ML
    • Recent
    • Categories
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Register
    • Login
    1. Topics
    2. Tags
    3. synology dsm
    Log in to post
    • All categories
    • JaredBuschJ

      Reset Synology admin account

      Watching Ignoring Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Solved IT Discussion synology synology dsm password reset encrypted folders
      24
      2 Votes
      24 Posts
      3k Views
      K

      @jaredbusch
      Glad Assuming the drives could be identified as to what is RAID, could you have removed the redundant set, then progressed with the reset and if it worked, great. If not, then you could have put the redundant set back in and not have lost anything other than the time and knowledge that the drives were indeed encrypted?

    • scottalanmillerS

      Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server

      Watching Ignoring Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved News synology synology dsm synology dsm 6.1 samba 4 samba active directory nas
      20
      1 Votes
      20 Posts
      8k Views
      scottalanmillerS

      @JaredBusch said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @scottalanmiller said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @JaredBusch said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @travisdh1 said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @scottalanmiller said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @travisdh1 said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @scottalanmiller said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @travisdh1 said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      Hrm, fast-clone. Probably time to try out a Btrfs based file server at home.

      It's good stuff.

      Yeah, I know brtfs is the way to go, I just haven't tried it out yet myself. Starting out on IRIX with XFS back in the day makes me a too nostalgic.

      I still use XFS for everything.

      When will be the right time to switch to btrfs then? We know it's been stable for long enough that it's becoming the default in a number of distributions now, but has it really been battle tested well enough yet?

      Also, should we maybe make another thread for the btrfs discussion?

      The answer here is you do not switch. You install a distro letting it do its native thing by default and less you have an over arcing huge reason to override defaults. So you will get this when you install a new system that now has it as a default.

      openSuse, for example, has had it as default for two years.

      Really though, I prefer XFS for anything that isn't a storage machine. VMs need something mature, stable and light. XFS does that well.

      But does your preference mean that you will override a default installs choice just because that is your preference?

      Using anything but default should have very clear reasons because the first time somebody besides you have to troubleshoot it there will be big problems.

      I would often, yes actually. XFS is not like an odd, unsupported option. It's just not the default. It's still completely core to openSuse's design. They simply had to pick which one they were going to use when someone did not choose one or the other and they opted for extra features over lean design for those that don't know which they want, which I think makes sense. Just like CentOS opts for the simplicity of using root for administration instead of sudo, but makes it super easy to enable sudo. It's not default, but it's fully supported. They just had to choose something as default.

    • Bill KindleB

      Synology DSM 5.0 Released

      Watching Ignoring Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved News synology synology dsm
      4
      1 Votes
      4 Posts
      1k Views
      scottalanmillerS

      I just have a two bay at the moment. It is a pretty recent addition. Very nice unit though. I actually have the ioSafe fire proof, water proof unit.

    • 1 / 1