mherger wrote:
> > I always have https enabled on the nas, although I'm just using the
> > default Ssl cert. What else am I supposed to do?
>
> It has nothing to do with your NAS web page, but with perl as a https
> client. Check with your vendor or its community about how to install
> that m
DJanGo wrote:
> https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/sbs/2013/09/25/information-about-sbs-2003-product-support-lifecycle/
I know it is old and out of microsoft support but thought someonw here
might have a pointer.
Turned out it was the DNS playing up and i gave it some new server ip's
and it cl
Such is the nature of RFEs. If it's easy and you win customers you do it
anyway; if it's not easy you need a bigger justification (or, in the
case of open source, you do it yourself)..
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Hardware: 3x Touch, 1x Radio, 2x Receivers, 1 HP Microserver NAS
QNAP do this a fair bit. The way they symlink the folders sometimes
changes with a firmware update. After 2 or three of these issues I went
with a similar set up to Grumpy Bob's where I run an uptodate LMS on
something else and point it at the shares on the QNAP.
You can get 7.9 to run on a QNAP
I run a very similar config with LMS on an old server class machine and
storage on a NAS (QNAP) mounted via NFS. Obviously if I boot the PC with
the NAS off then there is an issue but since I know thats going to be
the case I don't do it.
I also use a Pi3 with SMB mount to the NAS. The Pi is sli