On Sat, Feb 20, 2021, 02:53 John Jason Jordan <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Thu, 18 Feb 2021 21:20:29 -0800 > TomasK <[email protected]> dijo: > > >I use synology NAS - although I am not sure what is synology assistant. > >I login to the filer(s) using web browser and use it DSM directly. > > > >I would recommend you to do the same. Find out IP of your NAS and > >access it as: https://ipAddress:5001 login as admin - then: > >1. Go to Storage Manager - Storage Pool - you will see RAID1 - remove > >the pool > >2. Create new storage pool with RAID0 > >3. Create volume (btrfs or ext4) > >4. Control Panel - File Services and enable NFS/SMB/AFP or whatever you > >are using to access the storage > >5. Control Panel - Shared Folders - create shared folder and export it > >via NFS. > > > >Firewall should be configured automagically when you are creating the > >shared folder, I think. > > I got the RAID0 created and Volume 1. By default user NetBackup > existed, and when I created Volume 1 it was assigned to NetBackup. > Every time I make a change I try to mount the Volume, and eventually I > got an actual error message: > > sudo mount -a > mount.nfs: access denied by server while mounting > 192.168.1.164:/volume1/Synology > > I also created user JJJ, who also has volume 1, but I still can't get > the mount command to work. > > I am using NFS to access the storage, and it is enabled. However, your > point 5. is not going to work for me. If you do not create shared folder and export/share it via nfs, there will be nothing to mount. Whatever you say below does make no sense. Shared folders do not stop/restrict you from using rsync to mounted folder. I have an rsync script that makes > the Synology a mirror of my TB3 enclosure, and that means the Synology > has to be mounted. At least I think it has to be mounted for rsync to > work. And my old DS216j is mounted as I sit here, so it is definitely > possible. It's just that the Synology web interface on the DS220+ has a > million buttons with labels that I don't understand, plus it is always > telling me 'you must enable xxx' but it never tells me where I can find > the button to enable xxx. > > Here are the relevant lines from fstab: > > 192.168.1.115:/volume1/Synology /media/jjj/Synology nfs auto,user 0 0 > 192.168.1.164:/volume1/Synology /media/jjj/Synology2 nfs auto,user 0 0 > > And yes, the folder Synology2 exists. The first of the above lines > mounts the old DS216j with never a problem. It has been working for > several years. The second line is a copy/paste/edit of the first line. > It ought to work, but after investing several long days trying, it > still fails. > > My most recent endeavor on the DS220+ was to setup the router, but the > Synology web interface can't automtically find my router (DIR 860L B1). > You can set it up manually by choosing your router from a list, but my > router is not listed. However, when I log into the router I see that > the DS220+has been assigned an IP address, so I don't know why I might > need to set the router up for the DS220+. > What are you doing John? To setup networking, you need following: ip, netmask and default gateway ip (aka your router ip, most likely xxx.xxx.xxz.1) I am going to sleep now and will ski the weekend, so this will have to wait till Monday. Best, Tomas > > _______________________________________________ PLUG: https://pdxlinux.org PLUG mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
