HP StoreOnce VSA Backup System User Guide (TC458-96025)

3. Navigate to the StoreOnce-NAS—CIFS Server tab. Select the user and click Delete.
4. Click OK in the confirmation box. The user no longer exists in the system.
Configuring CIFS Server with AD and CIFS Share with AD domain users
To grant external users or groups (AD domain users) access to NAS shares:
1. Set the Authentication mode to AD on the NAS CIFS server tab. See “Configuring the CIFS
server” (page 30).
2. Add the StoreOnce device to an AD domain. See Adding the StoreOnce device to an AD
Domain” (page 35).
3. Add any required users or groups to the active directory to grant access to the AD domain.
See Adding users and groups to an AD domain” (page 36).
4. Create and manage NAS shares on the AD domain. See “Managing shares on an AD domain
(page 39).
5. Create local administrators for the CIFS server. See To create Local Administrators for the
CIFS server” (page 41).
NOTE: To create external users or groups on the StoreOnce Backup system (using the User
Management GUI or CLI function), first use the NAS CIFS server tab to set the Authentication mode
to AD, join an AD domain, and create any required users or groups. This is required even when
not using NAS shares as target devices.
Prerequisites
Domain Name
Domain Controller running:
Windows server 2003
Windows server 2003 R2
Windows server 2008
Windows server 2008 R2
Windows server 2012
Windows server 2012 R2
User account on Domain Controller, which should be the Domain Administrator or Delegated
user with Domain Administrative rights.
User account on server running DNS to add entries.
The system time on the StoreOnce Backup system must be correct and in sync with that of the
domain controller. Using the StoreOnce CLI time commands on the StoreOnce Backup system
to synchronize with a time server ensures accurate time keeping. See the HP StoreOnce Backup
system CLI Reference Guide for details.
IMPORTANT: AD Domain Support: StoreOnce models support configuration in a multi-domain
tree forest but do not support multi-forest domain topologies.
34 NAS functions