Administrator Guide

6 In the NAS Volume Name eld, type a name for the NAS volume clone.
7 In the Folder area, select a parent folder for the NAS volume clone.
8 Click OK.
Delete a NAS Volume Clone
Delete a NAS volume clone if it is no longer used.
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 the Snapshots & Clones tab and then select a clone.
5 Click Delete.
The Delete dialog box opens.
6 Click OK.
Managing SMB Shares
Server Message Block (SMB) shares provide an eective way of sharing les across a Windows network with authorized clients. The
FluidFS cluster supports SMB protocol versions 1.0, 2.0, 2.1, 3.0, and 3.1.1.
When you rst create an SMB share, access is limited as follows:
The Administrator account has full access.
If you are using Active Directory, the AD domain administrator has full access.
To assign other users access to an SMB share, you must log in to the SMB share using one of these administrator accounts and set access
permissions and ownership of the SMB share.
Share-Level Permissions
The default share-level permissions (SLP) for a new share is full control for authenticated users. This control can be modied either:
Using the MMC tool
In the Storage Manager Security tab of the Edit Settings panel
Conguring SMB Shares
View, add, modify, and delete SMB shares.
View All SMB Shares on the FluidFS Cluster
View all current SMB shares for the FluidFS cluster.
1 In the Storage view, select a FluidFS cluster.
2 Click the File System tab.
3 In the File System view, select SMB Shares.
The SMB Shares panel displays the current shares.
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FluidFS Administration