Administrator Guide

9-2 System Administrator’s Guide
I cannot create shares for
NetWare or Macintosh
clients in PowerVault
NAS Manager.
NetWare and Macintosh
shares can only be set up
from the Advanced
Administration Menu.
Select Te r m i n a l S e r -
vices Advanced Client
from the PowerVault
735N NAS Manager
Maintenance menu.
Next, select Shares
Management from the
Advanced Administra-
tion Menu.
I have just created an
HTTP share and cannot
browse the directories.
DirectoryBrowsingisnot
selected by default for
shares that were origi-
nally created through the
Advanced Administra-
tion Menu (NetWare and
Macintosh) and are now
being used for HTTP
sharing.
Select Te r m i n a l S e r -
vices Advanced Client
from the PowerVault
735N NAS Manager
Maintenance menu. Exit
from the Advanced
Administration Menu
and click My Appliance
from the desktop.
Browse through the fold-
ers to the one being
shared for HTTP (Web
Sharing). Select the
check box next to Direc-
tory Browsing.
I have just deleted a vol-
ume in Dell
OpenManage Array Man-
ager and now I am
unable to view my shares
in NAS Manager.
In the event that a vol-
umewithsharesis
deleted, NAS Manager
will not display any
shares until the shares
that were directed to the
deleted volume are
removed.
Use Terminal Services
Advanced Client to
remove the shares for
the deleted volume. Exit
NAS Manager and
restart. Shares should be
visible.
In PowerVault NAS Man-
ager, I have been modify-
ing many shares in a
short period of time and
now I noticed that one of
my shares is listed twice
or that a share I've cre-
ated is not listed.
Internet Explorer stores
previous versions of
pages in its cache, and
when that cache reaches
a limit, it may start to
misreport the data being
sent to the shares option
in NAS Manager. This can
only happen if you are
extensively using the
sharing function in a
short time period.
Exit from Microsoft Inter-
net Explorer and restart,
or disable page caching
in Internet Explorer
Table 9-1. Troubleshooting Issues (continued)
Issue Possible cause Resolution