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Forum Discussion
brianraus
Oct 10, 2021Tutor
NAS 212 Keeps Dropping Connection (Switches Cloud to "Off" on Admin Page)
Hi all. I don't post much to forums anywhere, so please forgive any faux pas... Basically what the subject line says. I have a ton of media storage on my system and use Plex. This wasn't a ...
- Oct 15, 2021
brianraus wrote:
I know that if I type in "https://nas-ip-address/admin" the browser changes to (Not secure) "nas-ip-address/admin". So even if I open up a Chrome browser and type in exactly what you have above, it is the same as if I opened up the ReadyCloud and clicked on the link after it tells me I have to be on the LAN. For me there seems to be no difference whether I type in the "https://" portion or not.
Public websites all use certificates issued by a certificate authority (CA). The CA certifies that the website is actually run by the company it appears to be run by. It also can be used to verify that there isn't a proxy between you and the website that is eavesdropping on browsing.
The NAS uses a self-signed certificate, so there is no way the browser can verify all this stuff. Still HTTPS will give you an encrypted connection (unlike HTTP). But most browsers now will try HTTPS first even if you type in HTTP.
In any event, you will need to click-through the browser security warnings when you log into the web ui.
One thing to check is whether the browser has your NAS admin credential saved. If it has an old password, then you can end up on the password reset page (because NAS is rejecting the wrong password). One test is to open an incognito window in Chrome, and use that to browse to https://nas-ip-address/admin. Or just go into your browser settings, and see if there is a credential for the NAS.
StephenB
Oct 10, 2021Guru - Experienced User
brianraus wrote:
The NAS won't respond to physical button pushing, so I have to unplug it and plug it back in every day or two if I want it to work.
Is this new behavior? When you do an unclean shutdown (pulling the plug), you do risk doing some damage to the file system (both your data and the operating system), since any cached writes are lost.
Is the NAS web ui responsive when it doesn't respond to the button pushing? If so, you ought to shut it down with the web ui instead.
- brianrausOct 10, 2021TutorThank you for the response and concern.
I don't believe I can connect to it at all when that happens. On the PC it says not connected, the web UI (from that I think you mean the netgear ready cloud login site) says not connected. I can see the name of my NAS everywhere (although grayed out) except when trying to access through my LAN 192.168 address for the administration page. That way just loads for a minute or two and says can't connect.- StephenBOct 10, 2021Guru - Experienced User
brianraus wrote:
On the PC it says not connected, the web UI (from that I think you mean the netgear ready cloud login site)No, I do not mean ReadyCloud.
I mean https://nas-ip-address/admin (using the real IP address of your NAS). That does not require ReadyCloud.
brianraus wrote:
This never happened until I put the Plex server app on the NAS and added a boatload of media.Is the issue only that you cannot get the NAS to power down? But it will respond to the power button when you power up?
I am thinking that plex is trying to complete its media scan, and that is not working correctly. Possibly you don't have enough memory. You could try going into the advanced settings for the library, and setting the agent to "personal media" You won't get any metadata matching, but it might allow the scans to complete.
- brianrausOct 13, 2021Tutor
Ok. I appreciate all the info.
When you said "Web UI", I assumed you meant accessing from the Web. That's why I thought you meant 'ReadyCloud'.
I do access through https://nas-ip-address/admin (using the real IP address of your NAS) for sure. That's how I realized I'm able to see the "Cloud" tab (admin page) and ReadyCloud is now toggled "off" (again), like right this moment. I guess I thought I wasn't technically on the web as I can't access that page (according to a warning) without being connected to the LAN.
I definitely don't want to change my library settings to personal media and lose the posters and all that jazz on my Plex UI. It's actually quite awesome. But, here, the story of my life is that it ALMOST works great.
Not enough memory? Here's where I don't know jack about this. I have plenty of space left on my NAS Drive(s). I have two of the 16TB IronWolf drives. Is there an upper limit on drive size?
Also - I appreciate your help. Back in the beginning, I was trying to use Netgear phone service. Of course, to talk to you, they want your serial number. The voice "recognizing" prompt couldn't tell the difference between a "B" or a "G" or a "C". I tried upteen times and gave up.
P.S. Did you mention this doesn't back up on its own? I bought two identical hard drives and I guess I thought the whole point of this thing was it would be redundant for when one craps out.
- brianrausOct 10, 2021TutorSorry, missed your first question.
Yes. This never happened until I put the Plex server app on the NAS and added a boatload of media.- SandsharkOct 10, 2021Sensei - Experienced User
If the NAS is in the same location as you are accessing from, you don't need (and, IMHO don't want) ReadyCloud. The local NAS GUI is reached by browsing to https://<ip.of.your.nas>/admin (where <ip.of.your.nas> is replaced with the actual IP address. RAIDar can be used to assist in doing that if you don't know the IP address.
Netgear chose to push people toward using ReadyCloud even locally. I think it was to give the illusion that is really is the "local cloud" they advertised it as. (By definition, it's not "in the cloud" if it's in your home.). IMHO it was a poor decision. It's not cloud storage (it's very much at many of the same risks as your original data (theft, fire, etc.) and not backed up unless you've set it up to have backup. And it's easier to use the NAS locally without ReadyCloud. ReadyCloud is certainly the easiest method to have remote access to the NAS, however.
So try logging in locally and see what you get.
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