User`s manual
Table Of Contents
- Copyright and Trademark Notice
- About This Manual
- Limited Warranty
- Safety Warnings
- Table of Contents
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: Hardware Installation
- Chapter 3: First Time Setup
- Chapter 4: System Administration
- Overview
- Web Administration Interface
- Language Selection
- System Information
- System Management
- System Network
- FTP
- Media Server
- HTTP/ Web Disk
- UPnP
- Nsync Target
- Bonjour Setting
- Storage Management
- User and Group Authentication
- Application Server
- iTunes® Server
- Module Management
- Module Installation
- System Module
- User Module
- Backup
- Chapter 5: Using the N7700SAS
- Chapter 6: Tips and Tricks
- Chapter 7: Troubleshooting
- Chapter 8: Revision updated (FW 3.00.03 to 3.00.04)
- Chapter 9: Revision updated up to FW 3.00.08
- Chapter 10: Version 3.01.00 Firmware Updates
- Appendix A: Product Specifications
- Appendix B: Customer Support
- Appendix C: RAID Basics
- Appendix D: Active Directory Basics
- Appendix E: Licensing Information

With a RAID 1, RAID 5, RAID 6, or RAID 10 volume, you can also add a spare disk
after the RAID is created.
See Chapter 6: Tips and Tricks > Adding a Spare Disk for details.
For more information on RAID, see Appendix C: RAID Basics.
RAID Level
You can set the storage volume as JBOD, RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 5, RAID 6 or
RAID 10. RAID configuration is usually required only when you first set up the
device. A brief description of each RAID setting follows:
RAID Levels
Level Description
JBOD The storage volume is a single HDD with no RAID support. JBOD
requires a minimum of 1 disk.
RAID 0 Provides data striping but no redundancy. Improves performance
but not data safety. RAID 0 requires a minimum of 2 disks.
RAID 1 Offers disk mirroring. Provides twice the read rate of single disks,
but same write rate. RAID 1 requires a minimum of 2 disks.
RAID 5 Data striping and stripe error correction information provided.
Building a RAID volume
and RAID mode. In gene
“RAID Building” then th
may take time, depending on the size of hard drives
ral, while the RAID volume building process is up to
e data volume is capable to be accessed.
NOTE
Creating RAID destroys a
unrecoverable.
ll data in the current RAID volume. The data is
WARNING
53