![]() ![]() That seems like something I shouldn't have to do, and didn't have to on any MacOS version prior. Meantime, I'm auto-mounting that drive on boot so Time Machine can see it every time. Is there another protocol or something involved? And I'm not sure why I have to manually add the TMBackup server in the first place to get MacOS Sierra to see it. HOWEVER - Still can't see any of my QNAP devices in QNAP Finder Pro. ![]() ![]() The one you select will mount and be available to MacOS Time Machine in the event you wanted to backup to any old QNAP share. If you just use "afp://qnap" and leave off "TMBackup", then after you authenticate you'll get a list of all your QNAP shares. Hit command-k 2) Type "afp//qnap/TMBackup" (replace "qnap" with your server name or IP address) 3) Authenticate (using your QNAP Time Machine creds in the example above) TMBackup will now successfully show TMBackup in your list of available Time Machine backup disks. In Finder, if I manually add a QNAP share using AFP, that share will show up in Time Machine. ![]()
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