March 3, 200917 yr I have unraid version 4.2.4 There is no password or anything on it. I have iso's of tv shows in a tv shows folder and within that there are folders for each show(24, family guy, etc) and within each of those folders is the different seasons. Season one for example will have say 4 iso's in it. one for each disk. I moved a bunch of them to another unraid server but no when i try to delete the folders it locks me out and says that my access has been denied. make sure the disk is not full or you have permission. wtf? I built the damn thing, of course i have permission. I have shut the server down and restarted and just stopped and started it. Those let me back in but as soon as i try to delete, boom, im locked out again. Whats the deal? thanks
March 3, 200917 yr Any reason you decided to not update to recent versions.? But not doing so you miss a load of big fixes.
March 3, 200917 yr Dont i have to pay for that? no. To upgrade from 4.2.4 to the current 4.4.2 should only require the replacement of the bzroot and bzimage on your flash drive with the same two files from the current release. You will also want to copy a third file from the current release as memtest has also been replaced with a newer version. Download the latest release from here: http://download.lime-technology.com/unRAID%20Server%204.4.2.zip to a folder on your PC. Un-zip it on your PC. You normally need two of the files from it. (bzroot and bzimage) but as I said, this release has a newer version of the memory test. You may want to copy it to your flash drive too. You can access the flash drive from windows at \\tower\flash In fact, you can perform the whole upgrade procedure from file-explorer in windows (renaming the two existing files, as described below, and coping into place the three new files) You do not need to re-format the flash drive, or lose any of your configuration. In fact, you can rename the existing bzroot and bzimage files to bzroot.424 and bzimage.424 so you can revert to the older version for any reason. You can even add a few lines to the syslinux.cfg file on the flash drive to allow you to boot from either version, the old, or the new. (described here: http://lime-technology.com/forum/index.php?topic=2190.msg16348#msg16348 Just change the names of the files to bzroot.424 and bzimage.424 where appropriate) Once you get the three new files in place, all you need do is stop the array from its management web-page and then reboot. At least once you upgrade, you will not be running into old bugs. There have been at least three bugs with user shares fixed, including ones where it would crash. You can see a summary of the change log here: http://lime-technology.com/wiki/index.php?title=Release_Notes#Change_Log Joe L.
March 4, 200917 yr Just did it. THAT WAS FREAKIN EASY!!! Awsome. Thanks!!! Great... A lot has happened in the past 16 releases... Those releases fixed a lot of bugs, added a lot of features, and (hopefully) did not introduce (m)any new bugs. Now, try your file deletions and see if you still have issues with permissions. You might want to review the release notes to see what has been changed and added: http://lime-technology.com/wiki/index.php?title=Release_Notes#Change_Log Joe L.
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