The Webdav File Explorer plugin enhances Obsidian by allowing users to save and manage files from any WebDAV-compatible network drive or cloud storage. This plugin enables browsing and referencing these files directly within Obsidian by displaying them in a file tree format. Additionally, it creates corresponding Markdown files locally for each folder, where users can add descriptions for better file organization and retrieval. This setup helps streamline the process of managing specialized files, such as compressed packages, videos, and presentations, within the Obsidian ecosystem.
The WebDAV Image Uploader plugin streamlines how images are handled by moving them from local storage to a connected WebDAV server and swapping them with clean preview links. It intercepts pasted or dragged images, uploads them automatically, and inserts the corresponding link right into your note. You can also right-click to upload, download, or delete individual files, and even run batch operations to process every image across your vault. There's flexibility to keep or remove local copies, and while authentication quirks mean previews sometimes behave differently, the plugin provides options to manage that too.
The Cloud Sync plugin brings multi-cloud synchronization to your vault with built-in end-to-end AES-256 encryption, keeping your notes secure while syncing across devices. It already offers full WebDAV support, letting you connect services like Nutstore or Nextcloud, with options for two-way, upload-only, or download only sync. The plugin handles file changes automatically, supports incremental updates for efficiency, and allows scheduled or selective syncing to avoid unwanted uploads. Though GitHub, iCloud, Google Drive, and OneDrive integrations are still in development, the structure is in place for broader coverage.
The Nutstore Sync plugin provides a two-way bridge between your notes and Nutstore using the WebDAV protocol. It handles incremental updates so only modified files move across, which keeps large vaults responsive. Sync behaviour can be tuned through loose mode, file-size limits, and conflict resolution rules that compare changes at character level or fall back to timestamps. A built in explorer lets you navigate and manage remote files, while real-time status indicators and detailed logs help you understand what's happening during each sync cycle. The plugin also supports single sign on to simplify authentication.