After installing Fonz’ fun_plug (see tutorial on this), you will probably want additional packages.
Continue reading Installing and Uninstalling Packages in Fonz fun_plug 0.7
After installing Fonz’ fun_plug (see tutorial on this), you will probably want additional packages.
Continue reading Installing and Uninstalling Packages in Fonz fun_plug 0.7
After installing Fonz’ fun_plug (see tutorial on this), you will probably want work with like NFS or Torrent. This tutorial will show you how to do this.
Continue reading Activation and Deactivation of Daemons in Fonz fun_plug 0.7
The Firmwares of various NAS-Devices includes a very interesting bonus: the user can execute a script (file) named “fun_plug” when the OS is booted. Unlike all the other Linux software which is loaded when the NAS boots, this file is located on Volume_1 of the hard disk rather than within the flash memory. This means the user can easily and safely modify the file because the contents of the flash memory is not changed. If you delete the fun_plug file (see here for instructions), or replace your hard disk, the modification is gone.
Fun_plug allows the user to start additional programs and tools on the NAS. A Berlin-based developer named “Fonz” created a package called “ffp
” (Fonz fun_plug), which includes the script and some extra software which can be invoked by fun_plug.
Installation of fun_plug is easy and takes only a few steps. These steps should be performed carefully, as they depend on typed commands and running with “root” privileges.
Fun_plug is essentially a technique to stepwise turn a NAS with fixed out-of-the-box functionality into an open Linux machine on which you can install additional software packages and, if you want, learn a bit about Linux.
This also implies that you are (temporarily or permanently) turning a stable turnkey system into a system that the respective vendors no longer supports. This is similar to buying a notebook with Microsoft software, and installing Linux on it. The shop where you bought it can no longer help you if you claim the audio no longer works. Although there is a Tutorial on how to disable and even remove fun_plug, and although the authors have tested their recipes, checked the wording and added warnings, these are advanced tools which can, if you experiment more than your own know-how can handle, give advanced problems.
Risks involved in all this are not so much damaging your hardware (shouldn’t be possible), but loss of reliability of the NAS (you bought a file server to reliably store files, didn’t you). This risk may be acceptable because the software was preintegrated and tested by competent people. But you yourself are, at the end of the day, responsible for deciding to use this.
Possibly a less obvious, but more real risk is that some kind of extensions to the NAS (e.g. adding a server) imply that you may decide to open your local network a bit to the outside world. For example, to allow others to view your holiday videos stored on the device. The out-of-the-box NAS can already have this problem (via the ftp server). The point here is that you are responsible for the security of your device and entire network. This site doesn’t even have tutorials on basic security issues like firewalls, etc. because these are all NAS independent and the tutorials would never be foolproof anyway. So when used wrongly, the NAS and firewall obviously do allow others to read more data than you intended. Or to delete your valuable data. Or to replace software by other software (chance is small, but the impact is high).
Conclusion: as the NAS is a powerful networked device, and as these tutorials can help you make it even more powerful, you are responsibility for having the basic understanding of networked security. Again, this also applies to an out-of-the-box NAS. But the more you mess with it, the more you need to apply some common sense. This is incidentally the reason why we provide some explanation on what you are doing in the tutorials, rather than just telling you what to type 😉
The main reason why people go this route is to extend their NAS with servers such as BitTorrent clients or Web servers. Other typical uses are to add extensions which fix current limitations of the device (e.g. time accuracy, fan noise).
In a first step, we install a script named fun_plug
that provides a hook to extend the boot process of Linux on the NAS. That hook was intentionally added by the vendor to enable this. But the vendors do not document or support all of this.
An initial set of packages (downloaded as a single compressed archive) gives you enough tools to get started and, if you are curious about the machine or its software, to carefully look around.
This set of tools gives you the ability to install even more software packages (typically servers) from trusted sources. These packages should obviously all have been compiled for the processor in the NAS and should have been tested on the device (or a very similar device) by a software expert.
The NAS needs to have a valid network configuration. Check the gateway & dns-servers to be valid. If the NAS receives the network configuration via DHCP it should be correct in most cases. If you receive the error “wget:bad address `wolf-u.li`” (or similar / other domains) the configuration needs to be checked.
Please ensure that the internal “Remote Backup” Services is deactivated. This server is shipped with newer NAS like the DNS-320/DNS-320L/DNS-325/DNS-345 and conflicts with the SSH-Server of the fun_plug. If you want to use the Backup-Service, please take a look at this tutorial after you have executed the installation of the fun_plug.
Fonz has decided to build to version of the fun_plug for different devices. The Types are “EABI” and “OABI” which you can determine by clicking on the description of your device here. Then search for “Application binary interface” in the details.
ATTENTION: The release notes of the D-Link DNS-320L Firmware 1.06 show: “Fun_plug script was removed according to security issue and no longer to be supported.” Therefore this version is NOT supported, please downgrade if you want to use ffp.
Download the latest files:
Ensure that these two files are named fun_plug
(not fun_plug.sh
) and fun_plug.tgz
(not fun_plug.gz
or fun_plug.tar.gz
or fun_plug.tar
).
Place both files in the topmost directory of Volume_1 of your NAS. If you use Windows Explorer it could look like this or this or similar. If you are running a different OS like Linux or MAC OSx, please ensure that the file fun_plug
is marked as executable (chmod 777).
For fun, you may want to open the file fun_plug
. If your are on Windows choose Notepad++ or any other “better” Editor. Avoid using Windows’ Notepad for viewing/editing Linux text files: Windows and Linux use different end-of-line conventions. Please be careful not to accidentally modify it.
The script fun_plug
is an ASCII file with commands which are executed by the Linux command interpreter (sh
for “shell”).
Lines starting with “#
” are comments (“#!/bin/sh
” is a special case).
You might be able to decode that the program creates a log file called ffp.log
(an ASCII file used here to capture the lines which start with “echo”).
Firstly, a number of named constants are defined for various file names and fragments of file names (the lines like “FFP_SOMETHING=...
“).
You can see that Fonz developed it for a D-Link DNS-323 (rather than a Conceptronic CH3SNAS, but this doesn’t matter as Uli, PeterH and others have tested in on the CH3SNAS).
The command date
will copy the current date and time to the log file.
Next, a first script setup.sh
is run if it is found in the expected /mnt/HD_a2/.bootstrap/
folder. Initially it will not be found.
Then a new directory “ffp
” is created (mkdir
) and the fun_plug.tgz
file is unpacked (tar
) into that directory. This step is a bit more complex than normal due to a problem with the tar
version supplied with the NAS. As a workaround tar
is run twice (first the older version, and then the tar version which was untarred from fun_plug.tgz
).
If all went well, the log file gets an extra “OK” string. And the tarball input file is deleted (rm
). This obviously only happens once (the script skips the unpacking if the tarball file is not found using the if
[condition]; commands fi
construct).
The “chown
” is about changing ownership for a program called busybox
. And “chmod
” is about changing access privileges.
Then, a script file /ffp/etc/fun_plug.init
(“containing the ffp-scripts package”) is executed if it is detected.
Next, a script file /ffp/etc/fun_plug.local
is executed if it is detected. It can be used to add your own startup commands: it will not be overwritten by package updates.
Finally, a script file /ffp/etc/rc
is run if it exists.
Reboot the NAS by holding down the power button 5 seconds or via the web interface (Mostly ”Tools” -> ”System” -> ”Reboot” or similar somewhere in the menu of the webinterface). This causes the NAS to go and find the file fun_plug on Volume_1 and execute it.
If you are interested, you will find that the fun_plug.tgz
tarball has disapeared, and has been unpacked into the newly created ffp
directory.
You will also find the ffp.log
file created during execution of the fun_plug
script and while executing some of its commands. It is longish (e.g. 47 KBytes) because the tar
program generates a lot of warnings about repairing links (this only happens once). You can view the log file with WordPad or NotePad++.
From now on, whenever the NAS is rebooted and thus the fun_plug
script is re-executed, the script appends about 15 extra text lines to the end of this log file. These contain the date/time of reboot and the status of various servers which you may enable in the future (see below). This appending of information to ffp.log
gives you one way to determine whether fun_plug
is really running: if you last reboot of the NAS is listed, fun_plug
and any servers that it actives are running.
Note that the end of the initial log file already states that a server called telnetd
is already running. We will use Telnet in the next step.
After rebooting, you need to connect to the NAS using a protocol called Telnet. Telnet allows you to “login” on a remote machine via a command line window.
Windows users can use an open-source telnet client called PuTTY. PuTTY is a self-contained program: the PuTTY.exe file can be stored wherever convenient and executed without any prior installation. In the PuTTY configuration screen you need to set the following before pressing Open:
CH3SNAS
) or its IP addressNow you can press Open (PuTTY can save these settings under a default or name if you want, but you will likely be using ssh instead of telnet later on). In PuTTY these setting could look like this:
Linux users are “supposed to be” familiar with how to use telnet.
After connecting to the device, the first line telnet will show:
/ #
Or
sh-4.1#
If this doesn’t show up, type “5784468” to get this prompt.
If you can see the prompt, you are logged in. This command “prompt” is where you can type in commands. The prompt shows you are in the root directory. Note that Linux command lines are not very communicative. These Rambo-like social skills are generally attributed to Linux’ resource-deprived childhood.
We proceed with updating /etc/shadow
by using the program pwconv
. It uses /etc/passwd
to generate the necessary lines in the shadow-file. Also the default shell will be changed. Additionally the home-directory of root is changed to a permanent one:
usermod -s /ffp/bin/sh root mkdir -p /ffp/home/root/ sed -ie 's#:/home/root:#:/ffp/home/root:#g' /etc/passwd pwconv
Hints:
"usermod: no changes"
, just ignore it. In this case the shell is already set to the correct one."pwconv: failed to change the mode of /etc/passwd- to 0600"
just ignore it and proceed.Now we need to change the password of user “root” to prevent unauthorized access.
Run the passwd
command and enter a new password twice (note that Linux passwords are case-sensitive):
passwd
Now check if everything went right using:
login
If this was successful, proceed to the next step, otherwise return to “passwd
“.
Store the password in the NAS. This step is essential, otherwise your password will be cleared on the next reboot! Also when you change the password of any user using the commandline, run the following store-passwd.sh
again!
wget http://wolf-u.li/u/172/ -O /ffp/sbin/store-passwd.sh store-passwd.sh
Now activate SSH (secure shell: telnet has major security limitations). Such lines can best be copied line-by-line or together into PuTTY:
chmod a+x /ffp/start/sshd.sh sh /ffp/start/sshd.sh start
Note that executing sshd.sh
takes a while to execute and generates three pairs encryption keys for secure communication between the CH3SNAS and a remote client (computer). Each pair has a “fingerprint” for the public key and a corresponding graphical “randomart” image. The fingerprint for the RSA encryption algorithm will incidentally show up again in the next step.
As shown in one of the pictures, the first time you connect to this new (as far as ssh is concerned) machine, you will get a stern warning from ssh. This is because ssh expects to be connecting to this machine through an encrypted connection (now and likely in the future). But ssh wants to be sure that you are connecting to the intended machine rather than to an imposter (“man-in-the-middle”) and has no way of knowing if this is the case. Assuming that you are connecting to via your own (safe) LAN, you don’t need to worry whether the presented identification (public-key fingerprint) is the right one. If you need to connect over the internet (very unlikely) or are paranoid (unlikely), you can follow the confirmation procedure described in this website.
Note that this step associates the name and IP number of your NAS with this public key (this is stored on your computer). This means that during future ssh sessions to this machine the confirmation of the public key is done automatically.
Now you can try to login using an ssh session as user root
. This involves starting a second copy of PuttY.
Once you were logged in sucessfully, you can deactivate telnet using:
chmod -x /ffp/start/telnetd.sh
If the login was not successful, please check that you executed all necessary steps from above. If you still cannot login, please contact us below in the comments.
Note that at this point telnet is actually still running, but it will stop working the next time you reboot the NAS (DO NOT REBOOT YET!). Once you have tested that the ssh server and the associated root password, and encryption keys are working fine you can turn telnet off.
sh /ffp/start/telnetd.sh stop
Congratulations! With the last step, you’ve installed your fun_plug 🙂 Now you need to execute a few steps to be able to install more packages.
First the sources for packages are installed:
wget http://wolf-u.li/u/441 -O /ffp/bin/uwsiteloader.sh chmod a+x /ffp/bin/uwsiteloader.sh uwsiteloader.sh
After entering the last line a menu pops up:
Press “Enter”
Press “Enter”. Now a screen pops up where you can choose the sites.
To choose an entry, you need to mark it with the arrow-keys on your keyboard and then press spacebar to activate it. It is activated if there is [*]
in the first characters of this line. Please choose at least “fonz” and “Uli”, otherwise the tutorials on this website will not work. At the end choose “OK” and press “Enter”.
Press “Enter”
Press “Enter”. This executed the update of the sites to see the current packages. This will not execute a installation. Now you need to install one more package before executing your next reboot:
slacker -UaA uli:uwchmod
To see what this package is about, you can go here.
You can now follow additional tutorials or (carefully) look around using the command line!
Note that the initial execution of the fun_plug script creates a new user group utmp
.
The script that installs the ssh
server creates a new user named sshd
and adds the user to utmp
. This user is for internal use only, and has no ability to login. It is standard procedure when installing OpenSSH, and believed to be safe.
On a NAS, user sshd
also shows up as having read-only ftp
access to Volume_1. Although it is doubtful that this user really can access ftp, this seems to be a bug and is being investigated.er group utmp
.
The script that installs the ssh
server creates a new user named sshd
and adds the user to utmp
. This user is for internal use only, and has no ability to login. It is standard procedure when installing OpenSSH, and believed to be safe.
On a NAS, user sshd
also shows up as having read-only ftp
access to Volume_1. Although it is doubtful that this user really can access ftp, this seems to be a bug and is being investigated.
Today i’d like to announce the availability of my packages for ffp 0.7. Since ffp0.7 there is a possiblity to add “sites” where the toole slacker can find packages. It took me a while to create an environment where i can package for ffp 0.7 but now the packages are ready for your usage.
Continue reading Announcement of Ulis repository for fun_plug 0.7
One of the new features of the fun_plug 0.7 is the possiblity to add multiple locations of the packages for the fun_plug 0.7. Although this looks nice, i wanted to see that automated. So i wrote uwsiteloader which first gets a definition-file which is then presented nicely to the user in the console. This will not work in other versions of FFP than 0.7!
Continue reading uwsiteloader: Tool to download the sites-definitions for packages of the fun_plug 0.7