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    • gjacobseG

      Domain Planning: Network shares or ,..

      IT Discussion
      • windows server server 2012 server 2008 server 2019 ntfs nas san das • • gjacobse
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      J

      @Dashrender said in Domain Planning: Network shares or ,..:

      @dafyre said in Domain Planning: Network shares or ,..:

      @notverypunny said in Domain Planning: Network shares or ,..:

      Does NC allow exposure of their "file shares" as smb? If you have users that can't / don't want to use a browser-based access they can always mount it in windows explorer via webdav. Alfresco allows (allowed?) access via both, but the last time I played with it the performance was meh, which I attributed to it being built on java...

      You can mount NextCloud into a drive letter or folder using WebDav.

      The question does become the aforementioned performance issue (if there is one).

      I wonder how file locks are handled when using WebDav?

      There are a few topics elsewhere here where file locking and cloud hosting were discussed. You do have to give up what we have all come to appreciate in file locking. Here is a response in one of those other topics I spoke about:

      @scottalanmiller said in file sharing in the 21st century:

      @Donahue said in file sharing in the 21st century:

      I am aware of that. It's online locking that I am after. Though, I will concede that any locking scheme has to plan for both online and offline. I like sync because of local performance and offline availability, but it really feels like it is best for non shared files. When you add multiple users into the mix, almost everything goes out the window, especially when and if they go offline.

      Everything is best for non-shared files 🙂

      SMB shines at "always online, always nearly local" files because it handles offline so poorly. It's a balance. To handle offline or very distant (e.g. high latency) networks well, you have to sacrifice locking.

    • brandon220B

      Backup Target for Linux

      IT Discussion
      • fedora fedora 30 linux backup nas readynas disaster recovery rsync • • brandon220
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      travisdh1T

      I've been using Duplicati where I need a standalone backup of a thing. Web based management interface makes it super simple to manage.

    • steveS

      Network Storage - CompTIA Network+ N10-007 Prof. Messer

      Training
      • storage networking nas san network+ comptia certification prof messer youtube it training video training it career • • steve
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    • gjacobseG

      NAS Share issue: NFS or SMB

      IT Discussion
      • readynas nas security • • gjacobse
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      JaredBuschJ

      you can set static entries in EdgeOS.

      Always set DHCP to give out the ERL for DNS. set service dhcp-server shared-network-name LAN subnet 10.254.103.0/24 dns-server 10.254.103.1 Always set the ERL to look at itself for a DNS (127.0.0.1 set system name-server 127.0.0.1 Make sure that DNS is listening on your LAN ports. set service dns forwarding listen-on eth1 set service dns forwarding listen-on eth1.2 Set DNS forward lookup to whatever. set service dns forwarding name-server 10.254.103.4 # my Pi-Hole set service dns forwarding name-server 1.1.1.1 If oyu are on a domain, tell EdgeOS to forward those to the DC. set service dns forwarding options server=/ad.domain.com/10.254.0.21 set service dns forwarding options server=/domain.local/10.254.0.21 set service dns forwarding options server=/domain/10.254.0.21 Set up your static DNS entries. set system static-host-mapping host-name nas inet 10.254.103.7
    • scottalanmillerS

      Panzura Sync Errors

      IT Discussion
      • panzura nas storage • • scottalanmiller
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    • openitO

      Synology File Server slow compared to QNAP.

      IT Discussion
      • nas qnap synology • • openit
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      dbeatoD

      Also what type of drives are you using?

    • bbigfordB

      Synology NAS - Can't delete

      IT Discussion
      • veeam synology nas • • bbigford
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      bbigfordB

      @dbeato said in Synology NAS - Can't delete:

      @bbigford said in Synology NAS - Can't delete:

      @dbeato said in Synology NAS - Can't delete:

      As an aside question, do you have it that it recycles the storage after certain time with Synology to Synology backuP?

      What do you mean recycles? It's not doing an offsite move-delete if that's what you mean, it's copying it in case either building is lost. Maybe I don't understand the question.

      So when I setup the backup between Synology devices, I make sure that after a certain time/age the backup device deletes the older snapshots/backups.

      Ah, got it. What are you using for backup software that you'd rather your backup software not delete it? Also, are you using Synology CLI for that? I don't know that I've noticed that option in the GUI as part of the task creation.

    • NerdyDadN

      Solved Synology Recovery

      IT Discussion
      • synology failed nas backups • • NerdyDad
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      wrx7mW

      Glad to know this worked. I have had 3 different Synology NAS boxes over the past 6 years- An 1812+ that was just retired, 1813+, still going after almost 5 years and a new 3617xs and wondered what would happen if the box died. Never had any issues with any (knocking on wood).

    • scottalanmillerS

      The Jurassic Park Effect and Why It Specifically Matters with Storage SAMIT Video

      IT Discussion
      • samit youtube scott alan miller jurassic park effect storage freenas openfiler nas4free unraid nas san nas os • • scottalanmiller
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    • wrx7mW

      Synology NAS for Veeam Backup Repository

      IT Discussion
      • veeam synology nas corruption disaster recovery backups backup repository aws s3 • • wrx7m
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      scottalanmillerS

      Veeam DOES recommended avoiding low end NAS devices, and recommends SAN over NAS because Veeam wants block protocols. These parts are true and we don't need to watch videos as they are available in writing from @Rick-Vanover - we even have the author of the best practices here in the community!

      https://www.veeam.com/blog/vmware-backup-repository-configuration-best-practices.html

      0_1501712220659_Screenshot from 2017-08-02 17-16-46.png

      The keys here are "low end" which is an issue around support. The misleading bit is that NAS means server, so low end servers are every bit affected in the same ways. The QNAP, Synology, ReadyNAS and other such devices are not actually NAS but Unified Storage, SAN as much as NAS. That Veeam recommends SAN instead of NAS is a protocol choice, it does not make those devices any less applicable. We should not be calling them NAS, as that is misleading, they are equally both.

      If we really look at the guidance and consider what it could mean, the only real concern is "low end" and low end is always of some concern. Why spend so much on Veeam and Windows licensing and then get cheap on the hardware? You want solid storage hardware and solid support. But nothing here is telling us that there is anything wrong at all with these kinds of devices and certainly the issue is not some kind of corruption caused by the fact that they are in this product category.

    • scottalanmillerS

      Kooler on DFS-R Issues

      IT Discussion
      • dfs dfs-r windows server storage file server nas smb • • scottalanmiller
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      KOOLERK

      @dafyre said in Kooler on DFS-R Issues:

      With Starwind's coming Linux release (or has it already been released?)... Would this not be done in a Linux VM? That would eliminate concerns about licensing and such.

      StarWind Linux VSA is released

      There's no problem to install anything like us into parent partition, question was is it OK to use it as a file server with a free version of Windows

    • matteo nunziatiM

      A recommendation for Buffalo NASes (or at least their support)

      Reviews
      • nas buffalo support • • matteo nunziati
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      matteo nunziatiM

      @JaredBusch said in A recommendation for Buffalo NASes (or at least their support):

      I do prefer Synology over Buffalo though.

      HW wise, the main argument for synology over buffalo here in Italy is if you use a NAS as a primary file server: no Terastation 5000 has redundant powersupply, nor easy maintainance is allowed on site. If power suppl. blows: byebye data, you are KO for a couple of days.

      synology is really well engineered. I'm thinking specifically at TS5400r vs rs815rp+

      (also buffalo do not provides units populated with 8TB disks (not yet... hell 8TB in a single disk, brrr))

    • mlnewsM

      Netgear ReadyNAS Accidentally Deletes User Backups On Local Devices

      News
      • netgear netgear readynas nas backup backups disaster recovery el reg readynas readycloud • • mlnews
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      RobR

      lol - the ultimate in ransomware protection. watch they don't raise prices, that's a premium feature

    • scottalanmillerS

      FreeNAS Gets Hit by the Jurassic Park Effect

      SAM-SD
      • freenas jurassic park effect storage san nas freebsd freenas coral sam-sd blog • • scottalanmiller
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      dbeatoD

      @scottalanmiller said in FreeNAS Gets Hit by the Jurassic Park Effect:

      HCL

      Yes, agreed!

    • scottalanmillerS

      Where the SAM-SD Concept Originated

      SAM-SD
      • sam-sd proliant dl585 g2 nas storage nfs scott alan miller article sam-sd blog • • scottalanmiller
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    • scottalanmillerS

      The SAM-SD Model 01

      SAM-SD
      • sam-sd sam-sd blog scott alan miller article proliant dl185 g5 nas san unified storage storage • • scottalanmiller
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    • scottalanmillerS

      Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server

      News
      • synology synology dsm synology dsm 6.1 samba 4 samba active directory nas • • scottalanmiller
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      scottalanmillerS

      @JaredBusch said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @scottalanmiller said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @JaredBusch said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @travisdh1 said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @scottalanmiller said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @travisdh1 said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @scottalanmiller said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      @travisdh1 said in Synology DSM 6.1 Released with Active Directory Server:

      Hrm, fast-clone. Probably time to try out a Btrfs based file server at home.

      It's good stuff.

      Yeah, I know brtfs is the way to go, I just haven't tried it out yet myself. Starting out on IRIX with XFS back in the day makes me a too nostalgic.

      I still use XFS for everything.

      When will be the right time to switch to btrfs then? We know it's been stable for long enough that it's becoming the default in a number of distributions now, but has it really been battle tested well enough yet?

      Also, should we maybe make another thread for the btrfs discussion?

      The answer here is you do not switch. You install a distro letting it do its native thing by default and less you have an over arcing huge reason to override defaults. So you will get this when you install a new system that now has it as a default.

      openSuse, for example, has had it as default for two years.

      Really though, I prefer XFS for anything that isn't a storage machine. VMs need something mature, stable and light. XFS does that well.

      But does your preference mean that you will override a default installs choice just because that is your preference?

      Using anything but default should have very clear reasons because the first time somebody besides you have to troubleshoot it there will be big problems.

      I would often, yes actually. XFS is not like an odd, unsupported option. It's just not the default. It's still completely core to openSuse's design. They simply had to pick which one they were going to use when someone did not choose one or the other and they opted for extra features over lean design for those that don't know which they want, which I think makes sense. Just like CentOS opts for the simplicity of using root for administration instead of sudo, but makes it super easy to enable sudo. It's not default, but it's fully supported. They just had to choose something as default.

    • scottalanmillerS

      Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?

      IT Discussion
      • nas storage aetherstore rain raid • • scottalanmiller
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      BRRABillB

      Nice writeup @shannon

    • DashrenderD

      Backups - how much does backup performance matter to you?

      IT Discussion
      • backup nas performance synology • • Dashrender
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      scottalanmillerS

      @BRRABill said in Backups - how much does backup performance matter to you?:

      @scottalanmiller said in Backups - how much does backup performance matter to you?:

      @BRRABill said in Backups - how much does backup performance matter to you?:

      All a function of time and need and money.

      Only time and money, need in a business is always a function of money.

      I mean all of them combine.

      You are correct.

      Need dictates the other two.

      Well, the other two dictate need. Businesses aren't a "need" based thing. They have a goal: profits. Backup restore time is a discussion about time. So the technical piece gives us the time axis and that we are talking about a business gives us a cost one. That's it. The idea of "need" should never really come up in a business, businesses never need to do anything. They desire profits and all actions should reflect that. The concept of needs only serves to confuse people from the singular mission.

    • mlnewsM

      Buffalo NAS Return Policy Review

      Reviews
      • buffalo nas storage • • mlnews
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      scottalanmillerS

      @ntozier said in Buffalo NAS Return Policy Review:

      Maybe the person you spoke to didn't realize if was just for a single drive? I mean I find the some non-technical users think of a Tower as the "hard drive". 🙂

      Here is a quote from him: "And that was for the entire NAS with two 4TB drives (I only needed one drive)!!!"

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