![]() ![]() I did a chmod and a chown so that Cloudberry could write to the drive: media/hddshare <- where my external laptop drive is mounted: it's in a case connected to a powered USB hub What I discovered is that given this path: sktop.aspx) and used their SFTP connection option to connect to the Pi using my username and password. I then purchased and set up Cloudberry Lab's Desktop Backup (. I have a Raspberry Pi 3 that has Samba installed and 2 USB drives mounted and shared out, which I did using Webmin ( ) that I installed on the Pi. If using rsync seems daunting to you, this more specifically Windows approach may be more comfortable. Is there another more secure way of gaining access to the Pi over the Internet that doesn't leave the Pi and data open to attack?Īs I said I'm a novice so looking for advice. I've read that one way of doing it is to forward all traffic on port 22 to the raspberry Pi, however I don't like the idea of that. I'm getting to the point now where I need to be able to access the Pi over the Internet and this is where I'm getting a bit lost. I've installed Cygwin and managed to ssh from my Windows machine into the raspberry Pi using a ssh key. I've read a few tutorials online and like the idea of using rsync to make incremental backups automatically. I have a few laptops at home with critical files on them that I'd like to backup and keep remotely. I'd like to use the raspberry Pi with a USB hard drive mounted to it as my remote backup facility. I have recently purchased a raspberry Pi and am a beginner so please bear with me. ![]()
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