

tar.bz2 file you downloaded as well as your owncloud_bak folder.
#Nas4free owncloud upgrade#
The data is by default stored unter /media/ within your Jail and not in the owncloud directory.Īfter the upgrade you can delete the. Ownership of the folder and its contents should be changed to the user Turn on Jail and go to your ownCloud with your webbrowser. The page should offer an automatic upgrade. Copy the config.php of your old ownCloud installationĬp. This is the link for the current version 8):Ħ. Get the latest version of ownCloud (you can find the link on. rename the old ownCloud folder (as a backup):Ĥ. Path is path/to/jail/usr/pbi/owncloud-amd64/wwwģ.

SSH to your machine and change into the ownCloud directory within your Jail: Turn off the Jail. I find it easier than using the maintenance mode.Ģ. The version below resembles the same upgrade, with just a few slight changes for FreeNAS.ġ. If it doesn’t, ownCloud has an easy to follow guide here.
#Nas4free owncloud update#
Depending on your current version, ownCloud should give you the option to update itself. Luckily, you don’t have to get your hands very dirty to do so, as upgrading ownCloud in itself is fairly easy. That is great and all, but the FreeNAS repository is not always up to date and if you want to use the latest software, you have to upgrade it yourself. Now, you can remotely shut down the system by using the commandįreeNAS uses the FreeBSD Jail functionality to provide support for plugins. Also, Sonoma is the name of my NAS and you can change the echo outputs to whatever you want.Īfter that, save the file with any name you like to use as a command in /usr/local/bin and make it executable with Replace “MAC address of the NAS”, “username” and “IP address” with your local data. To do so, I recommend installing it via brew: For your Mac, you need wakeonlan to generate the magic packet which will be sent to the NAS. So, you’ve got your hardware straight, now comes the software. The output should look somewhat like this if your network adapter supports WOL: If you know the name of your card you can also run To do so, log in on your NAS via SSH and run ifconfig. Check the output for “WOL_MAGIC”:Īs you can see, the onboard adapter on my HP N40l (bge0) doesn’t support it WOL but luckily I’ve fitted an Intel EXPI9301CTBLK PRO1000 network card (yep, that’s a real name) which does. To save a little power I wrote a small script to shut down my FreeNAS and wake it up again remotely.įirst, make sure your device support Wake On LAN. Although WOL has been an issue in the past on FreeNAS, on FreeNAS 9.3 it is supported out of the box.
