User guide

The next step is to configure network connections. The gateway is usually the internal IP address for the router the NAS unit is connected to. DNS entries
are usually the same as used by the router's external network configuration (determined by your ISP). Setting an NTP server will synchronize the NAS unit to
a time server, usually on the Internet. This can be a name or IP address. Use the keywords “free NTP servers” on your preferred search engine if you wish to
configure this feature and don't know of a server you can use.
When the wizard is complete by either choosing Automatic in Step 1 or completing Steps 2 and 3, a confirmation page will appear. Clicking the Finish button
will apply the settings.
View Drive Information
Displays details of all connected drives. If network shares are configured for drives that have been disconnected, those drives will also appear in this list as
unavailable.
Device: The letter after “sd” is the drive's letter, in order of when the drive was first encountered by the NAS unit. The number at the end of the device label
is the partition on the drive, in order of the drive's partition map.
Vendor: The drive's manufacturer.
Model: The drive's model number.
Mount Point: Used by the NAS unit internally. Also referenced in other areas when selecting a “volume.”
Type: The file system the partition is formatted with. NOTE: in this column, FAT32 is called “vfat,” NTFS is called “fuseblk.”
Size: The total space of the partition.
Used: Space in use on the partition.
Available: Remaining space available on the partition.
% Used: Percentage of the partition space in use.
Phone: 408-453-6212 Email: www.addonics.com/support/query/ 8