Table 13 Storage Manager > Internal Storage > Volume (continued)
LABEL
Delete
Disk Group X
Status
Volume Name
File System
Usage
5.3.1.1 Create a Volume
Use the Create Volume screen to configure a volume directly on a disk/RAID, which has better
performance. Click Create in the Volume section of the Storage Manager > Internal Storage > Volume
screen to open the screen as shown.
Chapter 5 Storage Manager
DESCRIPTION
Click Delete to remove the selected volume. A pop-up screen displays. Type "DELETE" in the
text box and click Delete to remove it.
Note: If you delete a volume, all data in the volume disks is erased.
Note: Deleting a volume on a disk group here does not delete the corresponding
disk group. To delete a disk group, click Internal Storage > Disk Group.
This field shows the name of the disk group, the percentage of the disk group size that is
available, the disk group size being used, and the total disk group size.
This field shows whether the volume is normal, degraded, crashed, Creating, Deleting,
Expanding, Repairing or Changing the RAID type.
Normal: A green circle represents a healthy volume.
Degraded: An orange circle represents a degraded RAID 1 volume.
Crashed: A red circle represents a down volume.
The following status also displays the percentage of an action has been completed.
Creating: The NAS's percentage progress in creating the volume.
Deleting: The NAS's percentage progress in deleting the volume.
Expanding: The NAS's percentage progress in expanding the volume. For a RAID 1 volume,
this also displays the percentage of resynchronizing the NAS has finished and the evaluated
remaining time.
Repairing: The NAS's percentage progress in repairing the volume. For a RAID 1 volume, this
also displays the percentage of resynchronizing the NAS has finished and the evaluated
remaining time.
Changing: The NAS's percentage progress in changing the volume's RAID type. For a RAID 1
volume, this also displays the percentage of resynchronizing the NAS has finished and the
evaluated remaining time.
This field shows the name of the volume. Click the column's heading cell to display an arrow.
Use the arrow to sort the table entries in ascending or descending order.
This field shows what file system the volume uses. At the time of writing, your NAS uses the
EXT4 file system for internal volumes.
This field shows the percentage of the volume being used, the percentage that is available,
and the total disk group size.
NAS Series User's Guide
49
Need help?
Do you have a question about the NAS326 and is the answer not in the manual?