![transfer pycharm license to webstorm transfer pycharm license to webstorm](https://resources.jetbrains.com/help/img/idea/2023.2/py_register.png)
also describes how to configure the sync. Basically, the licensing rules now look more relaxed. I had upgraded my subscription from individual P圜harm/WebStorm license to the full toolbox so that I could take advantage of DataGrip/P圜harm/WebStorm and possibly Project Rider - however, running even one of these tools on a VM guest on the same machine precludes my ability to use any of the others on the VM host. This option is useful if you want to implement the same settings among your team-members. Settings repository: it allows you to sync any configurable components (except for the list of enabled and disabled plugins), but requires setting up a Git repository with the settings you want to share. The settings you can sync include: IDE themes, keymaps, color schemes, system settings, UI settings, menus and toolbars settings, project view settings, editor settings, code completion settings, parameter name hints, live templates, code styles, and the list of enabled and disabled plugins. JetBrains’ open source projects are generally licensed under the Apache 2.0 License. Note that synced settings are linked to your JetBrains Account, so they will not be available to other team members, and are only useful to share settings between different IDE instances used by you. Let’s go to the LICENSE.txt in the root of the GitHub repo. IDE Settings Sync: it utilizes the JetBrains server, so no additional configuration is required. Yes, keymaps are shared as part of the settings sync, and can be synced across different IDEs