Are you using 32 or 64 bit?
32 Bit.
Are you using 32 or 64 bit?
32 Bit.
I ran the upgrade from OMV5.6.26 on my RPi 4 (4GB) using omv-release-upgrade and no problem so far.
Currently running 6.0.20-1.
Everything I need runs through Docker (Plex, Minecraft Server, Qbittorent) and I have netatalk installed as well. They all followed smoothly. No issue with the file systems whatsoever.
CPU utilization looks in check compared to OMV5.
Easy upgrade so far.
Alles anzeigenI run OMV5 on an ancient armel NAS that still does the job. I've turned off the SMB encryption to help the CPU. Even then, the SMB performance is about half the speed of Netatalk (30 vs 60+ MB/s).
For that reason, I've decided to install Netatalk manually. The good news is that the installation is so simple the lack of a plug-in is no big deal.
Let's assume you have a running OMV5 with existing shared folder(s) with the correct access rights. All you need to do as root is:
1. "apt install netatalk" to install all the necessary packages
2. "nano /etc/netatalk/afp.conf" to create the configuration file. Below is an example config file to be adjusted based on your needs.
CodeAlles anzeigen[Global] hostname = NAS - AFP spotlight = no [Share1] path = /srv/dev-disk-by-label-data/Share1 [Share2] path = /srv/dev-disk-by-label-data/Share2 [Share3] path = /srv/dev-disk-by-label-data/Share3 [TimeMachine] path = /srv/dev-disk-by-label-data/timemachine time machine = yes
3. "systemctl restart netatalk" to take the new config into account
Done!
I did that too, and imported the afp.conf from my OMV4 setup since it’s already all setup.
I also prefer AFP, it seems to have better transfer speed, and is more reactive with Finder, but that aside, it makes no sense to spend anytime on it.
- The last Netatalk update for Debian was in 2018...
- Airports, Xserves and OS X Server are shadows of a past long gone.
- iPadOS and iOS have no AFP support.
I think eventually we won’t be able to use it anymore.