flabberghaster wrote
I usually just use python3 -mhttp.server
to move files computer to phone. Don't really have a solution for the other direction tho
twovests OP wrote
This is exactly what I did to get files from my computer to my phone! Samba is what got me both directions. 'Samba' is a popular server that follows the SMB network protocol.
Samba really is where it's at. I'll make a small guide. This is for Ubuntu. I am using a Raspberry Pi with an SD card. Nothing too special, since this is just a transitory space for transfering files.
Here's what I do on Ubuntu. You might want to make a new user just for the Samba share, since the SMB username is taking from users on the machine.
# install samba
sudo apt install samba
# allow samba through firewall
sudo ufw allow samba
# make a file for the samba share
mkdir /home/USERNAME/samba
# edit the conf to add the lines
sudo vim /etc/samba/smb.conf
# add these lines to smb.conf
[sambashare]
comment = Samba on PiHole
path = /home/USERNAME/samba
read only = no
browsable = yes
# set a password for the samba share
sudo smbpasswd -a USERNAME
# start the samba server
sudo service smbd restart
Then, on the iPad or iOS device, add a network location (Files > three dots). You'll need the local IP of your Samba server. The details will be like:
- Address: `
smb://192.168.1.123
` - Username: USERNAME used to set start Samba on Ubuntu
- Password: Password set with `
sudo smbpasswd -a USERNAME
`
There's a bug on iPadOS and iOS where the share will be read-only until you disconnect and reconnect to the server. You may need to do that a few times, or restart your device.
flabberghaster wrote
That seems a lot easier than NFS, tbh. I wonder if android supports that :thinking:
twovests OP wrote
Funny enough, not on the default Files app, but at least on an officially-supported client (plus most "good" file managers I'm aware of.)
Something I dislike with Apple products is that so much basic functionality is locked behind expensive apps. I need to pay $10 to get a calculator on my iPad or $20 to control audio volume per-app on MacOS. So it's very refreshing to me that Samba support is built in to Files.
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