Nov 17, 2013 - If this setting is incorrect on a new hard drive you just installed, you'll. (My favorite is “Available,” which is always seems to disappear. If it is closed, twirl open the Sharing and Permissions triangle. But, for those instances where it isn't, now you know how to fix it. Apple isn't overwriting anything.
These are instructions on how to run applications that 'can't be opened because it is from an unidentified developer' in Mac OS X Mountain Lion. ALLOW SINGLE APP: If you would like to allow just one specific application to run: Step One Hold down the Control key and click the application icon. From the contextual menu choose Open. Step Two A popup will appear asking you to confirm this action. Click the Open button. ALLOW ALL APPS: If you would like to allow all applications from unidentified developers to run: Step One Select System Preferences from the Apple Menu at the top left of your screen. Step Two Choose Security & Privacy from the System Preferences menu.
Step Three Select General from the tabs at the top of the Security & Privacy page. Step Four Click the Lock icon at the bottom left of the window.
Step Five Enter your administrative username and password and click Unlock Step Six Select Anywhere from list of places to allow downloaded applications from. Step Seven A popup window will appear asking you to confirm your selection. Click the Allow From Anywhere button.
I have an R6400 router (latest firmware: V1.0.1.24), and want to connect a Seagate Backup Plus 4TB external drive to serve as back up for several computers in the house. Prior to connecting it to the router I connected it directly to my MacBook Air (running OS X.12.6)-and was coached to download drivers so I could use TimeMachine. I then copied some files onto it (not with TimeMachine). When I connected it to the router, it mounts and is recognized as USB Storage-but it doesn't show the files and reports 0 bytes. I take it this is because the drive now has 'special drivers' and so won't work with the router?
Is there anything I can do about this-e.g. Remove the drivers (and I guess live without TimeMachine).
Or am I stuck with a drive I can't use on my network? Thanks for any advice you can give me. More than me! Perhaps, but, as I said, my actual experience with ReadySHARE consists of some (not much) reading. So advice is to forget about using this as a network drive through the router?
The way I look at is this: You 'copied some files onto' the disk, which, I gather, is still formatted with a NTFS file system, as supplied by Seagate. I assume that if you eject and disconnect the drive from the Mac, and then reconnect it, those files are still seen by the Mac (Finder). Then you eject and disconnect that disk from the Mac, and attach it to the router, which seems happy enough, but now those files which you know must be on the disk are not visible? Unless there are some odd-ball permissions involved (which doesn't seem very likely), then I'd say that the Paragon NTFS file-system software is doing something on that disk which confuses the GNU/Linux NTFS file-system software on the router.
At least one of them could have a bug, and file-system bugs are not particularly desirable if you expect a backup (Time Machine or other) to be useful. One more thing I'd want to test would be if you could actually do a Time Machine restore operation using a backup from that ReadySHARE-served NTFS file system.
In principle, the normal Mac OS can read a NTFS file system (without the Paragon software, which might not be available in the macOS restore/recovery environment), and it should be able to do network access, too, so it could work, but I'd want to see it work before I trusted it. Which would be true of any backup system. A write-only backup system always looks good when you don't need it, but tends to disappoint when you do need it. Around here, I use an old Seagate NAS220 network storage gizmo for my Time Machine backups. I don't know what the actual on-disk file system is in that thing, but I believe that it's some native GNU/Linux thing like 'ext3'.
But the NAS box runs software which presents the data to the network as an Apple File System volume. (You can see the Time Machine XXX.sparsebundle files using the Finder Go Connect to Server. afp://nas220., just like any normal Apple-shared volume. ('Get Info' says: Kind: Mac / Where: Network.) There's still software involved (as usual; it's hard to avoid), but the actual underlying file system is an OS-native one, and the only worry is the Apple File Protocol layer on the NAS box.
And it did actually work for me recently, when the (original) disk in my MacBook (13-inch, Aluminum, Late 2008) died. So, network storage for Time Machine backups has worked in the real world. Whether ReadySHARE with a NTFS disk works, I don't know. If all you care about are Time Machine backups, then you might also consider formatting this disk with an Apple-native file system, instead of its original, Windows-friendly NTFS. You'd still need to worry about the router's Apple-file-system software, but it'd be a different stack of stuff from the NTFS stack.
I'd still test it, and realistic testing is the best advice I have for any proposed backup scheme. Yes, I connected the drive directly to my MacBook Air and copied some files to it-worked fine. I did check the list on the page you sent me-the product name is there, but with a slightly different model number. The quick start guide to the router refers to 'special drivers' on a disk: 'If your USB device has special drivers, it is not compatible.'
I had downloaded software to make the drive work with the Mac file system-is that the 'special driver?' Can that move be reversed? Thanks for any ideas! Ztrachtenberg wrote: Yes, I connected the drive directly to my MacBook Air and copied some files to it-worked fine. Apologies., I should have been clearer. I meant to ask 'Did it work on Readyshare' before you added the drivers?
The special drivers probably refers to drives that will not work anywhere without drivers. That usually means fancy stuff that is bigger than your PC can handle without help.
If your drive didn't need any extra help to talk to your Mac then it probably doesn't apply. You can always get back to square one by reformatting the USB drive. But that will wipe out everything on the drive so don't do that if you have important files that you don't want to lose. and was coached to download drivers so I could use TimeMachine.
What, exactly, did you download (and install)? The Paragon NTFS-for-Mac driver? ('This driver provides write access for Seagate external drives in Mac OS without having to reformat.' ) I take it this is because the drive now has 'special drivers' and so won't work with the router?
Installing a NTFS driver on the Mac should have approximately no effect on the drive itself. (If that's what you did.) I did check the list on the page you sent me-the product name is therebut with a slightly different model number. And who, beside you, knows what either of those model numbers is? NTFS is a file system designed by Microsoft. The Paragon NTFS-for-Mac driver is a third-party implementation of NTFS for a Mac running macOS (Mac OS X). The Netgear router uses a different third-party implementation of NTFS for GNU/Linux.
In an ideal world, all these NTFS implementations would be perfectly compatible, and one disk could be read and written by any or all of them. In the real world, any of them could do something quirky which might cause trouble for one of the others. There's much to be said for using a native (Mac) file system on a disk which is connected directly to the Mac. I've never tried to use ReadySHARE, so I know nothing, but casual reading in these forums suggests that it is supposed to work on disks with NTFS or Mac file systems (using more third-party file-system software for GNU/Linux), and, I'd guess, some native GNU/Linux file system (like ext4?).
And people complain right and left about lost files and unreadable disks, and so on. Perhaps Netgear's GNU/Linux multi-file-system software really does work well, and is perfectly compatible with disks from Windows and Mac systems, but I wouldn't bet my data on such a thick stack of software from such a wide variety of vendors. But what do I know?
TimeMachine is beyond my knowledge. That doesn't make it unique. It simply writes data to and reads data from a file system. Antinode wrote: What, exactly, did you download (and install)?
The Paragon NTFS-for-Mac driver? ('This driver provides write access for Seagate external drives in Mac OS without having to reformat.' ) Yes-that's right. Installing a NTFS driver on the Mac should have approximately no effect on the drive itself. (If that's what you did.) Makes sense-didn't see additional files on the drive (but thought maybe they were hidden) And who, beside you, knows what either of those model numbers is? My model is SRD0PV0-other is on a page on this site somewhere. Perhaps Netgear's GNU/Linux multi-file-system software really does work well, and is perfectly compatible with disks from Windows and Mac systems, but I wouldn't bet my data on such a thick stack of software from such a wide variety of vendors.
But what do I know? More than me! So advice is to forget about using this as a network drive through the router? More than me! Perhaps, but, as I said, my actual experience with ReadySHARE consists of some (not much) reading. So advice is to forget about using this as a network drive through the router? The way I look at is this: You 'copied some files onto' the disk, which, I gather, is still formatted with a NTFS file system, as supplied by Seagate.
![Paragon ntfs for mac os x can Paragon ntfs for mac os x can](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125448262/397345540.jpg)
I assume that if you eject and disconnect the drive from the Mac, and then reconnect it, those files are still seen by the Mac (Finder). Then you eject and disconnect that disk from the Mac, and attach it to the router, which seems happy enough, but now those files which you know must be on the disk are not visible? Unless there are some odd-ball permissions involved (which doesn't seem very likely), then I'd say that the Paragon NTFS file-system software is doing something on that disk which confuses the GNU/Linux NTFS file-system software on the router. At least one of them could have a bug, and file-system bugs are not particularly desirable if you expect a backup (Time Machine or other) to be useful.
One more thing I'd want to test would be if you could actually do a Time Machine restore operation using a backup from that ReadySHARE-served NTFS file system. In principle, the normal Mac OS can read a NTFS file system (without the Paragon software, which might not be available in the macOS restore/recovery environment), and it should be able to do network access, too, so it could work, but I'd want to see it work before I trusted it. Which would be true of any backup system. A write-only backup system always looks good when you don't need it, but tends to disappoint when you do need it. Around here, I use an old Seagate NAS220 network storage gizmo for my Time Machine backups. I don't know what the actual on-disk file system is in that thing, but I believe that it's some native GNU/Linux thing like 'ext3'.
But the NAS box runs software which presents the data to the network as an Apple File System volume. (You can see the Time Machine XXX.sparsebundle files using the Finder Go Connect to Server. afp://nas220., just like any normal Apple-shared volume. ('Get Info' says: Kind: Mac / Where: Network.) There's still software involved (as usual; it's hard to avoid), but the actual underlying file system is an OS-native one, and the only worry is the Apple File Protocol layer on the NAS box. And it did actually work for me recently, when the (original) disk in my MacBook (13-inch, Aluminum, Late 2008) died. So, network storage for Time Machine backups has worked in the real world.
Whether ReadySHARE with a NTFS disk works, I don't know. If all you care about are Time Machine backups, then you might also consider formatting this disk with an Apple-native file system, instead of its original, Windows-friendly NTFS. You'd still need to worry about the router's Apple-file-system software, but it'd be a different stack of stuff from the NTFS stack. I'd still test it, and realistic testing is the best advice I have for any proposed backup scheme. Ztrachtenberg wrote: BTW I thought about getting an NAS set up, but to be honest I was trying to save money, since the router has the port and presents itself as making this easy. I use both ReadyShare and NAS. The latter is better for things that you want to leave permanently connected to the network.
So it is the way to go for things like backup copies of important files and system images. USB drives are better for copies of things you might want to move or share on another device that isn't on the network, music files for example, of work that you want to take on the road.
NAS devices are more expensive, but you can find offers from time to time, especially if you don't need something that powerful. To play around a bit with your current devices, have you tried using a USB stick with ReadyShare? By the way, the manual for the R6400 goes into some detail about using it with Time Machine. the router has the port and presents itself as making this easy. Yup, sounds good.
And if it actually works, that's even better. The question is whether the ReadySHARE software is only a slapped-together collection of unreliable building blocks which were available (free) for the GNU/Linux which the router was already running, or, a well integrated, well tested package which can be trusted with valuable data. I still haven't done anything with ReadySHARE, so I can't say. I have seen Netgear release firmware updates with serious Web interface defects (broken links which kill the Web server), so I'm unwilling blindly to trust their software quality. ('Trust but verify' or 'Distrust but verify' - 'verify' is the important part.).