However, you have to configure it by hand:
* set Set up a mysql database and user to access it:
hda-create-db-and-user greyhole
* load Load the schema
mysql -u greyhole -pgreyhole greyhole < /usr/share/greyhole/schema-mysql.sql
* initialize Initialize the basic settings for Greyhole: configure /etc/greyhole.conf appropriately (that is up to your configuration) <b>NOTE:</b> Ensure <u>db_user</u> and <u>db_password</u> are set to <i>greyhole</i>.
<b>NOTE:</b> Ensure <u>db_user</u> and <u>db_password</u> are set to <i>greyhole</i>.* Edit /etc/greyhole.conf as root user. Add a line for each drive in the storage pool at the end of the file. The example below is for two drives: storage_pool_directory = /var/hda/files/drives/drive2/gh, min_free: 10gb storage_pool_directory = /var/hda/files/drives/drive3/gh, min_free: 10gb* Now configure the number of copies per share. The example below sets the shares as follows:** Books for max copies (which is 1 for 2 drives)** Pictures for 1 copy (which is the same as max)** Movies for no copies num_copies[Books] = 999 num_copies[Pictures] = 2 num_copies[Movies] = 1 <b>NOTE:</b> For a system with 2 Greyhole drives, 1 copy is the max. The first Greyhole drive holds the master copy and the second a copy. The share will contain a symbolic link to the master.* In the Dashboard, Shares tab add the following to <b>Extra Parameters</b> for each share you will be configuring to use Greyhole: dfree command = /usr/bin/greyhole-dfree vfs objects = greyhole* Finally, enable greyhole permanently and start the greyhole service:
systemctl enable greyhole.service
systemctl start greyhole.service