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Currently running osx 10.8.2
Have an external network drive attached to my rt-n66u router running tomato
I'm trying to use tmutil to connect my external network drive, and am having a lot of trouble.
I mount the drives in Finder
Run sudo tmutil setdestination /Volumes/external, and get Incompatible file system type: smbfs (error 45)
Any ideas? :(
I can't answer your question specifically aside from telling you that timemachine backups on samba shares are not supported officially. As a consequence, even if you will be able to backup your data on a samba share (as far as I know lots of people have issues to do so), you will run into trouble during a restore procedure. If you would try to restore your data by booting an OS X livecd you couldn't because it doesn't have a samba client installed in order to connect to a samba share. The next step would be to try to connect the backup drive directly to your Mac to access your data. Chances are this would also fail because the harddrive was formatted with a linux filesystem which is not supported by OS X.
So the best thing you could do is to install netatalk (afpd) on that router box if it is possible at all.
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so I wanna be able to access my files on my Ubuntu 18.04 LTS machine from my other windows machine by typing its local IP address like this image
but I don't know how to setup apache to display the folders I want, all I'm getting when I type my IP address in the other machine is the apache Ubuntu default page, so how can I make this.
thanks in advance.
To access file system on remote server you can use SFTP to transfer file between systems.
Download Winscp : https://winscp.net/eng/download.php
Type your local ip address including username and password into setup then you can access your remote folders.
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I just upgraded the ssd card to 2018-11-13-raspbian-stretch-lite. Hence, no screen, no keyboard, just headless. With the version before I used SSH to acess the raspberrypi 3. But now i have trouble. SSH is disabled by default. Could be overcome by writing an empty file named ssh into / . Fine, should be easy, but it isn't. I tried to mount the ssd-card in a card reader from a linux computer. This would allow to write the required empty file with cat /dev/null > /mnt/rasp/ssh , but it doesn't work, because the device is mounted read only indepent of how I try to mount for read-write!
Has anybody an Idea how to open the ssh, maybe over USB-Telnet, or what ever?
You have to create a file called ssh in the boot partition, not the root partition.
You can also create a file called wpa_supplicant in the same place and your RasPi will join your wifi network.
You'll probably be able to ssh into it with:
ssh pi#raspberrypi.local
If not, look in your router's "DHCP clients" table or use nmap to get its IP address. Or install the fing app in your smartphone and it'll tell you the IP addresses and host/OS of all your network clients.
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I'm trying to install and configure some apps in VM in Windows Server but have a limited access to the Windows server so I'm trying to do all the configuration in a local VM in my Ubuntu system then export the VM to the server. Is it possible?
Most virtualization systems can handle OVF format. You can create VM on VirualBox, save it to OVF (or OVA) and then restore it in VMWare ESXi environment, for example. OVF contains a "hard drive" data and all virtual hardware info. But OVF is not fully compatible with Microsoft Hyper-V. There are some tools that allows OVF file to be converted into Hyper-V compatible form, but all the hardware information will be lost.
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I've an old VMware virtual machine (.VMDK).
It has been installed as Windows XP. It runs but I forgot the Windows password to login.
Is it possible to use the VM as a virtual drive and just READ OUT THE FILES stored into it as it was a normal HD?
I don't need to execute the VM, only to recover some data.
You can mount a vmdk file in Windows or Linux, read HERE. Becuase it is password protected C drive I would mount it in Linux and just copy what I needed since Linux will read the filesystem without the need for a password where windows is likely not going to allow you to read without the password.
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I am using win-sshfs to mount a remote drive from a Debian Linux server on a windows 7 64-bit desktop machine over the internet. The drive works but it is slow. I want to speed up win-sshfs by disabling compression and encryption. How can I do this? Otherwise is there a faster alternative?
i would suggest installing samba on your debian server or maybe a ftp server for large file transfers.
FTP is unencrypted and you can set different compression options,
windows can map a ftp:// share in explorer without any tools