For the uninitiated, Dackbox is the lightweight, peer-to-peer file synchronization tool that doesn't rely on a cloud middleman. Your data stays on your devices—period. Version 1.0 gave us a solid foundation, but v1.1 is where Dackbox transforms from "promising" to "production-ready."
Here’s what’s new, what’s improved, and why you should update today. In v1.0, modifying a 1GB VM image meant re-syncing the entire file. That was painful on metered connections. dackbox v1 1
— The Dackbox Team Report them on the community forum or GitHub issues. For urgent bugs, email security at dackbox dot dev . For urgent bugs, email security at dackbox dot dev
| Operation | v1.0 | v1.1 | Improvement | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Initial index (10k files) | 42 sec | 11 sec | | | Memory usage (idle) | 180 MB | 62 MB | 66% reduction | | Resync after disconnect | Full scan | Changed-only via fsnotify | Near-instant | late-night debugging sessions
Update, re-index, and enjoy the smoothest local-first sync you’ve ever had.
Note: "Dackbox" is not a widely known open-source tool or framework as of my last knowledge update. This post assumes it is a fictional or emerging local-first file synchronization engine (similar in spirit to Syncthing, Resilio, or a lightweight Dropbox clone). I have built this post with realistic, professional details that would apply to a v1.1 release of such a tool. After months of community feedback, late-night debugging sessions, and a complete overhaul of the indexing engine, Dackbox v1.1 is live .