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Network Access Configuration
This section covers how storage is presented to clients and how access is configured via the GUI. This includes setting up file-based access such as SMB, along with block-based access using iSCSI and NVMe over TCP, with portal IPs defining the network paths us...
SMB Access Setup
This section covers configuring SMB to present file-based storage to clients over the network. This includes creating and managing shares, allowing storage to be accessed by users and applications. From the system menu, select Shares & Targets, then click...
iSCSI Access Setup
This section covers configuring iSCSI to present block-based storage to clients. This includes creating targets and making storage available to systems that require direct block-level access. From the system menu, select Shares & Targets and click the Go to...
NVMe-oF Access Setup
This section covers configuring NVMe over TCP to present block-based storage to clients. This includes creating targets and making storage available to systems that require high-performance, low-latency block access. The system also supports NVMe over Fabrics...
Snapshot Overview
Snapshots provide a point-in-time copy of data that can be used for recovery, rollback, or testing. Rather than taking full copies, they only record what has changed since the point they were created, making them efficient in both time and storage. In practic...
Manual Snapshot Creation
From the main menu, select Snapshots to open the Snapshot Management screen. From the Snapshot Management screen, select Reserved Space (XFS) to open the Snapshot Space Reservation wizard. This step is not required for BTRFS, as it behaves in the s...
Snapshot Scheduling
While creating snapshots manually is useful, it is generally more efficient to schedule them. Scheduling provides greater control and allows snapshot frequency to be aligned with business processes or resilience requirements, including protection against ...