Table 11 Status - ZyXEL Communications NSA-220 User Manual

Network storage appliance
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Chapter 4 Status Screen
The following table describes the labels in this screen.

Table 11 Status

LABEL
Status
System Information
Server Name
Model Name
Firmware Version
MAC Address
Media Server Status
FTP Server Status
Volume Status
Internal Volume
Create an Internal Volume This displays if there are no volumes created on the hard drive(s) installed
External Volume
Status
Name
Configuration
File System
Disk(s)
Disk Usage
Active Sessions
Type
Share Name
Username
52
DESCRIPTION
Click Status to refresh the status screen statistics.
This displays the name which helps you find the NSA on the network.
Click the edit icon to go to the screen where you can configure this.
This displays which model this NSA device is.
This is the NSA firmware version. Click the update link to go to the
Maintenance > Firmware Upgrade screen from which you can upload
new firmware. Click the edit icon to go to the screen where you can
upload new firmware.
This displays the NSA's unique physical hardware address (MAC). You
need the MAC address to register the product at myZyXEL.com.
Customer support may also request it for troubleshooting purposes.
This shows whether the media server function is enabled or disabled. It
must be enabled for media clients to play content files stored on the NSA.
Click the edit icon to go to the screen where you can configure this.
This shows whether the FTP server function is enabled or disabled. It
must be enabled to use FTP file transfer to/from the NSA. Click the edit
icon to go to the screen where you can configure this.
A volume is a storage area on a single disk or spread across a number of
disks within a single file system.
This displays the volumes created on the hard drives installed in the NSA.
in the NSA. Click this button to create a volume. See
69.
This displays the volumes created on USB hard drives connected to the
NSA. USB disks are numbered in the order that you insert USB devices.
This icon indicates whether the volume is healthy, degraded, or down.
This field shows the name for the volume. Read only displays for an
external volume that uses Windows NTFS. This means the NSA can read
the volume but can't save files on it.
This field (also known as Type) shows what type of data storage system
(a RAID type or JBOD) an internal volume is using.
This field shows what file system an external (USB) volume is using.
For internal drives, this shows which hard drive bays are included in the
volume. For external drives, this field shows USB1 for the first external
hard drive you connect to the NSA (regardless of which USB port) and
USB2 for the second.
This field shows total disk size, the percentage of the disk being used and
the percentage that is available.
This shows how many users are currently connected to the NSA.
This shows whether it's a Windows/CIFS, web (web configurator), or FTP
connection to the NSA.
This displays the shared folder name on the NSA that the user is
connected to for CIFS sessions and is blank for FTP sessions.
This displays the name of the user connected to the NSA if one is defined.
ANONYMOUS CIFS or ANONYMOUS FTP display if a username is not
defined for the user's connection.
Section 6.6 on page
NSA-220 User's Guide

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