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Forum Discussion
joeho717
Oct 10, 2008Aspirant
how to add no-ip client to ReadyNAS ?
There is a Linux/BSD/Unix version of the client, and I was hoping to add that to my ReadyNAS Duo at work. I have enabled SSH for the Duo, does anyone have this up and running and can provide some inst...
rmfield
Dec 07, 2008Aspirant
It looks like the addon is doing a /usr/local/no-ip/no-ip -c /etc/no-ip2.conf, which starts the service with the configuration file specified in /etc/no-ip2.conf. However, a /usr/local/no-ip -S /etc/no-ip2.conf doesn't appear to be a valid construct. /usr/local/no-ip -S looks for a configuration file in /usr/local/etc and then displays the configuration and shows it is running:
1 no-ip process active.
Process 1380, started as no-ip -c /etc/no-ip2.conf, <version 2.1.9>
Using configuration from /etc/no-ip2.conf
Last IP Address set xx.xx.xx.xx
Account someone@somewhere.com
configured for:
host somewhere.outthere.com
Updating every 45 minutes via /dev/eth0 with NAT enabled.
Configuration data from /usr/local/etc/no-ip2.conf
Account someone@somewhere.com
configured for:
host somewhere.outthere.com
Updating every 45 minutes via /dev/eth0 with NAT enabled.
So, it's clearly setup properly and running fine. My only question was why you are pointing to /etc/ for your configuration file instead of the default /usr/local/etc since no-ip seems to be looking there for the file. As long as I have a configuration where it is looking for one, it will show me all of the configurations on the machine.
1 no-ip process active.
Process 1380, started as no-ip -c /etc/no-ip2.conf, <version 2.1.9>
Using configuration from /etc/no-ip2.conf
Last IP Address set xx.xx.xx.xx
Account someone@somewhere.com
configured for:
host somewhere.outthere.com
Updating every 45 minutes via /dev/eth0 with NAT enabled.
Configuration data from /usr/local/etc/no-ip2.conf
Account someone@somewhere.com
configured for:
host somewhere.outthere.com
Updating every 45 minutes via /dev/eth0 with NAT enabled.
So, it's clearly setup properly and running fine. My only question was why you are pointing to /etc/ for your configuration file instead of the default /usr/local/etc since no-ip seems to be looking there for the file. As long as I have a configuration where it is looking for one, it will show me all of the configurations on the machine.
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