On Wed, 21 Feb 2018 17:43:24 -0800
Tomas Kuchta <tomas.kuchta.li...@gmail.com> dijo:

>I do not think that you will be able to break into the NAS without
>either pulling disks out, mounting them on the PC and resetting the
>password or by factory reset. So that would take some effort or data
>loss.
>
>How did you access your data before without the password? NFS,
>CIFS,...? I bet that both NFS and CIFS mounts are functional even on
>Ubuntu.

My laptop accesses the Synology without a problem. There is this line
in fstab that mounts it every time I boot the laptop:

        192.168.1.115:/volume1/Synology /media/jjj/Synology nfs
        auto,user 0 0

So I added the line to fstab on the new desktop and rebooted. When it
came up I saw Synology in the Thunar file manager, so I clicked on it
hoping to see the list of files as I do on the laptop. Instead I get a
popup:

        'mount.nfs access denied by server while mounting
        192.168.1.115/volume1/Synology.' 

The line in fstab is identical on both machines. I think the problem is
that (apparently) when I set up the Synology I added something telling
it to accept requests from the laptop and the old desktop. Now I need
to add a permission for the new desktop. Unfortunately, I can't get in
to the Synology administration because I have forgotten the username or
password.
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