On 02/21/2018 10:06 PM, John Jason Jordan wrote:
On Wed, 21 Feb 2018 17:43:24 -0800
Tomas Kuchta <[email protected]> dijo:
I do not think that you will be able to break into the NAS without
either pulling disks out, mounting them on the PC and resetting the
password or by factory reset. So that would take some effort or data
loss.
How did you access your data before without the password? NFS,
CIFS,...? I bet that both NFS and CIFS mounts are functional even on
Ubuntu.
My laptop accesses the Synology without a problem. There is this line
in fstab that mounts it every time I boot the laptop:
192.168.1.115:/volume1/Synology /media/jjj/Synology nfs
auto,user 0 0
So I added the line to fstab on the new desktop and rebooted. When it
came up I saw Synology in the Thunar file manager, so I clicked on it
hoping to see the list of files as I do on the laptop. Instead I get a
popup:
'mount.nfs access denied by server while mounting
192.168.1.115/volume1/Synology.'
The line in fstab is identical on both machines. I think the problem is
that (apparently) when I set up the Synology I added something telling
it to accept requests from the laptop and the old desktop. Now I need
to add a permission for the new desktop. Unfortunately, I can't get in
to the Synology administration because I have forgotten the username or
password.
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Any help?
https://www.synology.com/en-us/knowledgebase/DSM/tutorial/General/How_do_I_log_in_if_I_forgot_the_admin_password
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