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Installing and running Wuala in Linux using only command line

Update (2012-07-29): Wuala isn’t as great as it used it be, see my new post Moving from Wuala to SpiderOak for what seems, as of today, a better alternative.

Wuala is a free online file storage service. Yet another one, you’ll say, however it has some (unique?) particularities. To make the list as short as possible:

  1. They care about privacy: unlike (for instance and just to cite the most famous one) Dropbox where the files are encrypted once they’ve arrived on Dropbox’s servers (sure, the transfer is SSL-protected, but at the end of the tunnel Dropbox can see the unencrypted files), the files are encrypted on the user’s computer. So Wuala has no way to read your files. (source: Wuala FAQ – Is Wuala private and secure?). The obvious drawback with that is that you’d better not lose your password: they don’t know it, and they can’t regenerate it, if you lose it it’s lost. You know, like dead is dead.
  2. You can get lots more storage for free, just by sharing space. If your goal is to secure your data by storing them redundantly and not to store more data than can fit on your hard drive, read on carefully: if you let Wuala store 1 GiB of data on your computer (for redundantly storing encrypted files from other users), you’ll get an extra 1 GiB x [your uptime] free storage. At the moment, you can share 1 to 100 GiB per computer. So if you have 2 computers online 50% of the time and you share (aka “trade”) 100 GiB on each, you’ll get 100 GiB x 2 x 50% = 100 GiB of free Wuala space! Try and get that on Dropbox… they sell the 100 GiB quota at 20 bucks a month (oh, right, $19.99…). If you don’t want to trade storage with Wuala, you can also pay for extra GiBs, for instance 100GiB come at 100€ a year (right, 99€ or $129).
    UPDATE: this possibility to trade storage has been removed. However, at the moment it’s possible to pay for storage using Bitcoin.
  3. Last but not least, there’s a decent corporation behind Wuala: Lacie (and guess what they sell: hard drives and NAS ;)). Sure, startups are cool. But losing your valuable data just because startups come and go, not so cool. And if you’re already on Dropbox, why not simply duplicate your Dropbox folder to Wuala for extra redundancy? 🙂

So, want to try? Wuala comes with 1 GiB free plus 500 MiB per referral (the bonus only lasts 1 year though, and is maxed to 6 GiB), plus as I explained lots more if you want to trade storage. It works on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux, so if you happen to own a server you’ll be able to use it to trade storage. And to finish here is the guide to run it on Linux (Ubuntu / Debian) using only the command line:

  • Get Java and Screen if you don’t have them already: apt-get install sun-java6-jre screen or apt-get install default-jre screen
  • Download wuala: wget http://wuala.com/files/wuala.tar.gz
  • Extract it: tar -xzf wuala.tar.gz
  • Make some files that need it executable:
    cd wuala
    chmod 744 wuala
    chmod 744 wualacmd
  • Open a screen session and launch Wuala in it:
    screen
    ./wualacmd
  • Detach the screen session: CTRL+A, CTRL+D
  • Login to Wuala (NB: once again, Wuala needs to be running in the background, for instance in screen, for this to work): ./wuala login [your username] [your password]
  • Start trading: ./wuala trade [space you want to trade, in gigabyte, so from 1 to 100]

That’s it, Wuala is installed and started trading. You can check your trading status by using ./wuala tradeStats, and you can force to update the trading stats by running again ./wuala trade.
The only problems I’ve been unable to solve yet is that the command line client seems to behave pretty bad with every update: it just seems to fail to restart, and even needs some manual cleaning (removing .lock files and/or killing the java process) about every time Wuala gets updated… which occurs quite often currently.

Sources:

Posted in privacy, security.


3 Responses

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  1. Andy Silviu Stancu says

    yeah wuala is awesome! i made an account on it out of curiosity to check it out, now i’m sorry i made it with my generla user name and now i want to use that account to share the storage space and uptime of some internet cafe (mean me :P) so now i can’t do that anymore.. though it’s awesome anyways wuala, currently i share 20GB and i leave my comp online 24/7 but there is so slow updating but anyways it’s worth it 😛
    i got 10 GB free storage (beat that drop box 😛 ) and still coming. (9gb out of traded storage.

  2. Yoshi says

    Great, easy tutorial! After having installed it, which whent very well, I have a question: is there a way to change the location of the Wuala storage, i.e. the data it saves when sharing disk space? I installed Wuala on a very small drive, and would like to keep it there but change the local storage location. Thanks!

  3. patheticcockroach says

    Hm, I never really looked into that… But why don’t you move your Wuala install to the partition you want? That seems like the easy way to go around the problem 😉 I don’t have a Linux box where I can experiment with Wuala at the moment.



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