I need help understanding what the community’s recommendation is for how to save my files across two pcs without having to manually cut and paste or setting up a NAS.
My situation is that I have a Linux server running Opensuse pulling down media through an Arr stack setup. It only has .5 TB available but I have a Windows PC with 3 TB available. I would like to know if there’s a way that I can seamlessly direct my Linux server to save onto my windows PC without me having to manually copy and paste.
Let’s say I initiate a download of a .75TB file on my Linux server, can I just have it save directly to my available 3TB windows PC? And then be also able to tell an app like Jellyfin to read it from there?
Long term I was thinking that I would set up a separate NAS but I don’t want to do that for a few months. I want to stabilize my current setup before adding another machine.
Am I crazy to think that I can save files to my windows computer from my Linux server? I have tried to look into different things. I started going down the route with samba, but it seems to only show files to my windows PC but not actually save them there directly from Linux. I’ve looked into FTP/SCP but I don’t know a good guide or if would do what I need. I am struggling understanding the networking portion of this, so let me know if I am wrong.
As a secondary question, if I had a NAS, could I also point some of that free 3TB from the windows pc to be used as part of the NAS?
thorbot@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Enable file sharing over the network in windows, create a directory on the 3TB drive, and share it with windows. It will broadcast as an SMB share over the network, and you can use it’s UNC path to access it from Linux.
Okus@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 year ago
Thank you. I am attempting this today. I seem to be struggling with this. I typed in $ sudo mount -t cifs //HOME/sharedmain /mn
HOME is my pc and sharedmain is the folder I created and shared with everyone.
When I run it I get: Couldn’t chdir to /mn: no such file or directory.
I’ve googled a couple of these terms but I’m not getting any cleaner answers.
TCB13@lemmy.world 1 year ago
I assume your PC is at home and the server at the datacenter. If you actually try to this you’ll most likely end up with broken files and I/O errors because your home’s internet connection might fail, drop or whatever.
NightEagle@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Try using the IP address instead of the NETBIOS name, it’s usually more reliable that way. Also the error you are getting is because the /mn folder needs to be created beforehand (the mount command doesn’t create the mount point for you). Also make sure you have the cifs package installed for your distro. Hope this helps :)
MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 year ago
Does /mn exist? You can’t mount to a non-existant folder.
nehal3m@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
Make sure the dir you are mounting to exists. If it doesn’t, create it with:
mkdir /mn