![]() ![]() I thought I could add the user to the Syncthing group and have the same access, however I cannot create or add any file to the Syncthing-owned folders, nor can I edit or modify any file.Īny ideas, questions, or comments? All is appreciated. I prefer to keep this share secure and not have it set to nobody:nogroup as outlined in the tutorial at. If I try to make a group named mike with a GID 983 the name conflicts with the already created group named mike with a GID 1000 for Ubuntu mounting the share.įor every file or folder I attempt to change permissions to include other to have full access. Pw useradd -n mike -u 983 -d /nonexistent -s /usr/bin/nologin Solution 1: In order to keep the easy access to the files from Ubuntu fstab the user needs to be UID 1000, not 983 for syncthing Where I am stuck is allowing the user on each PC to have read/write/execute access to the files. The main user on each PC has a UID and GID 1000:1000 and the same username (mike) that I have set up on each FreeNAS server. I have NFS sharing set up from my home and office Ubuntu 18 PCs where /etc/fstab have entries to automatically mount each shared NFS folder on FreeNAS to Ubuntu using the same user id and group id Ubuntu uses to match the user id and group id on FreeNAS. I have successfully installed and set up Syncthing to sync both FreeNAS servers to each other. The folder defined in the NAS in /DATA/user1/phone_photos.I have a home and an office FreeNAS setup with both upgraded to 11.2. The synchronization of photos from our smartphone should begin to To go to the "Advanced" tab and click on "Permissions The NAS Syncthing interface a dialog box will appear, click on Select the "NAS" device to activate this folder, and The Syncthing interface of the smartphone we click on "Folders"Īnd then on "+", in the window we click on "Directory"Īnd look for our photos folder (usually DCIM), we allow access, we That "userapp" has read and write permissions on this Sync a folder, for example photos, from your smartphone:Ĭreate the folder /DATA/user1/phone_photos on our NAS. WeĪccept the messages and we already have the two devices connected. ![]() Right of "Device ID" and scan the QR code of the NAS. "Devices", then on "+", then on the icon to the Open the Syncthing application of the smartphone and click on A QR code willĪppear that we must scan with the smartphone. The Syncthing interface of our NAS, click on the bottom button Our smartphone we go to the google app store, find and install the Go to the top menu andĬlick on "Actions", then in the window menu click on "GUI"Īnd enter a username and password. NAS and the defined access port 8384 (for help see point 1).įirst thing you should do is set a password. The Syncthing interface through a browser by typing the IP of your The stack, this will download the necessary images and start the SSD/config/Syncthing:/config #See point 1 Note: Verify on the official page that this stack has not changed before installing it. We define it asĪnd implement the following stack in Portainer (for help see point 1). Initial subsequent configuration will be easier. Host name is optional but if we leave it already defined, the We can do it from the OMV GUI by editing the userĭefault port to access the Syncthing interface is 8384, we leave it User "appuser" must have read and write access to these That each user has a folder with his name inside /DATA. As anĮxample we suppose that we want to synchronize two folders of twoĭifferent users (user1 and user2) with access to the NAS. ![]() User variables, location, "config" folder are alreadyĪccess paths to the data that we are going to synchronize. Is assumed that you have followed the previous guide, therefore, the Prepare OMV to install docker applications For this, the application must be installed on each of the machines individually, and then they are configured for the synchronization job. Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, and other platforms. Synchronize data from our OMV server with other machines in our Image supports x86-64, arm64, and armhf architectures.įollowing installation of Syncthing in OMV through docker allows to Synchronize filesīetween two or more computers in real time, safely protected from Is a continuous file synchronization program. Allows you to synchronize folders between ![]()
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