Wie bekommt man ein #Android dazu Dateien, vorrangig Bilder und Videos auf ein #Samba Share zu laden? Ich hätte sowas unter "Teilen" in der Galerie erwartet aber scheinbar ist das kein unterstütztes Feature...
Jemand eine Idee wie das geht?
Geht generell um #Backup und Netzwerk Zugriff auf die Daten.
Bin dankbar über jeden Hinweis.
This post is really a small collection of thoughts about Proxmox when used in a home lab situation and home labs in general. I was originally going to post this to Mastodon only but it didn't fit in a single post.
A lot of people (at least what I see on reddit) build Proxmox systems with shared file systems like ceph, even for home lab use.
If I use NFSv3, then all my shares are full of #AppleDouble files (i.e., with the "._" prefix).
If I use #NFSv4, then "git fetch" just hangs forever and never finishes.
If I use #Samba, then either 1) everything is 755 but I cannot delete files xD or 2) (after applying https://askubuntu.com/a/1126633/413683) the permissions are correct, but something is wrong with my .git: ad_convert: Failed to convert [.git].
It's been a while since I've used nLite. Slipstreaming updates and drivers, great for speeding up XP installs, but even better if you're using RIS to do a network installation.
Why use PXE+RIS? Because I spent all of last night trying to get it to install from a USB stick, and couldn't get it working... :(
This just involves a bit of #samba and #tftp magic. #windowsxp
Sigh. So copying and pasting commands from the internet doesn't solve my problem. This means I'm going to have to actually try and /understand/ what's wrong. I didn't sign up for this.
@xdydx I'm trying to mount a Apple Airport Time capsule Samba share on #FreeBSD 14, and so far no luck. I'm lost somewhere between #samba versions, types of security and the fact that FreeBSD seems to have changed the way to deal with Samba shares over the years; and I think from various forum posts I'm getting the different methods confused.
@hl@xdydx#FreeBSD has only support for SMBv1, which you should absolutely avoid for security reasons, although you can probably configure #samba to still allow it ... but ... don't. Nowadays I'd prefer to say FreeBSD does not support mounting SMB shares.
There are some ports available implementing "modern" SMB (v2/v3) on top of #fuse, which might be an option, but in my experience, they're not perfectly reliable and performance isn't the greatest either.
If ever possible, work on the server side and see whether you can share via #NFS instead. Either #NFSv3 (which is only "secure" as long as your network is perfectly secure and you control all participating machines, but at least it doesn't pretend to do anything else), or #NFSv4 with #kerberos security.