![]() See approved HDDs for a list of compatible drives. Improves support for adding used or pre-formatted HDDs that are supported by LifeLine. Improves security to prevent malicious attack through a web browser when running the device management interface. Drive Management improvements, including RAID recovery. Removes the native video surveillance application included in LifeLine versions 4.0 and earlier. #Ix 2 transmission torrent upgrade torrent#Provides improved BitTorrent support with the Transmission Torrent application. Atmos and Mozy Backup are no longer included as built-in LifeLine applications. NAS device is automatically secured during device setup. Fixes issue with user ID mappings resulting from Samba 4 upgrade. See the OpenSSL CVE list for a complete list of CVE's fixed with this update. Refer to Answer ID 34789 for more information on Shellshock. Fixes Shellshock vulnerabilities (see Shellshock CVE list). Secures access to media server settings If it's not working, I don't know what the hell's wrong.- Addresses POODLE security vulnerability by removing support for SSLv3. Start the service again, and check if it's working on your server on port :9091 Mess with the following values : (at the very least) Start and stop the service to create the Transmission settings file settings.json Make sure the nano SSH window is very wide before pasting into it, or lines will be cut. Put the script I supplied up top into a file : /etc/init.d/transmission-daemon, using nano editor. ![]() This user needs a /home so that transmission can work in it. The daemon script will start Transmission as user "transmission". I found the default repository has nothing in it, so yum never finds any useful packages.Įxtract it, change to it, then hopefully make it: Something important for converting Centos to a real OS, is connecting it to a real repository. & /bin/rm -f $DAEMON_LOCKFILE $DAEMON_PIDFILEĮcho "Usage: $SCRIPTNAME " >&2 ![]() Pidof -o %PPID -x $NAME > $DAEMON_PIDFILE Status $NAME &> /dev/null & echo_success || echo_failure Su - $DAEMON_USER -c "$DAEMON $DAEMON_ARGS" PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin ![]() #DAEMON_ARGS="-T -blocklist -g $TRANSMISSION_HOME/.config/transmission" # description: Start up transmission-daemon The transmission-daemon script for /etc/init.d/ If you are terribly stuck, you can start transmission-daemon as root (using no script), and then everything, including settings.json appears in root home. It appears best to start Transmission using no args, and then then the settings.json appears in /home/transmission/.config/transmission, after you've run it, and stopped it. The smaller one with "-T and -blocklist" will force Transmission to start the web interface with no password, and force "rpc-authentication-required": false, this is terribly annoying. You will notice that I've commented out a few DAEMON-ARGS, which didn't work for me. ![]() This is different for Centos/Redhat because they don't have the start-stop-daemon function. I'll get two things out of the way, because they are the most important frustrations. Keywords for google: installing transmission torrent on Centos headless server web interface (for dummies). Here are my cheat notes from struggling for a couple of hours last night. My server just trashed my Centos install, so I had to do it all again. ![]()
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