Select the box “Create database with same name and grant all privileges” (Privileges can be changed later) This is the password TNG will use during the install. This is the username TNG will use during the install.Īdd your password. Under the current users select the “add user account option”Įnter the name you will give your TNG database. Login to phpMyAdmin and select the user account tab. This username and password is also used for phpMyAdmin. The user name is root but you will need to create a password. (Note phpMyAdmin will automatically install MyMariaDB)Īfter installation start MyMariaDB. Install the following Synology packages Web Station and phpMyAdmin. However this doesn't really cover permissions: The only other advice I got was from in an email from Darren Lythgoe with advice sent to him by someone else using Synology NAS. Are you having difficulty logging in to your NAS via SSH? If you're using Windows, I recommend WinSCP. I infer that DSM 4 has the standard Unix permissions so, in that case, you should be able to follow Darren's introductory video where he uses an FTP client to log into the NAS and change permissions that way. The reason for my post was that the standard installation instructions does not cover Windows permissions, only Unix. I'll try to help but I only have experience on DSM 5 and I think my instructions are only applicable to DSM 5 due to the introduction of Windows type permissions. Since the Express set-up uses Unix commands to change permissions, it is ineffective. These appear to overrule the Unix settings that appear in an FTP client. However, if you use the Permission Editor in File Station, you will only see ACL Read permissions enabled. Just upload and extract the zip file from your PC/Mac using DSM File Station.įor example, any file in the 'web' folder after upload will have the 777 Unix permissions. *Ultimately this means you can successfully install TNG without using any FTP client because this can't be used to set the necessary permissions. Crucially however Synology DSM 5.0+ does not actually use Unix permissions for the 'web' shared folder access, it uses Windows Access Control List permissions, so you're wasting your time fiddling with Unix permissions. This might lead you to believe that these are more than necessary to begin setting up TNG. Set Permissions' if you just want to get on with it.Īfter you've unzipped all the files to your TNG folder, if you happen to log in via an FTP client*, you will notice that all the files and folders have 777 permissions. Installing on a Synology NAS is not a new topic but Synology is evolving its security and file system especially since DSM 5.0 so this may be new material.
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