Hello!
In this post I am not asking for help with this issue, but rather offering the solution to the problem that worked for my situation, in hopes that someone may find it useful.
I consulted the forums while experiencing this issue, and found: viewtopic.php?t=326840&sid=925cb58d1e94 ... 5ec69cd5bc, as well as another inconclusive post from a few years ago, but that is all I found, and didn't provide a solution for me. Maybe these posts will provide a solution for you, so again, referencing them here.
For my particular situation, I have a RPI 4B with raspberryOS lite 32-bit, and OMV 7.6.0-1. I would flash RaspberryOS to the SD card, and set it up for headless configuration. Put it into RPI, and connect to router via hard wire. I would be able to SSH into the Pi just fine, until I installed OMV.
OMV would install just fine, and I would reboot and try to log into Pi via SSH, and would be denied access due to incorrect password. I know for sure that I physically typed the correct password multiple times, and still failed to authenticate.
I check the OMV dashboard to make sure that SSH is enabled under services, and that my users have permissions in the users tab, from the OMV dashboard. Everything was configured correctly there.
If I connect monitor and keyboard to Pi, and log in with same credentials, it works! I try to SSH into the PI from a different machine once again, this time as root. Success!! I am able to SSH into the RPI post OMV install as root, but not as regular user that was created at time of setup for the RPI NAS.
Once logged in as root, I navigate to /etc/ssh and edit sshd_config in nano. The changes I made were to disable root login, make sure password authentication is enabled, and make sure that right users/groups have SSH permissions.
I then apply some package updates that were available from the OMV dashboard, set up my shared folders, and reboot the system. After reboot, I am now able to SSH into the NAS effortlessly, and access my shared drive from all my devices!!
Again, I could not find any truly helpful documentation in the forums for my specific situation, and I hope that If you are experiencing the same or similar problem, that you find value here.
Happy tinkering y'all!!
Dapigi
In this post I am not asking for help with this issue, but rather offering the solution to the problem that worked for my situation, in hopes that someone may find it useful.
I consulted the forums while experiencing this issue, and found: viewtopic.php?t=326840&sid=925cb58d1e94 ... 5ec69cd5bc, as well as another inconclusive post from a few years ago, but that is all I found, and didn't provide a solution for me. Maybe these posts will provide a solution for you, so again, referencing them here.
For my particular situation, I have a RPI 4B with raspberryOS lite 32-bit, and OMV 7.6.0-1. I would flash RaspberryOS to the SD card, and set it up for headless configuration. Put it into RPI, and connect to router via hard wire. I would be able to SSH into the Pi just fine, until I installed OMV.
OMV would install just fine, and I would reboot and try to log into Pi via SSH, and would be denied access due to incorrect password. I know for sure that I physically typed the correct password multiple times, and still failed to authenticate.
I check the OMV dashboard to make sure that SSH is enabled under services, and that my users have permissions in the users tab, from the OMV dashboard. Everything was configured correctly there.
If I connect monitor and keyboard to Pi, and log in with same credentials, it works! I try to SSH into the PI from a different machine once again, this time as root. Success!! I am able to SSH into the RPI post OMV install as root, but not as regular user that was created at time of setup for the RPI NAS.
Once logged in as root, I navigate to /etc/ssh and edit sshd_config in nano. The changes I made were to disable root login, make sure password authentication is enabled, and make sure that right users/groups have SSH permissions.
I then apply some package updates that were available from the OMV dashboard, set up my shared folders, and reboot the system. After reboot, I am now able to SSH into the NAS effortlessly, and access my shared drive from all my devices!!
Again, I could not find any truly helpful documentation in the forums for my specific situation, and I hope that If you are experiencing the same or similar problem, that you find value here.
Happy tinkering y'all!!
Dapigi
Statistics: Posted by Dapigi — Mon Feb 03, 2025 3:32 am