![]() ![]() So on the QNAP NAS I went into Network Services, FTP Service, and unticked FTP and ticked “FTP with SSL/TLS (Explicit)”. On my Netgear router the stuff to do with DHCP is in the LAN IP section under Advanced. network card unique identification number). All is not necessarily lost: the DHCP server (probably built into your router) might have the ability to use address reservations, this means that it will always hand out the same IP address to a device with a specific MAC address (i.e. Up until this point you might have quite happily had your NAS running with a DHCP address with no problems (it can become a Master Browser so you can find/map drives to it by name on your home network), and UPnP has been taking care of the NAT port mappings automatically. I have a Netgear cable modem/router from Virgin Media, and the place to go for the NAT table is Port Forwarding under Advanced. If UPnP doesn’t work you also need to forward ports 21 and 22 to the NAS. So you need to go to your NAT gateway (possibly your modem/router) and manually add an entry for the range of ports and point them to the IP address of your NAS. If it is then it’s still fairly easy, except that whilst the UPnP stuff on the NAS opens most of the ports you need, it does not open the passive FTP port range. If your NAS is not behind a NAT gateway then it’s easy. ![]() You think that it’d be pretty handy to be able to move stuff between the two, and would like to use a secured protocol. So you have a QNAP TS series NAS (I have a TS239 Pro II + and very good it is too). Not really enterprise IT but somebody might find this useful (including me in a few months if it breaks and I’ve forgotten what I did!) ![]()
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