![]() Given that we are going to build a lot of services through this entire series, I’d recommend to use a Raspberry Pi 3 b+ or, better, a Raspberry Pi 4 (possibly the 8GB version). ![]() If you have an old PC you wish to use instead, you can follow this series anyway and configure your PC for the job (in this case remember to download and build for the Intel x86 platform instead of for ARM as we’ll do here). a Raspberry Pi that we’ll use as server (from now on, we’ll refer to it as the server system), this in order to reduce costs for this project and have something we can leave it on all the time.Create a File Server on a Raspberry Pi Pre-Requisitesīefore we start, you should have ready to use: So, this post will try to provide some help to users so they can configure a Raspberry Pi (or another machine) to allow file sharing between RISC OS (or other Retro Operating Systems) and other platforms, which is a particularly useful thing when coding on retro systems. It seems that sharing files and directories between RISC OS (but also Amiga OS, OS/2 and other Retro Operating Systems) and other modern platforms is not such an intuitive thing. ![]() Given the complexity required to complete this tutorial, please make sure you read it carefully and, if you have doubts, please ask questions in the comments area at the end of the tutorial. ![]() I have tried to do my best to test this tutorial on different Linux distributions and computer architectures. ![]()
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