Ubuntu 18.04 LTS : Mount CIFS On Boot











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I am new to Ubuntu and just only started using it. So please be specific if you are able to help me with my issue.



I am trying to automount my Netgear ReadyNAS shared drive which is using SMB1. I am aware of the security risk but there is nothing I can do as that is the only supported version.



Anyway, I am able to mount the shared drive using the following command:




sudo mount -t cifs -o username=MyUsername -o password=MyPassword -o
vers=1.0 //192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/




However, when I reboot the machine, the mounted folder is no longer mounted. My question is based on the above mount command, how do I add into /etc/fstab?



Please note that I had to add the option vers=1.0 or I will get the error "Host is down" due to the fact that my NAS device only supports SMB1. Thanks for any help you can provide me.










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  • //192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/ cifs credentials=/etc/samba/passwd_file,vers=1.0,sec=ntlm 0 0 (the sec= option may not be needed, I found I needed it on some boxes)
    – guiverc
    Dec 2 at 1:52















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I am new to Ubuntu and just only started using it. So please be specific if you are able to help me with my issue.



I am trying to automount my Netgear ReadyNAS shared drive which is using SMB1. I am aware of the security risk but there is nothing I can do as that is the only supported version.



Anyway, I am able to mount the shared drive using the following command:




sudo mount -t cifs -o username=MyUsername -o password=MyPassword -o
vers=1.0 //192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/




However, when I reboot the machine, the mounted folder is no longer mounted. My question is based on the above mount command, how do I add into /etc/fstab?



Please note that I had to add the option vers=1.0 or I will get the error "Host is down" due to the fact that my NAS device only supports SMB1. Thanks for any help you can provide me.










share|improve this question






















  • //192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/ cifs credentials=/etc/samba/passwd_file,vers=1.0,sec=ntlm 0 0 (the sec= option may not be needed, I found I needed it on some boxes)
    – guiverc
    Dec 2 at 1:52













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I am new to Ubuntu and just only started using it. So please be specific if you are able to help me with my issue.



I am trying to automount my Netgear ReadyNAS shared drive which is using SMB1. I am aware of the security risk but there is nothing I can do as that is the only supported version.



Anyway, I am able to mount the shared drive using the following command:




sudo mount -t cifs -o username=MyUsername -o password=MyPassword -o
vers=1.0 //192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/




However, when I reboot the machine, the mounted folder is no longer mounted. My question is based on the above mount command, how do I add into /etc/fstab?



Please note that I had to add the option vers=1.0 or I will get the error "Host is down" due to the fact that my NAS device only supports SMB1. Thanks for any help you can provide me.










share|improve this question













I am new to Ubuntu and just only started using it. So please be specific if you are able to help me with my issue.



I am trying to automount my Netgear ReadyNAS shared drive which is using SMB1. I am aware of the security risk but there is nothing I can do as that is the only supported version.



Anyway, I am able to mount the shared drive using the following command:




sudo mount -t cifs -o username=MyUsername -o password=MyPassword -o
vers=1.0 //192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/




However, when I reboot the machine, the mounted folder is no longer mounted. My question is based on the above mount command, how do I add into /etc/fstab?



Please note that I had to add the option vers=1.0 or I will get the error "Host is down" due to the fact that my NAS device only supports SMB1. Thanks for any help you can provide me.







mount automount cifs smb






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asked Dec 2 at 1:43









Allie Syadiqin

82




82












  • //192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/ cifs credentials=/etc/samba/passwd_file,vers=1.0,sec=ntlm 0 0 (the sec= option may not be needed, I found I needed it on some boxes)
    – guiverc
    Dec 2 at 1:52


















  • //192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/ cifs credentials=/etc/samba/passwd_file,vers=1.0,sec=ntlm 0 0 (the sec= option may not be needed, I found I needed it on some boxes)
    – guiverc
    Dec 2 at 1:52
















//192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/ cifs credentials=/etc/samba/passwd_file,vers=1.0,sec=ntlm 0 0 (the sec= option may not be needed, I found I needed it on some boxes)
– guiverc
Dec 2 at 1:52




//192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/ cifs credentials=/etc/samba/passwd_file,vers=1.0,sec=ntlm 0 0 (the sec= option may not be needed, I found I needed it on some boxes)
– guiverc
Dec 2 at 1:52










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
1
down vote



accepted










I use lines in fstab like this



//[my-ip-address]/[my-share] /media/[mount-point] cifs vers=3.0,credentials=[my-login-file],iocharset=utf8,file_mode=0777,dir_mode=0777,uid=[username],gid=[username],nofail 0 0


Once you've edited fstab (make a backup first!) don't reboot yet. Test your work by doing sudo mount -a and fix any errors before you reboot. This prevents breaking your system by an fstab error.






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    Thank you to both Organic Marble and guiverc for your answers. Its working fine and I was able to read/write to the CIFS shared folder.
    – Allie Syadiqin
    Dec 3 at 3:59


















up vote
1
down vote













//192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/    cifs credentials=/etc/samba/passwd_file,vers=1.0,sec=ntlm 0 0


can be added to your /etc/fstab file



You then create a /etc/samba/passwd_file or whatever you wish to call it with your credentials



username=secret1
password=secret2


the sec= option may not be needed, I found I needed it on some boxes






share|improve this answer





















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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    1
    down vote



    accepted










    I use lines in fstab like this



    //[my-ip-address]/[my-share] /media/[mount-point] cifs vers=3.0,credentials=[my-login-file],iocharset=utf8,file_mode=0777,dir_mode=0777,uid=[username],gid=[username],nofail 0 0


    Once you've edited fstab (make a backup first!) don't reboot yet. Test your work by doing sudo mount -a and fix any errors before you reboot. This prevents breaking your system by an fstab error.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 1




      Thank you to both Organic Marble and guiverc for your answers. Its working fine and I was able to read/write to the CIFS shared folder.
      – Allie Syadiqin
      Dec 3 at 3:59















    up vote
    1
    down vote



    accepted










    I use lines in fstab like this



    //[my-ip-address]/[my-share] /media/[mount-point] cifs vers=3.0,credentials=[my-login-file],iocharset=utf8,file_mode=0777,dir_mode=0777,uid=[username],gid=[username],nofail 0 0


    Once you've edited fstab (make a backup first!) don't reboot yet. Test your work by doing sudo mount -a and fix any errors before you reboot. This prevents breaking your system by an fstab error.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 1




      Thank you to both Organic Marble and guiverc for your answers. Its working fine and I was able to read/write to the CIFS shared folder.
      – Allie Syadiqin
      Dec 3 at 3:59













    up vote
    1
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    1
    down vote



    accepted






    I use lines in fstab like this



    //[my-ip-address]/[my-share] /media/[mount-point] cifs vers=3.0,credentials=[my-login-file],iocharset=utf8,file_mode=0777,dir_mode=0777,uid=[username],gid=[username],nofail 0 0


    Once you've edited fstab (make a backup first!) don't reboot yet. Test your work by doing sudo mount -a and fix any errors before you reboot. This prevents breaking your system by an fstab error.






    share|improve this answer












    I use lines in fstab like this



    //[my-ip-address]/[my-share] /media/[mount-point] cifs vers=3.0,credentials=[my-login-file],iocharset=utf8,file_mode=0777,dir_mode=0777,uid=[username],gid=[username],nofail 0 0


    Once you've edited fstab (make a backup first!) don't reboot yet. Test your work by doing sudo mount -a and fix any errors before you reboot. This prevents breaking your system by an fstab error.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Dec 2 at 1:54









    Organic Marble

    10.5k63257




    10.5k63257








    • 1




      Thank you to both Organic Marble and guiverc for your answers. Its working fine and I was able to read/write to the CIFS shared folder.
      – Allie Syadiqin
      Dec 3 at 3:59














    • 1




      Thank you to both Organic Marble and guiverc for your answers. Its working fine and I was able to read/write to the CIFS shared folder.
      – Allie Syadiqin
      Dec 3 at 3:59








    1




    1




    Thank you to both Organic Marble and guiverc for your answers. Its working fine and I was able to read/write to the CIFS shared folder.
    – Allie Syadiqin
    Dec 3 at 3:59




    Thank you to both Organic Marble and guiverc for your answers. Its working fine and I was able to read/write to the CIFS shared folder.
    – Allie Syadiqin
    Dec 3 at 3:59












    up vote
    1
    down vote













    //192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/    cifs credentials=/etc/samba/passwd_file,vers=1.0,sec=ntlm 0 0


    can be added to your /etc/fstab file



    You then create a /etc/samba/passwd_file or whatever you wish to call it with your credentials



    username=secret1
    password=secret2


    the sec= option may not be needed, I found I needed it on some boxes






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      1
      down vote













      //192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/    cifs credentials=/etc/samba/passwd_file,vers=1.0,sec=ntlm 0 0


      can be added to your /etc/fstab file



      You then create a /etc/samba/passwd_file or whatever you wish to call it with your credentials



      username=secret1
      password=secret2


      the sec= option may not be needed, I found I needed it on some boxes






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        1
        down vote










        up vote
        1
        down vote









        //192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/    cifs credentials=/etc/samba/passwd_file,vers=1.0,sec=ntlm 0 0


        can be added to your /etc/fstab file



        You then create a /etc/samba/passwd_file or whatever you wish to call it with your credentials



        username=secret1
        password=secret2


        the sec= option may not be needed, I found I needed it on some boxes






        share|improve this answer












        //192.168.0.34/Family_Medias /mnt/NAS-Media/    cifs credentials=/etc/samba/passwd_file,vers=1.0,sec=ntlm 0 0


        can be added to your /etc/fstab file



        You then create a /etc/samba/passwd_file or whatever you wish to call it with your credentials



        username=secret1
        password=secret2


        the sec= option may not be needed, I found I needed it on some boxes







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 2 at 1:54









        guiverc

        3,94311522




        3,94311522






























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