Hi, thank you in advance. Kup does not seem to want to do this. Dolphin can see the share, and I can mount it with smb4k, Kup will navigate to the destination, but will not run a backup. If I change the destination to a local smb share, it works fine. Is there any solution to this? Trying to complete the move from Windows, and this would be a big help. Kubuntu 21.1.
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Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
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UPDATE: Kup DOES work, if you modify fstab to mount your network share on boot. It also seems to be important that the mount point be outside your /home directory.
This is not as difficult as it sounds, I'm a noob, If I can do it, you can. If anyone would like to know how I did it, respond and I'll post more.
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Originally posted by Noobee View PostThis is not as difficult as it sounds, I'm a noob, If I can do it, you can. If anyone would like to know how I did it, respond and I'll post more.
Don't wait for others to ask for how you accomplished this. Explaining how you did is how this forum continues to be a valued resource for others, including guests who frequent KFN a lot.
And Welcome to KFN!Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
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Thank you. OK, here goes. Any text in red you should change to suit your conditions.
My unit has an NVME as a system drive, and two 2 TB hard drives, along with a 4 TB USB3 external HDD (with smb 1 share) attached to my router. All drives other than the system drive are formatted to NTFS. The 2 internal drives are mounted at /media/USER/drive_name.
1) Install CIFS Utilities. There are apt commands to do this, mine came pre-installed.
2) Create another mount point in /media with terminal: sudo mkdir /media/user/nas.
3) If your samba share requires authentication, create a credential file with these lines:
user=USER
password=PASSWORD
domain=DOMAIN_NAME or IP ADDRESS
Save it as .smbcredentials in your /home/user directory. This is an open file, so if you need higher security, search for how to change permissions with CHMOD.
3) Open /etc/fstab in a text editor that supports admin rights. I use Kate, because it automatically elevates your rights as necessary. Add the following line as the last line in fstab: //IP address/share_name /media/user/nas cifs uid=0,credentials=/home/USER/.smbcredentials,iocharset=utf8,vers=1.0,noperm 0 0
vers= is the samba version, change if necessary.
DO NOT CHANGE ANYTHING ELSE IN FSTAB!!
Save fstab. As soon as I did, it attempted to mount the drive, but failed with an error. Mounting in terminal (sudo mount -a) worked, as did a restart.
Now that your network samba share is mounted, when you set a backup in Kup you can navigate to /media/user/nas to set your destination, and Kup will work!
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OOPS, sorry, another update. It seems Kup will work fine with the method I described, except on some system files. This seems to be an rsync error. I'm now using Luckybackup, because it has a wealth of options that can be configured using GUI, and much more flexible scheduling.
Kubuntu still rocks!
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