Buffalo TeraStation 7000 User Manual page 29

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• If the TeraStation has joined a domain network, you cannot connect to the TeraStation via FTP.
8
Click
next to "Folder Setup".
9
Click a shared folder for which you want to set access restrictions.
10
Click Edit.
11
Enable "Access Restrictions".
12
Select the level of access for "Domain Users" or "Domain Groups" you added.
: Read and write access allowed
: Read access allowed
: Access prohibited
13
Click OK.
Notes:
• If both "Read only" and "Read & Write" permissions are given to a user, the user will have read-only access. The
most restrictive access is used.
• If a domain username is more than 20 bytes long, the TeraStation truncates it to 20 bytes.
• The TeraStation supports a domain environment with a maximum of 1000 users and 1000 groups. 10,000 users
and 10,000 groups can be downloaded from the domain controller but are not supported.
• To use the TeraStation as a member server in an NT or AD domain, the TeraStation should be logged in to the
domain and accessed from a computer that is not a member of the domain with a valid domain account.
• If the TeraStation is a member server of an NT or AD domain, you cannot connect as a guest user via AFP.
• When you change the user or group settings on the domain controller, these changes may not take effect imme-
diately on the TeraStation until it is rebooted.
• If your TeraStation is a member server in an NT or Active Directory domain and you change the authentication
method to "Workgroup", the account on the domain controller will not be deleted automatically.
• If the TeraStation has joined a domain network, you cannot connect to it via FTP.
29

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