Chapter 7 Storage
The following table describes the labels in this screen.
Table 23 Storage > Create an Internal Volume
LABEL | DESCRIPTION |
Volume Name | Type a volume name from 1 to 31 characters. To avoid confusion, it is highly recommended |
| that each volume use a unique name. |
| Acceptable characters are all alphanumeric characters, " " [spaces], "_" [underscores], and |
| "." [periods]. |
| The first character must be alphanumeric |
| The last character cannot be a space " ". |
| For an external volume, type a volume name from 1 to 32 |
| allowed for example) ASCII characters. The name cannot be the same as another existing |
| external volume. |
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|
JBOD | Use this if you want maximum storage capacity and/or you have other means of protecting |
| your data. JBOD is the only option if you only have one disk installed. With two disks, you can |
| choose to create a JBOD volume on one of the disks or both. JBOD is the only option for the |
| NSA310S. |
| Select which disks to use for this volume (disk1, disk2, or disk1 and disk2). A disk can only |
| belong to one volume. You do not need to select anything if only one hard disk is installed. |
| For the NSA310: |
| • Internal Disk - Is the hard disk inside an NSA310. |
| • External Disk - Is the eSATA hard disk connected to an NSA310. |
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|
PC Compatible | (NSA310 only) |
Volume | This type is only available if you have attached an eSATA hard disk to your NSA. |
| |
| A primary partition is created on the eSATA hard disk. |
| Use this to make your eSATA hard disk readable by other computer systems. However, the |
| computer’s platform (for example, Windows XP SP2) should support the file system you |
| selected for the eSATA hard disk. |
| • External Disk - This is checked automatically. It refers to the eSATA hard disk that you |
| can attach as a second drive to your NSA310. |
| • File System - Select the file system you want the new volume to use. |
| Windows file systems include: |
| NTFS: Recommended for volumes greater than 40 GB. |
| FAT32: Newer, and more efficient than FAT16. Supports a volume size of up to 32 GB |
| (Giga Bytes) and individual file sizes of up to 4 GB. |
| FAT16: Compatible with older Windows operating systems. Supports volume and file |
| sizes of up to 2 GB. |
| Linux file systems include: |
| EXT2: Most commonly used on Linux platforms. |
| EXT3: The same as EXT2, but adds a journaled file system and is more robust. |
| EXT4: Supports larger files and better performance than EXT3. |
| ReiserFS: Offers better performance for small files. |
| XFS: Allows expansion for mounted volumes. |
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|
RAID 0 | |
| Use this if you want maximum speed for your disks, and/or you have other means of |
| protecting your data. This is only available when you have two hard disks installed. |
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|
RAID 1 | Use this if you want to mirror all data on one disk to the other disk. This is only available |
| when you have two hard disks installed. |
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|
Volume will be | This field lists all hard disks installed inside the NSA. Select which disks should make up this |
created on | volume. A disk can only belong to one volume. You do not need to select anything if only one |
| hard disk is installed. |
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|
Apply | Click this to save your changes and create the volume. |
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Cancel | Click this to exit this screen without saving your changes or creating a volume. |
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Media Server User’s Guide | |
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