

When it does that, it also adds any pre-set defaults that were stored in a default ini file. When you do that, it looks for that ini file and if it doesn't exist, it re-creates one.
#Twonky server free password password
That will show you a page message stating something like 'Server restarting' (thus confirming that it has accepted the RPC)Īs that Qnap instruction states, yet another way to remove the password is to simply delete (or if concerned, rename) that entire ini file and restart Twonky. Note 2: If you wish, after changing the ini file you can simply restart Twonky via another rpc option (to save having to access the Twonky web interface):

Note 1: If you don't like using vi, another way to edit the file is to copy it to a share, then change permissions (so you can edit it) then use the text editor on you PC to change it, then save it, pop it back where it should be and change the permissions back (not even sure that last part is important it is only a Twonky ini file). So you can now SSH in and navigate to the above file, but rather than just deleting the entire file, you could use vi (or equivalent) to delete just these two entries (well, deleting only the parts to the right of the two = signs, thus ending up looking like my own ones), then re-starting Twonky will force it to read that ini file and thus it should no longer be password protected. So obviously, in my case the file I want to edit (or delete more on that below) is actually /share/CACHEDEV1_DATA/.qpkg/TwonkyServerEU/appdata/twonkyserver.ini Inipath=/share/CACHEDEV1_DATA/.qpkg/TwonkyServerEU/appdata Code: Select all ininame=twonkyserver.ini
