Administrator Guide

Delete a NAS Volume
After deleting a NAS volume, the storage space used by the deleted volume is reclaimed by the NAS pool. Deleting a NAS volume deletes
all the les and directories as well as its properties, that is, SMB shares and NFS exports, snapshots denitions, and so on. After it is
deleted, the NAS volume cannot be restored unless it is redened and restored from an external backup.
Prerequisites
Before a NAS volume can be deleted, you must remove its SMB shares, NFS exports, replications, quota rules, NAS volume clones, and
any other reference to the NAS volume.
Ensure that the NAS volume is not mounted and warn aected clients that the data will be deleted.
Steps
1 In the Storage view, select a FluidFS cluster.
2 Click the File System tab.
3 In the File System view, expand NAS Volumes and then select a NAS volume.
4 In the NAS Volumes panel, click Delete.
The Delete dialog box opens.
5 Click OK.
Organizing NAS Volumes in Storage Manager Using Folders
By default, Storage Manager displays NAS volumes in alphabetical order. To customize the organization of NAS volumes in Storage
Manager
, you can create folders to group NAS volumes.
Create a NAS Volume Folder
Add folders to organize NAS volumes.
1 In the Storage view, select a FluidFS cluster.
2 Click the File System tab.
3 In the File System view, expand NAS Volumes and then select a NAS volume.
4 In the NAS Volumes panel, click Create NAS Volume Folder.
The Create NAS Volume Folder dialog box opens.
5 In the Name eld, type a name for the folder.
6 In the Parent Folder area, select a parent folder.
7 Click OK.
Rename a NAS Volume Folder
Rename a NAS volume folder.
1 In the Storage view, select a FluidFS cluster.
2 Click the File System tab.
3 In the File System view, expand NAS Volumes and then select a NAS volume.
4 Click Edit Settings.
The Edit NAS Volume Folder Settings dialog box opens.
5 In the Name eld, type a new name for the folder.
6 Click OK.
FluidFS Administration
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