Yes, you can do this by command line.
Show us the ouput of the following command:
The output should look like this for example:
Code
root@omv4:~# ls -l /tank/
insgesamt 5
drwxr-xr-x 3 1002 1001 3 Okt 6 2016 backups
drwxrwxr-x 3 1002 1001 3 Apr 2 2016 pictures
drwxrwx--- 3 1002 1001 3 Aug 26 2016 private
There you should see the old UID (1002) and the old GID (1001) of your old omv configuration.
After that you can change the owner (user and group) by the following command:
- change "user" to the name of your user (for example: fred)
- change "group" to the name of your group (for example: family)
- change "path/to/your/pool" to the path of your pool (for example /tank)
So the command has to look like this:
Now, you can check the result with "ls -l" again. The output should look like this for example:
Code
root@omv4:~# ls -l /tank/
insgesamt 5
drwxr-xr-x 3 fred family 3 Okt 6 2016 backups
drwxrwxr-x 3 fred family 3 Apr 2 2016 pictures
drwxrwx--- 3 fred family 3 Aug 26 2016 private
You can do this within some seconds. I never used the web ui to change file permissions or owners.
Regards Hoppel