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Forum Discussion
mbielaw
Aug 06, 2015Tutor
file sharing outside of home network with owncloud
Hi all,
I've spent half the day trying to figure this out, so please be kind.
I have a ReadyNAS Ultra 4+ with 4.2.27 firmware running PHP 5.something and ownCloud 8.1, both from Whocares. My goal is to be able to selectively and securely share files/folders over the internet with others who do not use ownCloud. So I'm stuck since I don't know how to actually accomplish this last part as the server is on my home network, so I don't just have a web link I can send for sharing. Is there some kind of online service I need to subscribe to that will be the jump between my home network and the outside. I get the impression that's how ReadyCloud works. I could have sworn I saw something about this somewhere, but my head is spinning at this point. I'm not an idiot, but I'm not a web developer either.
TIA.
6 Replies
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- JennCNETGEAR Employee Retired
Hello mbielaw,
Welcome to the community!
ReadyCloud has its own permissions for shares, this can be used with ReadyNAS OS6 and not available on ReadyNAS OS4 and OS5.
What you can use with these legacy ReadyNAS devices is ReadyNAS Remote. However, ReadyNAS Remote is currently not compatible with Windows 10.
See ReadyNAs Remote FAQ and ReadyNAS Remote Setup
Hope this helps!
Regards,
- mbielawTutor
Hi Jenn,
Thanks for the reply.
I understand that ReadyCloud is not an option for my hardware (although I have seen that some have updated their old hardware to OS6).
I don't really want to use ReadyNAS Remote for my purposes because [unfortunately] it complicates file sharing with less tech-savvy people. I'd like to be able to share through a web browser. I believe ownCloud is a possible solution, but I'm stuck on the next step. Hopefully, there is someone in the community who uses ownCloud and can point me in the right direction.
Mark
- SandsharkSensei - Experienced User
Chances are, you have a dynamic IP address. That being the case, you need a dynamic IP redirector that keeps track (via a program you run in your router, on the NAS, or on another computer on the home network that's always on) and links a URL to that changing IP address. Chances are that Port 80 and 443 are also blocked, which are the standard HTTP and HTTPS ports. So you will need to use an alternate port. The redirector service can help with HTTP alternate port re-direction, but not HTTPS, as re-directng HTTPS would circumvent the security it provides.
There are many such services with optionas that are both free and not, depending on your needs. I personally use No-IP.com. DynDNS is also popular (and the only one most Netgear routers support natively). But there are plenty more. I have two web sites runnig on my NAS, not OwnCloud, but it's the same principal. And I also run DDClient on the NAS to keep my IP up to date with No-IP.
So, as you can see, ReadyNAS Remote (or ReadyCloud for ReadyOS 6) starts to look a whole lot simpler for the novice than other options.
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