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Forum Discussion
Numb3r6
Mar 07, 2019Apprentice
FTP setup
Whist I am pondering a full NAS upgrade a little issue has come up that is bugging me.
Here's what I am trying to achieve. I have a couple of IP cams on my home network. I have them set up to respo...
- Mar 07, 2019
The problem with many embedded ftp clients is that they want to upload to the ftp root - this is where the ReadyNas does not allow to upload date, instead the client has first to choose a shared folder ... unless your cameras can be configured to upload to a certain path, there won't be much luck.
StephenB
Mar 07, 2019Guru - Experienced User
Masquerading could be a factor. FileZilla can work around masquerading issues, but other clients can't. If the cameras are on the home network, then make sure it isn't used on the NAS.
Also, there are two flavors of FTP - passive and active. The dominant setup is passive, but it is possible that the camera needs active.
If you have a link to the camera user guide, perhaps post that.
schumaku
Mar 07, 2019Guru - Experienced User
The problem with many embedded ftp clients is that they want to upload to the ftp root - this is where the ReadyNas does not allow to upload date, instead the client has first to choose a shared folder ... unless your cameras can be configured to upload to a certain path, there won't be much luck.
- Numb3r6Mar 07, 2019Apprentice
Boom! FTP path!
There must some difference between how things are handled when dealing with a Windows client with IIS/FTP running vs. how the ReadyNAS provides the service. In the cam FTP path dialogue, the default is "./" which I presume is the root. Now that works just fine with a Win10 client FTP service, and in fact it creates its own subfolders based upon date. All good.
Now what the NAS seems to have done on having the new FTP share created is create a subfolder off the root named as per the share, and the cam config doesn't know about that, so I modded the value to "./NASFTPsharename" and it's working with the account I'd created.
Just need to play with security a bit now, to make sure I only open it up as much as needed.
At the moment I don't know how the RN422 handles FTP but this has moved me a step closer to that upgrade.
Thanks for the pointer! :smileyhappy:- schumakuMar 07, 2019Guru - Experienced User
Great it helped!
Numb3r6 wrote:
There must some difference between how things are handled when dealing with a Windows client with IIS/FTP running vs. how the ReadyNAS provides the service.:
Yep, that's it. Many generic FTP servers you create a specific folder for the service, either by user, or by user group - so the default path (the ftp root) is a writable and readable folder already. Many NAS (Q, R, S) ftp do list the shared folders in the FTP root, and before uploading a path must be selected. or cd'ed to first.
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