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Dec 08, 2008Aspirant
AFP auto mount on ReadyNAS startup (OSX 10.5.5)
Hi there
Is it possible to get some of the shares automatically mounted, when the NAS ist started up? Or even better as soon as the ReadyNas is visible in the Finder? This would also allow me to connect my macbook to the network when the ReadyNas is already running and get my shares auto mounted...
Thx in advance!
Is it possible to get some of the shares automatically mounted, when the NAS ist started up? Or even better as soon as the ReadyNas is visible in the Finder? This would also allow me to connect my macbook to the network when the ReadyNas is already running and get my shares auto mounted...
Thx in advance!
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- You_never_know_Aspirant
physicsguy wrote: starg4ze wrote: On My PRO, with both AFP and CIFS(SMB) shares enabled, The PRO I have THREE Icons in the sidebar: One looking as a Imac(AFP), One looking as a WinDoze-BSOD and one looking as a timecapsule(due to the enabled timemachine-support). If you click on the "Imac-nas-icon" you get AFP, If you choose BSOD you get CIFS(SMB).
Starg4ze:
I have the original readyNas rev A, not the Pro. I don't have those three kinds of icons in the sidebar. I just have one for the nas device, and if I click it, all the volumes mount as smb. To get afp, I have to use the finder's "connect to server" pull-down item.
Any suggestions on how to get afp every time on a mac?
Maybe cause you´re using 10.4. not 10.5? - cbhiii1AspirantBonjour Mounter didn't work for me. It was causing kernel panics on my new Macbook after coming out of sleep. The same is true for MountWatcher which I paid for but have not gotten any support on.
- rainbow2009Aspirant:D Most plausible posts I knew so far 8)
simulation credit auto - After a lot of trial-and-error, I discovered that if you're going to use the System Preferences->Users->Login Items method to automount your shares, make sure you automount your private home share (or other non-guest-login shares) BEFORE you automount other shares. Otherwise, your private home share (or non-guest-login shares) won't mount and will give you an error -6602 on any attempt to mount, until you unmount all shares and start over.
This is true in OSX 10.5. I don't know if it's true in other revs. - KillerBobAspirantAll,
I never got Automounter, Bonjour Mounter, or any of the countless other utilities to work, and I still am irritated to s.... that there is not a small simple functioning application to scan for my AFP shares regularly and mount them again if they are missing.
My problem is not so much when my ReadyNAS Pro restarts, but rather with my MBP. Every-time it goes to sleep, and I wake it up again, the shares disappear. I get a silly message; "service connections interrupted".
I know this is NOT a ReadyNAS Pro issue (it works fine on my MBA), but rather an OSX/MBP issue with the WiFi.
However, such a small application would mean no issues at all:)
KB - fixmacsGuideThis is very easy to do. Don't need AppleScripts or any third-party applications.
1) Mount the NAS share manually
2) Go to System Preferences in the Apple Menu
3) Select Accounts
4) Select Login Items
5) Drag and drop the icons for the ReadyNAS shares from the desktop to the Login Items window
6) Quit System Preferences
You're done. The NAS shares will automount at start-up. - KillerBobAspirantThat's exactly what I have, but they will disappear again when the MBP goes to sleep and comes back to wake stage!
KB - fixmacsGuideYou don't mention the operating system. Assuming 10.5.7 connecting to AFP shares:
Mount the share(s)
Make aliases of the shares
Double click the alias after the Mac wakes from sleep
An alternative is to drag the share icon to the Dock, thus making a mountable dock alias. - KillerBobAspirantYes I am using 10.5.7, and I have used both these two solutions, and they do work, but I want it automatic. Having 9 links to shares in the dock is not pretty, and neither is 9 links on the desktop.
And, why does this work on my MBA and my Mac Pro, and not my MBP?. It must be something to do with the WiFi setup differences in the two laptops.
KB - fixmacsGuideAn MBA is a master's of business administration.
This seems like it is as you suggest--a problem with the MacBook Pro, but not the ReadyNAS.
This is a work-around (not an elegant fix). Create a folder on the desktop. Drag the nine(! why would you have nine shares? oh well) shares into the folder. Then, drag the folder into the Dock. Clicking once on the folder in the Dock will connect to all shares.
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