![]() I should say that when I SSH from the shell, it asks me for the root password in the Mac mini - not sure that matters. If I use the FreeNAS shell to SSH to the Mac mini, it lets me connect, and I can navigate to /Volumes/BK2, so the SSH is working, but still no Rsync. I tried everything I could think of, nothing worked: FreeNAS says the path doesn't exist or it is not a folder. Ssh-keyscan -t rsa 10.0.0.24 > /root/.ssh/known_hostsĪnd. The Secure Shell SSH allows you to send secure, encrypted, communications between computers that is nearly impossible to crack. Next I copied the host key of PULL using the shell on PUSH, again as instructed in the FreeNAS manual: I appended the public key I had copied from FreeNAS into /var/root/.ssh/id_rsa ![]() I generated a key pair with the same command as above. In PULL, I enabled remote log in to turn on SHH daemon in the Mac mini. Next I got the contents of the public key by: Warning: macos 10.14 and later only allows control if Screen Sharing is enabled through System Preferences. No need for a separate package like you need on Windows. I created a key pair on PUSH as instructed in FreeNAS user guide: Novellizator Both Mac and Linux have ssh available out of the box. Target: external drive mounted as /Volumes/BK2 in the Mac mini Screens can connect to any Mac from the latest macOS version to the venerable OS X 10.4. When I connect to 127.0.0.1 with Screen Sharing.app on my macbook pro which runs 10.8.4. ![]() Ive set up ssh with -L for the appropriate ports, and bound my local ports 59 through this. I am unable to ssh to a remote computer, but when I do ssh userlocalhost, it works fine. So after extensive searching I think the solution would be rsync. I need to control a remote Mac mini running 10.7 through an ssh tunnel. ssh connection refused from mac os x on connecting to a remote computer. ![]() Now, I also want to use an old Mac mini to create an extra backup to an external disk that, if I am not around, anybody in my family could plug into any computer and read - in other words I want a backup in exFAT. I have very little knowledge or experience with networks, but with a lot of courage and reading, I've been able to create a backup of everything on that FreeNAS over localhost, to a disk that I swap and store off-site. If you’re using Linux or Mac OS X, open your terminal and run the following command under your username: local ssh-keygen -t rsa. I have a FreeNAS box for home use - the usual pictures, movies, music, etc. On your home computer: Generate an RSA private key using ssh-keygen (unless you have already created one). ![]()
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