I am completely new to this kind of stuff, Any ideas how to fix? Another problem is that I am not able to write to the folders, but able to read. All places I have Read and Write checked for all users, both admin and guest.
Failed to set file group to 'users' for '/srv/dev-disk-by-id-ata-ST4000LM024-2AN17V_WCK1M9H9-part2/untitled folder 2':
-
-
I'm guessing it is a windows filesystem?
-
I am trying to be able to access the files mainly on Macs, but I am using windows for the set-up. The media vault is on a Raspberry Pi 3B+ with a partitioned hard drive attached.
-
I am trying to be able to access the files mainly on Macs, but I am using windows for the set-up. The media vault is on a Raspberry Pi 3B+ with a partitioned hard drive attached.
I am guessing the drives are NTFS? I am not sure why is failing, in NTFS filesystems mounted in omv you cannot set any fs permissions, basically ntfs drives are mounted read-write for everyone. But from my experience when doing this to ntfs fs chmod,chgrp is just ignored, they return zero exit code, but nothing happens effectively., which should be the same for the omv webui
What version of omv are you using?
If you have ssh enabled, please post this command:
omv-confdbadm read conf.system.filesystem.mountpoint
cat /etc/fstab
-
Also post this command:
mount
I am guessing here the disk got kicked when accessed, underpowered RPI and hub maybe?
-
I have a 4tb Seagate external Hard drive, and I'm using a 2.5A wall power adapter for the Pi. I am using OMV 3.0.99. If posting is entering commands into the Pi, then the attachment below is what I got after the three from above.
-
-
Maybe this could be helpful https://forum.openmediavault.o…?postID=131407#post131407
-
Thank you guys for all the help, I have the drives I want mounted and shared. But does anyone know why I cannot write to the drives? I have all permissions set to read and write, and all users have read and write permissions.
-
You cannot set permissions in fat drives. The drives are mounted with same permissions for folder and files contents inside. Go in terminal and check who owns files and folder and permission mode.
This would be much easier if you use native Linux filesystem, not some fs from 30 years ago. -
What file system would you recommend that can be accessed by both Windows and Mac, yet modifiable on Linux?
-
What file system would you recommend that can be accessed by both Windows and Mac, yet modifiable on Linux?
I don't think you understand the NAS concept then. Disks in omv are not be on a pull off, plug in basis, except for a portable disk that you can used for the usbbackup plugin. As a NAS server your disks should be plugged 24/7, you can access your disks through the network using samba, nfs, ftp, afp, is not like omv doesn't give you sharing options.
If you pull a registered drive in omv then boot without that disk, that causes all sort of problems. Avoid this, always
-
And if you insist then use NTFS all chown, chmod, etc fail silently (zero exit code), so they don't produce any errors in the webui. Of course forget about setting permissions (less ACL). As i understand ntfs is readable in OSX
-
I understand this, I'm not going to mess with the NAS once I get it started. But I don't have anything on the drive yet, and I'm willing to delete what I have done so far to restart if needed. I just want to be able to R/W to the drive.
-
You will be able to read/write to the drive using the sharing protocols, means mounting the share as a drive in windows, the same goes for OSX.
Performance is not gonna be the best as you choose the worst board for this job
Jetzt mitmachen!
Sie haben noch kein Benutzerkonto auf unserer Seite? Registrieren Sie sich kostenlos und nehmen Sie an unserer Community teil!