Difference between revisions of "Cloud Sync No longer works, owner changed"

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(Created page with "The settings are stored in an SQLite database and can be modified there. I took the following steps. 1*Stop the cloud sync service from the package manager Connect through ssh to your diskstation or open a terminal console window go to the volume where the configure for cloudSync sits. and there into the config folder. for me that was `cd /volume1/@cloudsync/db` before we open the sqlite database to modify it we need to look up what the user id and group id of our new u...")
 
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The settings are stored in an SQLite database and can be modified there. I took the following steps.
The settings are stored in an SQLite database and can be modified there. I took the following steps.


1*Stop the cloud sync service from the package manager
<p>Stop the cloud sync service from the package manager</p>
Connect through ssh to your diskstation or open a terminal console window
Connect through ssh to your diskstation or open a terminal console window
go to the volume where the configure for cloudSync sits. and there into the config folder. for me that was `cd /volume1/@cloudsync/db`
go to the volume where the configure for cloudSync sits. and there into the config folder. for me that was `cd /volume1/@cloudsync/db`

Revision as of 14:54, 25 April 2024

The settings are stored in an SQLite database and can be modified there. I took the following steps.

Stop the cloud sync service from the package manager

Connect through ssh to your diskstation or open a terminal console window go to the volume where the configure for cloudSync sits. and there into the config folder. for me that was `cd /volume1/@cloudsync/db` before we open the sqlite database to modify it we need to look up what the user id and group id of our new user will be. You can do this by running `id -u new_user_name` and `id -g new_user_name`. lets assume these return 1033 and 100 now we can run an sqlite shalle for the config database by doing `sqlite3 config.sqlite` To see all the existing connections you can do a `select * from connection_table;` Note down the ids of the configurations that need a change. This is the first number in each row. The actual update is then done similar to this command using the right user id and local user name ` update connection_table set uid=1033, gid=100, local_user_name="new_user_name" where id=3;` the last id will indicate in which row you want to update this press Ctrl+C multiple times to exit the sqlite shell start your cloudsynch package again