I am using three SFFS profiles to back up various folders to the same share on a Synoolgy NAS. The share name and its credentials are specified identically in "Mount Network Volumes..." on the Job sheet using the format smb://server/share. The Mac OS converts the SMB name into a /volumes mount point. The problem is that the mount point names are not stable.
I have seen the following problems on two Macs we just bought:
Anywhere from one to over a dozen connected server icons show up on the desktop, all connected to the same share. There have also been times when NO connected server icon shows on the desktop.
Attempting to connect via the Connect to Server dialog (Command-K in Finder) should show the share as grayed out as it is already in use. This is not always the case. Attempting to use the share in this way will break SuperFlexible's link to the NAS, with sometimes disastrous results (SFFS attempts to or actually succeeds in deleting everything on the left side).
Likewise, in the Finder sidebar, the NAS shared resource doesn't always show up as connected (the disconnect button is not displayed). If you attempt to use the shared resource in this state, the Finder will happily connect again to the NAS share – and break SuperFlexible’s link to the NAS as above.
The /Volumes folder shows multiple instances of mount points for the same share They are named share, share-1, share-2 etc. I've seen up to 35 of them at once, though I don't think they are all connected at the same time. These seem to be detritus left in the /volumes folder that makes the instability worse.
Two days ago the mount points were so broken on one of the Macs that any attempt to use the NAS or disconnect the share resulted in a system hang. The only way out was a hard shutdown via the power button. No amount of cleaning out the /Volumes folder or deleting various .plist files helped. I finally gave up and made an appointment with Apple Care, letting the computer sit unused for a day. When I went to boot the machine this morning in anticipation of the call from Apple Care, it was all happy again about using its shares. How or why it finally decided to fix itself is a mystery to me.
The problem here is that the linkage between the mount point and the software using it is so easily broken that it becomes terribly unreliable. A little Google research reveals that this appears to be a known problem, but I haven't found a solution.
Is this newbie Mac user error? Are there work-arounds? Is this just the way OS-X works? (Wow, Macs really are so much better than PC's!)
Any help appreciated.
Thanks
P.S. The folks at Apple Care were anti-helpful. After talking to 5 different techs over the course of 90 minutes, I finally got a senior engineer who said that they knew nothing about this issue and could not help me. I think that is universal tech-support speak for "Yes, we know we have a problem here, but we won't acknowledge it." Yep, they're another useless tech support organization, just like all the rest. OK, not quite like all the rest. They're Apple, so they were polite about it and suggested I hire an outside consultant to investigate the problem. (Really, that isn't a joke.)
P.P.S The support on this forum for SuperFlexible is stellar. I’m impressed that problems get fixed so quickly. Other computer companies should take a hint.