

So I did once again but I did run the package after install. I tried once again to reinstall the package (with deletion of all data), sudo cp -r the file in the new transmission folder but I have immediately the issue that the moved folder cannot be open, even by the admin user I'm logged with. I should try tonight, but I would be surprise and a bit frustrated if it works. I cannot restart right now as kids are watching videos out of it. Is it really necessary to restart the NAS completely ? I never had situation where it was necessary in the past as far as I remember. Thus I did chown -r 777 to see if it helps before that. Ls -l gives "ls: cannot open directory Permission denied"ĭrwx- 6 777 sc-transmission 4096 Aug 14 22:10 transmission Could you try the steps above to confirm your folder permissions? I tried to restore only the torrents folder (and restore folder) but it doesn't make them appear in Transmission after restart of the package.
LS LAND ISSUES TORRENTS INSTALL
If I don't restore the data and install transmission then manually edit the settings.json I can run Transmission but without all my torrents. Does ls -l also give the same error? If so, can you do ls -l and see what permissions are set to the transmission folder? should at least have read permissions for all users which means you should be able to cd into this folder without sudo. If I try to cd to I get this error: -sh: cd: transmission/: Permission denied

It was fine just to copy them directly from /volume1/public/transmission to and then change ownership via chown. Then I did the sudo chown command as you instructed (I did tried before already) and then if I try to start back Transmission package it fails to start. I tried to tar the file in the public folder and tar them back to the new folder.
LS LAND ISSUES TORRENTS ARCHIVE
Tar-ing to an archive file is just another way.

I think doing sudo cp -r to your public folder as temporary place to keep the files is sufficient. initially so my var directory has been copied in /volume1/public/transmission with sudo cp -r and now the original files are gone in the folder. As I said, I didn't do the sudo tar -czvf ~/.
