Could you give an example of the SSH syntax to login to the NAS? My *NIX is rusty to say the least (I have four *NIX books, all to old to even mention SSH).
Also, will that permanently disable Twonky or will Twonky restart if the NAS is power-cycled or rebooted?
Login under root through SSH and execute the following:
chmod ugo-x /etc/init.d/S97twonkyserver
or
To manually stop a Service you can run the command “/etc/init.d/S97twonkyserver stop”. When you would like to Disable the Service rename the File and put a “_” in front of it. (Command “mv S97twonkyserver _ S97twonkyserver”). Reboot the NAS when you have changed and check on the Console with “ps-aux” that the Service has not been started anymore.
To enable the Service again just remove the “_” and restart the NAS.
It did the trick for me and the performance are much improved!
I had to login as root (psw welc0me) and not ‘admin’. Then /etc/init.d/S97twonkyserver stop. Last - don’t forget to rename it and remove the x permission so it won’t start next time you reboot.
All this should be possible from the gui, would be nice if some one made a list or some scripts that we could execute so that its easier for us non ssh pple.
All this should be possible from the gui, would be nice if some one made a list or some scripts that we could execute so that its easier for us non ssh pple.
Login under root through SSH and execute the following:
chmod ugo-x /etc/init.d/S97twonkyserver
or
To manually stop a Service you can run the command “/etc/init.d/S97twonkyserver stop”. When you would like to Disable the Service rename the File and put a “_” in front of it. (Command “mv S97twonkyserver _ S97twonkyserver”). Reboot the NAS when you have changed and check on the Console with “ps-aux” that the Service has not been started anymore.
To enable the Service again just remove the “_” and restart the NAS.
*> what is the command for renaming it back to original? I have tried “mv S97twonkyserver S97twonkyserver” but am told that there is no such file or directory.
well if you ran the command exactly how you posted it here then you get the file doesn’t exist error because you renamed the file you are referencing to start with an underscore. to reverse it you would need the first filename to have that underscore too.