Reference Guide

NOTE: FTP is enabled by default on the FluidFS cluster. However, if FTP has been disabled, see
system internal security FTP configuration enable to reenable FTP before using this
command.
Format
system internal diagnostics run-nfs-file-accessibility-diagnostic <ClientIP>
<ExportPath> <VolumeName> <Path>
Arguments
Argument Description Format
<ClientIP> IP address of the client Existing client IP address in the
format: x.x.x.x
<ExportPath> NFS export path Existing NFS export path
<VolumeName> NAS volume name Existing NAS volume name
<Path> File path (relative to NFS export
path)
Existing file path
<RepositoryType> Type of repository on which to
run file accessibility diagnostics
<RepositoryVolume> Volume of repository on which to
run file accessibility diagnostics
<RepositoryPath> Path of repository on which to
run file accessibility diagnostics
Example
Run the file-accessibility diagnostic for an NFS client with the IP address 172.22.69.18 to an NFS export at
the path /folder on a NAS volume named vol1 with the relative file path subfolder:
CLI> system internal diagnostics run-nfs-file-accessibility-diagnostic
172.22.69.18 /folder vol1 subfolder
system internal diagnostics run-performance-diagnostic
Run the performance diagnostic on a NAS volume.
If possible, run the diagnostic when the activity on the FluidFS cluster is minimal. The diagnostic files
should be downloaded by FTP from the following directory:
ftp://<FluidFS_administrator_user_name>@<client_VIP_or_name>:44421/diagnostic/archive/
PerformanceDiagnostic/
NOTE: FTP is enabled by default on the FluidFS cluster. However, if FTP has been disabled, see
system internal security FTP configuration enable to re-enable FTP before using this command.
CLI Commands
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