I turned SMB 2 back on for the Diskstation (tick box for that and MTU), it was on, but I turned it off as Synology Tech support said Large MTU maybe be causing issues if not setup properly on my network.
164) Although my orange shutdown/log off/ startup screen has returned :(
If you have feedback for TechNet Support, contact got the Windows update today, now running ver. Please remember to mark the replies as answers if they help, and unmark the answers if they provide no help. You can manage the permissions with the NTFS-Permissions of the Security Tab. On the sharing tab, the only entry you Need is:
Set permission to "Allow" / Full controll (Or at least read permission).Go back to the "Permissions for " dialog.Select the user who needs the permission to acces the folder.Click on the "Security" Tab of the Folder you want to share.Please check the shared permission and the folder security permission to fix this issue: A conflict between share permissions and NTFS permissions was created when someone changes permissions without examining both types of permissions. An explicit Deny has mistakenly been applied to the user or group.ģ. The user or group was unintentionally removed from Group or User names on the file's or folder's Security tab.Ģ. That could deny a user access to a file or folder they should be able to access include:ġ. $CSDaemonLog = $env:LOCALAPPDATA + '\CloudStation\log\daemon.This problem results when an administrator, the owner of the file or folder, or a user with the Change Permissions permission for a file or Full Control permission for a folder, changes the access control list (ACL) on the file or folder. # This is the path to the CloudStation log file you should't have to change this. $StopMonitoringFlagFile = "$env:LOCALAPPDATA\CloudStation\log\StopMonitoring.txt", # un-fix (read: re-apply the read-only attribute) on files it already processed # Creation of this file will allow you to: # How long we wait before restarting the loop # insanely high for a low number of files
# In my testing, this worked better than a fixed number that was either # Note, this is a calculated timeout based on this + the number of files it found that needed fixing # How long we want to give the client to catch up It may not be perfect, but it resolved the issues I was running into and provides meaningful output. Since I had nothing better to do, I expanded on it, adding some checks & balances, visual feedback and I tried to add some error handling. I ran the script which mostly worked but I ran into some odd problems. I took to the Synology forums and not only found I wasn’t the only one experiencing this problem, but that someone wrote a small script to address this issue. The other cloud sync services don’t fall prey to this issue, so it’s a little strange that the CSC isn’t able to handle it. That’s when I noticed the file sync queue was something like 90k and CSC needed some help. I thought it was going to fix itself so I left it in this state for a while until I realized changes I made were not reaching the other system. In this state, a file sync queue builds because CSC is hung up on the handful of files that it cannot overwrite locally because they’re read-only. I switch back to system B and CSC is up in arms because “FILENAME cannot be synced due to access permission denied, or it is in use.”.I make changes to the same read-only files on system A which get synched up to the NAS.I switch to system A and the read-only files are now updated with copies from the NAS.I modify a handful of read-only files on system B which gets synced up to the NAS.I jump to system B and setup CSC which syncs the data down from the NASīoth systems now have identical sets of data.The CSC syncs the data up to the NAS and all is well.I work on system A, generating files in a synchronized directory.Upon further investigation, the Cloud Station Client (CSC) was having trouble processing read-only files. Initially things worked well, but as I added more data – like 300GB of data – I noticed things were not synchronizing correctly. I setup Cloud Station on the NAS and installed the Cloud Station Client (CSC) on my home machines to sync key directories on the machine to the NAS. I’ve been slowly working on weaning myself off services like DropBox, OneDrive, Google Drive to rely fully on the NAS but it certainly hasn’t been without it’s struggles.
I picked up a Synology NAS (DS411+ii) years ago and it’s still alive and kicking today, mostly due to the rock-solid hardware and the amazing improvements in DSM.