muy bien, mucho mejor que v6, sin embargo, el comportamiento extraño que describe sigue sucediendo de forma intermitente. No puedo decirlo con certeza, pero todavía parece ser similar a v6 donde si un archivo cambia antes de que termine de sincronizarse, nunca podrá sincronizarlo correctamente.
      Por ejemplo: archivo editado, guardado, inicio de sincronización, archivo guardado de nuevo antes de que se complete la sincronización, la sincronización se atasca porque el archivo que estaba sincronizando todavía existe pero ya no coincide con lo que esperaba. No me he molestado en seguirlo con ellos y solo lo uso con esa regla en mente. Crea problemas para archivos más grandes en particular. Ahora prefiero oDrive para conexiones de múltiples nubes: https://stillaslife.com/technology/30-days-of-odrive-cloud-unification-review/ Es un poco más caro si necesita poder desincronizar archivos y no es tan 'nativo' como ExpanDrive, pero parece ser mucho más confiable.

      Responder

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Matt in Noumea

Matt trabaja casi a tiempo completo dirigiendo su negocio de marketing digital, TerraMedia. Sin embargo, en su tiempo libre, le encanta viajar con su esposa, por lo que generalmente terminan haciendo mucho.
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