Have a look at the link below and let me know if that helps or you need anything further.
I've now written a whole guide on plex permissions, which can get into quite a complex topic but I've tried to keep it as simple as possible. So, on your NAS (and in a console) type in 'sudo chmod -Rv 764 yoursharedirectory'. The NAS is attached to the domain and I can see all of the domain users on the NAS.
#Synology drive mapping password
That way, you could omit the password altogether. Synology NAS in Domain Environment GPO Drive Mapping Posted by Tom3904 on Dec 27th, 2013 at 6:57 AM Solved Active Directory & GPO We just got a Synology Rackstation and Im trying to map the shares on it as drives through GPO. If you want to go down that route, here's an example of one of my NFS lines in my fstab in case it helps:ġ92.168.43.15:Video /mnt/Video nfs rw,hard,intr 0 0Īnother option for you is to use the chmod command and make sure that read only is set to everyone. Basically NFS is less CPU intensive and works better between *NIX systems anyway. Given you are being prompted for a password, this is likely the sticking point, or at least the first sticking point to begin addressing fault finding - (the second one will be just making sure that the files and directories have appropriate access).īefore I say anything further though, I've personally found NFS to be much more reliable and simpler to set up.
All Plex does is look at the folders presented to the local linux machine as the active Plex user, which by default is the user 'plex'. As you have probably figured out, this has very little to do with Plex.