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Instructions Buffalo Technology, Modèle HS-DTGL/R5

Fabricant : Buffalo Technology
Taille : 2.11 mb
Nom Fichier : 3b75263f-f014-475c-93d0-fcd33826e3d1.pdf
Langue d'enseignement: en
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Facilité d'utilisation


When the Run dialog opens, type d:\setup.exe (where “d” is the drive letter of the CD-ROM drive). Press OK to continue. TeraNavigator should now be running. Press the Install Client Utility button, and then Start. When installation is finished, press Launch. Each TeraStation on the network will have a tab in the client utility. Make sure that your Terastation’s tab is selected, click Setup and choose Browser Management. Step 4: TeraStation Configuration Utility Step 4: TeraStation Configuration Utility This login prompt will appear. The user name is admin. The password is password, until you change it. Press OK when finished. You’re now logged in. Bookmark this page in your browser for easy future access. For detailed explanations of each menu and setting, refer to your TeraStation manual, available on your TeraNavigator CD. Click on the Basic button on the left side. Here on the Basic page, begin by changing the name of your TeraStation in the TeraStation Hostname field. A friendly, easy-to-remember name is recommended. The name cannot contain any spaces or special characters. Enter a short description of your TeraStation in the TeraStation Description field. You’ll then see this description in Network Neighborhood. Make sure that the date and time are correct in Date and time setup. To synchronize clock settings with your computer, press Use Local time. Press Apply at the bottom of the page when desired fields are completed. Step : Map a Driveletter to your Share Step : Map a Driveletter to your Share To access your TeraStation’s data, it’s convenient to have the TeraStation’s share (a folder you can store data in) mapped to a drive letter. Begin by clicking Start and then Run.... In the Run dialog box, type \\TeraStation_Name where TeraStation_Name is the friendly, easy-to-remember name that you entered into the TeraStation Hostname field on page 5. Press OK to continue. TeraStation’s root directory will appear. You’ll see all of the configured folders, including share, the preconfigured share folder that we’re going to map a drive letter to. From the pull-down menu, click Tools, and then Map Network Drive. want to map share to from the Drive: list box. In the Folder: field, enter \\TeraStation_Name\share, where TeraStation_Name is the friendly, easy-to-remember name you gave your TeraStation on page 5. If you set up other shares on your TeraStation, you may map them by substituting their share name for “share” in the Folder: field. You can also browse for a shared folder by pressing the Browse button and searching through the Entire Network and then the Microsoft Windows Network. Check the Reconnect at logon checkbox to have Windows connect to your mapped drive every time it starts. When finished, press the Finish button. Selectthedriveletteryou Congratulations! Your TeraStation is set up. Please see the TeraStation User Manual for more help and configuration options. Note on RAID arrays: TeraStation uses RAID (“Redundant Array of Independent Disks”) technology to control the four hard drives in your TeraStation. RAID may be configured several ways: RAID Spanning -All four drives are combined into one large drive, giving the maximum capacity for your TeraStation. RAID Spanning is efficient, but has no redundancy. If one hard drive fails, all data on the TeraStation is lost. RAID 1 (mirroring) -Hard drives (or spanned pairs of hard drives) are arranged in mirrored pairs. Each half of the pair reads and writes exactly the same data. This costs you half of the total capacity of your TeraStation, but provides excellent redundancy. If a hard drive fails, the mirror set continues to operate, allowing you to work on normally. You may replace the damaged or defective drive at any time, and normal RAID 1 mirroring will then be automatically restored. RAID 5 (parity) - All drives in a RAID 5 array reserve part of their data space for parity information, allowing all data to be recovered if a single drive fails. The parity information takes up about one hard drive’s worth of space, so if you set up all four drives in the TeraStation as a RAID 5 array, your usable capacity will be about 3/4 of the total capacity of the TeraStation. RAID 5 is an excellent compromise between efficiency and security. If a single drive fails, no data is lost. After the damaged or defective drive is replaced, your TeraStation will automatically restore all data on the new drive and resume normal RAID 5 operation. This is how your TeraStation is set up out of the box. Out of the box, your TeraStation is configured with RAID 5. This means that you’ll only be able to use about 3/4 of the total capacity of your TeraStation, but your data will be much safer than it would be without fault tolerance. If you wish to use a different type of RAID, instructions for changing your RAID settings are in the TeraStation manual, available on your TeraNavigator CD. Technical Specifications LAN Standards: IEEE 802.3u 100BASE-TX; IEEE 802.3 10BASE- Technic...


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