paul- wrote:
> The pic you posted, It says max version is smb2, whereas, we have
> vers=3.0 on the mount line in pCP. I would increase your synology
> setting to include smb3
Wow, that worked! Music is playing! VU meters are bouncing!
Thank you guys, Paul in particular, for all your help.
The pic you posted, It says max version is smb2, whereas, we have
vers=3.0 on the mount line in pCP. I would increase your synology
setting to include smb3
piCorePlayer a small player for the Raspberry Pi in RAM.
Homepage: https://www.picoreplayer.org
Please 'donate'
I did change the password in NAS to alpha-numeric (no exclamation
point). Same change in the LMS Mount Point configuration. But still the
same "Operation Not Supported" error.
ghulse's Profile:
paul- wrote:
> There are quite a few special characters in linux shell.A good rule
> of thumb, if it is not alpha-numeric, there is a good chance it is a
> special character. Either change your password, or do what kidstypike
> has already highlighted.
>
> The reason we don't do this by
paul- wrote:
> There are quite a few special characters in linux shell.A good rule
> of thumb, if it is not alpha-numeric, there is a good chance it is a
> special character. Either change your password, or do what kidstypike
> has already highlighted.
>
> The reason we don't do this by
There are quite a few special characters in linux shell.A good rule
of thumb, if it is not alpha-numeric, there is a good chance it is a
special character. Either change your password, or do what kidstypike
has already highlighted.
The reason we don't do this by default..is that we are
ghulse wrote:
> The NAS is named NASty. The actual path to the music folder is:
> /volume1/homes/Music
>
> The shared volume is listed as "homes" in the NAS control panel (Shared
> Folder). So that's what I use for the CIFS configuration. Though I've
> also tried volume1.
>
> As far as I know
paul- wrote:
> Permissions are easier with CIFS. With respect tO the screenshot
>
> Is homes the correct name of the shared volume?
> Is the IP address correct?
> Is the password correct?
> Is the password using a password with special characters or spaces?
The NAS is named NASty. The actual
Permissions are easier with CIFS. With respect tO the screenshot
Is homes the correct name of the shared volume?
Is the IP address correct?
Is the password correct?
Is the password using a password with special characters or spaces?
piCorePlayer a small player for the Raspberry Pi in RAM.
paul- wrote:
> At this point, the easiest solution is probably to install LMS on the
> RPI. And then network mount to the Synology using a CIFS share.
Hi Paul,
I faced a similar problem a couple of months ago and built a dedicated
pCP+LMS system to replace the LMS that had been running on my
ghulse wrote:
> I am wondering about the vers=3.0,uid=1001,gid=50. In other examples
> online, you usually see the vers=3.0 come at the end.
>
It doesn't matter, it's just a comma separated list of options. I've
just changed mine to put *vers=1.0* first, no problems (re)mounting my
NAS.
slartibartfast wrote:
> Are you using the correct IP address? The IP address of the NAS not the
> IP address of the LMS server.
>
>
> Sent from my Pixel 3a using Tapatalk
Good question, but yes, definitely using the NAS IP address.
I am wondering about the vers=3.0,uid=1001,gid=50. In other
ghulse wrote:
> I used a larger SD card to a 16GB and set up the RPi from scratch,
> resizing the FS to use the entire card.
>
> Did everything (I think) and now getting a "System call failed:
> Operation not supported. Network mount failed from server at
> xxx.xxx.x.xxx."
>
> Here's the
I used a larger SD card to a 16GB and set up the RPi from scratch,
resizing the FS to use the entire card.
Did everything (I think) and now getting a "System call failed:
Operation not supported. Network mount failed from server at
xxx.xxx.x.xxx."
Here's the Network Mount screen. Let me know
paul- wrote:
> What Synology version are you running?
>
> At this point, the easiest solution is probably to install LMS on the
> RPI. And then network mount to the Synology using a CIFS share. You
> should also consider making the network connections hardwired.
>
> On the Synology:
> 1) In
paul- wrote:
>
> On the Synology:
> 1) In File Services, enable SMB. I think everything can stay default
> 2) In Shared Folder, find the Share that has your music on it. Edit
> it, and goto permissions. Make sure your user account has read/write
> access (Write is only needed for saving
paul- wrote:
> What Synology version are you running?
Version 6.2.4-25556 Update 5, though it looks like I could go to v.7 if
I wanted to.
Otherwise, I'm reinstalling PiCorePlayer on the RPi, and I will hold off
on installing LMS while I'm following your directions. Thank you.
What Synology version are you running?
At this point, the easiest solution is probably to install LMS on the
RPI. And then network mount to the Synology using a CIFS share.
On the Synology:
1) In File Services, enable SMB. I think everything can stay default
2) In Shared Folder, find the
Yesterday I made the horrible mistake of updating PERL on my Synology
NAS 218+ which broke my Squeezebox (actually PicorePlayer on a Raspberry
Pi 2). I have about a 750 GB of music files on the NAS. The RPi is
connected to my stereo receiver. (The RPi is equipped with a small LCD
screen, so that
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