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ZYXEL COMMUNICATIONS NAS326 USER MANUAL Pdf

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  • 12 Chapter 1 Get to Know Your NAS 12 12 12 13 14 14 14 15 15 17 17 17 19 19 21 22 22 23
  • 26 Chapter 3 Web Configurator 26 26 26 30 33 33 34 36 26
  • 37 Chapter 4 Video Tutorials 37 37 37 37 39 40 40 37
  • 41 Chapter 5 Storage Manager 41 41 41 41 43 43 44 45 70 74 76 80 81 85 95 95 95 97 98 101 41 102 102 102 105 105 105 105 106 107 108 112 113 114 114 115 119 120 121 121 121 123 127 128 129 130 130 130 130 131 131 132 137 138 139 140 141 141 141 142 145 146 148 148 148 148 149 150 150 151 152 152 153 154 154 155 156
  • 159 Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service 159 159 159 159 160 161 162 163 163 164 166 166 167 168 168 169 170 172 173 173 175 175 176 177 159 178 178 178 178 178 180 181 182 183 184 185 185 186 186 187 188 189 190 190 190
  • 197 Chapter 12 Status Center 197 197 197 198 197 200 200 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 211 212 212 214 217 218 220 222 223 224 226 227 227 228 230 232 232 232 232 235 236 238 240 241 242 242 244 245 245 246
  • 248 Chapter 15 Upload Manager 248 248 248 248 249 249 255 257 259 259 248 263
  • 263 Chapter 16 Backup Planner 263 263 263 263 263 264 264 264 266 272 276 282 282 283 284 285 286 288 288 288 290 293 294 294 296 296 298 299 300 300 300 301
  • 301 Chapter 18 Access Your Cloud Remotely Via Myzyxelcloud and Zyxel Drive App 301 303 304 305 305 306 306 307 308 312 312 313 315
  • 318 Chapter 20 Troubleshooting 318 318 318 320 321 322 324 325 326 326 327 327 328 328 329 331 331 332 333 333 334 318
  • 335 Appendix A Product Specifications 335
  • 336 Appendix B Customer Support 336
  • 342 Appendix C Legal Information 342 348 div.pdf { position: relative; width: 950px; height: 1229px; background: url(//static-data2.manualslib.com//pdf6/125/12465/1246421-zyxel_communications/images/nas326_1_bg.png); overflow: hidden; } div.pdf * { display: inline; position: absolute; margin: 0; padding: 0; color: #000000; font-family: Arial, sans-serif; white-space: nowrap; } div.pdf div.ocr { filter: alpha(opacity=20) -moz-opacity: 0.2; -khtml-opacity: 0.2; opacity: 0.2; } User's Guide NAS Series Model: NAS326, NAS520, NAS540, and NAS542 Personal Cloud Storage Default Login Details Ways to Find Your NAS Web Address User Name Password Copyright © 2016 Zyxel Communications Corporation FindMe NAS Starter Utility http://(NAS Server Name) http://(NAS IP Address) admin 1234 Version 5.2 Edition 1, 12/2016 Advertisement Table of Contents 2 3 3 4
  • Page 2: Related Documentation IMPORTANT! READ CAREFULLY BEFORE USE. KEEP THIS GUIDE FOR FUTURE REFERENCE. This is a User’s Guide for a series of products. Not all products support all firmware features. Screenshots and graphics in this book may differ slightly from your product due to differences in your product firmware or your computer operating system.
  • Page 3: Table Of Contents Contents Overview Contents Overview Get to Know Your NAS ......................... 12 Find and Access Your NAS ........................17 Web Configurator ..........................26 Video Tutorials ............................37 Storage Manager ..........................41 Control Panel: Overview ........................102 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing ....................105 Control Panel: Network ........................
  • Page 4: Table Of Contents Table of Contents Table of Contents Contents Overview ..........................3 Table of Contents ..........................4 Chapter 1 Get to Know Your NAS........................12 1.1 Overview ............................12 1.2 LEDs ..............................13 1.3 Hard Disks ............................14 1.4 SD Card ............................14 1.5 Power Button ........................... 14 1.6 COPY/SYNC Button ........................ Table of Contents 4.4 Back up files to the NAS using Windows File History ..............39 4.5 Restore a backup using Windows File History ................40 4.6 Remotely access files on the NAS using WebDAV ..............40 Chapter 5 Storage Manager..........................41 5.1 Overview ............................ Table of Contents 7.5.1 Share and Folder Names ....................121 7.5.2 Shared Folders Screen ....................... 121 7.5.3 Add a Share ......................... 123 7.5.4 Edit a Share .......................... 127 7.5.5 Shared Folder Information ....................128 7.5.6 Recycle Bin Screen ......................129 Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network ........................130 8.1 Overview ............................ Table of Contents Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service ........................159 10.1 Overview ............................. 159 10.2 What You Can Do ........................159 10.3 What You Need to Know ......................159 10.4 Media Server Screens ......................160 10.4.1 Media Server Share Publish Screen ................161 10.5 iTunes Server Screen ........................ Table of Contents 11.6 Technical Reference ........................189 11.6.1 Log Classes ........................190 11.6.2 Log Severity Levels ......................190 11.6.3 Log Messages ........................190 Chapter 12 Status Center ............................197 12.1 Overview ............................. 197 12.1.1 System Information ......................197 12.1.2 Network ..........................198 Chapter 13 App Center and Packages......................200 13.1 About Packages ......................... Table of Contents 14.3.1 Add a Download Task ...................... 235 14.3.2 Configure General Download Settings ................236 14.3.3 Configure the P2P Download Settings ................238 14.3.4 Configure the IP Filter Settings ..................240 14.3.5 Configure the Email notifications Settings ..............241 14.3.6 Select Files to Download .................... Table of Contents Chapter 17 File Browser, Photo, Music & Video ....................288 17.1 Overview ............................. 288 17.2 File Browser ..........................288 17.3 Photo ............................290 17.3.1 Exif and Google Maps (Photos) ..................293 17.3.2 Slideshow (Photos) ......................294 17.4 Music ............................294 17.4.1 Now Playing (Music) ...................... Table of Contents 20.8 Storage ............................326 20.9 Firmware ............................327 20.10 File Transfer ..........................327 20.11 Networking ..........................328 20.12 Some Features’ Screens Do Not Display ................328 20.13 Media Server Functions ......................329 20.14 Download Service Functions ....................331 20.15 Web Publishing ..........................
  • Page 13: Leds Chapter 1 Get to Know Your NAS Figure 1 Example of the NAS in a Home Network Above is the NAS in a home network. Users back up and share data on the NAS. The media player (A) plays the NAS’s media files on the TV. A USB hard drive (B) provides extra storage space and files are copied directly from the USB mass storage device to the NAS.
  • Page 14: Hard Disks Chapter 1 Get to Know Your NAS Table 2 LEDs (continued) COLOR STATUS DESCRIPTION HDD1/2 White The hard disk drive is connected properly to the NAS. This LED stays on white when the hard disk drive is in hibernation if you do not enable sleeping HDD LED blinking.
  • Page 15: Copy/Sync Button Chapter 1 Get to Know Your NAS Power On • Press the power button for one second to turn on the NAS. When the system is on and ready, you will hear one beep. Power Off Figure 2 Using the Power Button to Turn Off the NAS Press 1 Beep 2 Beeps... Chapter 1 Get to Know Your NAS • Press the RESET button until you hear two beeps. After the second beep, continue pressing the button for five more seconds, then release it. You will hear three quick beeps after you release the button. This resets the NAS to the factory default configuration.
  • Page 17: Find And Access Your Nas H A P T E R Find and Access Your NAS 2.1 Overview Use FindMe or the NAS Starter Utility to find and access the NAS and the files on it. The NAS Starter Utility supports Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7, and Windows 8. Click Help to open a Web Help page about the NAS Starter Utility screens. Chapter 2 Find and Access Your NAS Figure 6 Congratulations Figure 7 FindMe Welcome Screen Press the Copy button on the front of your NAS within 5 minutes. Figure 8 Press the Copy Button Click Admin Page to connect to the NAS login screen. NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 19: Nas Starter Utility Chapter 2 Find and Access Your NAS Figure 9 Click Admin Page Button Use the default username “admin” and password “1234” to log in. See Chapter 3 on page 26 for more on the web desktop. Figure 10 NAS Login Screen 2.3 NAS Starter Utility •... Chapter 2 Find and Access Your NAS Figure 11 NAS Starter Utility Desktop Icon Figure 12 NAS Starter Utility Windows System Tray Icon The first time you open the NAS Starter Utility the discovery screen appears as follows. Figure 13 NAS Seeker The following table describes the labels in this screen.
  • Page 21: Main Nas Starter Utility Screen Chapter 2 Find and Access Your NAS 2.3.2 Main NAS Starter Utility Screen The main NAS Starter Utility screen displays after you select an NAS in the NAS Seeker screen. Figure 14 NAS Starter Utility Main Screen The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 4 NAS Starter Utility Main Screen LABEL DESCRIPTION...
  • Page 22: Directory Of The Nas Chapter 2 Find and Access Your NAS Table 4 NAS Starter Utility Main Screen (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Shared Folder Click this to log into the NAS’s file directory in Windows Explorer. myZyxelCloud Click this to go to mycloud.zyxel.com to set up a free DDNS hostname for the NAS so you can connect to it easily from the Internet.
  • Page 23: Configure System Settings Chapter 2 Find and Access Your NAS Figure 17 Login Select a share on the NAS and the drive letter on your computer to which you want to map it. The shares that each user can select to map depends on the user’s permissions. For example, if share1 is private to user1, then only user1 is allowed to map share1. Chapter 2 Find and Access Your NAS Figure 19 NAS Starter Utility > Configuration > System Setting The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 5 NAS Starter Utility > Configuration > System Setting LABEL DESCRIPTION Server Name Specify a name to uniquely identify the NAS on your network. Chapter 2 Find and Access Your NAS Table 5 NAS Starter Utility > Configuration > System Setting (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Use from DHCP Domain Name System (DNS) is for mapping a domain name to its corresponding IP address server and vice versa. Select this if the NAS is automatically given DNS information from the ISP or a DHCP server in your network.
  • Page 30: Desktop Chapter 3 Web Configurator Figure 26 Reboot 3.3 Desktop The Desktop screen displays after you log in. Hover your mouse over the heading bar icons to display their names. NAS Series User’s Guide... Chapter 3 Web Configurator Figure 27 Desktop (Administrator) Status Zone Figure 28 Desktop (User) NAS Series User’s Guide... Chapter 3 Web Configurator Note: The Web Configurator session automatically times out if left idle for 15 minutes. Simply log back into the NAS if this happens to you. Desktop - click this to minimize all windows so you can see the desktop. Click it again to restore the windows to their previous state.
  • Page 33: Status Zone Chapter 3 Web Configurator 3.3.1 Status Zone The Status Zone displays icons for various features you can access. Table 6 Status Zone Icons ICON DESCRIPTION Click System Status to open the Status Center screen. System Status displays the health state of the NAS.
  • Page 34: Group Icons Chapter 3 Web Configurator Figure 29 Switch between Desktop Pages 3.3.3 Group Icons You can drag one icon to another one and make them a group as shown below. NAS Series User’s Guide... Chapter 3 Web Configurator Figure 30 Group Icons After the group is created, the default group name is “NewGroup”. You can click the icon to change the group name. In the following example, the group name is changed to Media. Figure 31 Change the Group Name You can also move the group to another page by right-clicking the icon as shown next.
  • Page 36: Move Icons Chapter 3 Web Configurator Figure 32 Move the Group Location 3.3.4 Move Icons You can move an icon to another page by right-clicking the icon as shown next. Figure 33 Move the Icon Location NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 39: Back Up Files To The Nas Using Windows File History Chapter 4 Video Tutorials When prompted for the username and password of share01, enter the login information for an existing user account with write access permission on share01 (for information on configuring user accounts and shares see Chapter 7 on page 105).
  • Page 40: Restore A Backup Using Windows File History Chapter 4 Video Tutorials https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xt1XdMAZisU&list=PL-69xFi03dP9zQn8gHGcVwf- X6ShkNU27&index=3 for how to use File History in Windows 10 to back up files from a computer to the NAS. 4.5 Restore a backup using Windows File History If you used Windows File History to back up files from your computer to the NAS, File History also allows you to restore the backup.
  • Page 43: External Volumes Screen Chapter 5 Storage Manager 5.2.2 External Volumes Screen Figure 35 Storage Manager > Overview > External Volumes The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 8 Storage Manager > Overview > External Volumes LABEL DESCRIPTION Volume Details include the currently used percentage of the volume. Used - green on the circle represents the volume’s percentage of used capacity in a healthy state.
  • Page 44: Raid Types Chapter 5 Storage Manager • External volumes (built on the external storage devices attached to the NAS) Internal Volumes Table 9 Internal Volumes OPTION DESCRIPTION Volume Allocates all the available space to the volume. Provides better performance. Volume on Disk Allows you to create multiple volumes on a disk group.
  • Page 45: Volume Screens Chapter 5 Storage Manager Change RAID Type You can change the following RAID types without losing stored data. This can help you manage your storage capacity as you add more disks. Table 11 Internal Volumes RAID TYPE WHAT YOU CAN CHANGE IT TO Basic RAID 1 RAID 1... Chapter 5 Storage Manager Figure 36 Internal Storage Volume The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 13 Storage Manager > Internal Storage > Volume LABEL DESCRIPTION Volume Use this section to configure and manage volumes built on hard disks directly. Create Click this to format internal hard disks and create a new volume. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 13 Storage Manager > Internal Storage > Volume (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Delete Click Delete to remove the selected volume. A pop-up screen displays. Type "DELETE" in the text box and click Delete to remove it. Note: If you delete a volume, all data in the volume disks is erased. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 13 Storage Manager > Internal Storage > Volume (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Status This field shows whether the volume is normal, degraded, crashed, Creating, Deleting, Expanding, Repairing or Changing the RAID type. Normal: A green circle represents a healthy volume. Degraded: An orange circle represents a degraded RAID 1 volume. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 13 Storage Manager > Internal Storage > Volume (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Delete Click Delete to remove the selected volume. A pop-up screen displays. Type "DELETE" in the text box and click Delete to remove it. Note: If you delete a volume, all data in the volume disks is erased. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Note: Create a volume on a disk group instead if you want to have multiple volumes on a disk. See Section 5.3.1.7 on page 62 for more information. Moreover, the maximum size for one volume is 16TB. Step 1 Select Disks and RAID Type Figure 37 Create Volume: Select Disks and RAID Type The following table describes the labels in this screen. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 14 Create Volume: Select Disks and RAID Type (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION 2. Choose a Select a RAID type from the drop-down list box. The corresponding space allocations of RAID type available size, data protection area, and wasted size display. Use Basic with one disk. Chapter 5 Storage Manager The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 15 Create Volume: Summary LABEL DESCRIPTION Disk Selected This field displays the hard disks you have selected. RAID Type This field displays the type of RAID on which the volume will be built. Volume Type This field displays the type of the volume, Single volume on RAID (no disk group). Chapter 5 Storage Manager The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 16 Manage Volume LABEL DESCRIPTION Repair RAID Select this to repair a degraded RAID volume. Expand the Select this to add one or more disks to a JBOD, RAID 1 or RAID 5 volume. You can add a disk to volume by increase an array’s capacity or to use as a hot-spare (standby). Chapter 5 Storage Manager Step 1 Select Disks Figure 41 Manage Volume (Repair RAID): Select Disks The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 17 Manage Volume (Repair RAID): Select Disks LABEL DESCRIPTION This shows the name of the volume you have selected. Status This field displays the status of the volume. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 17 Manage Volume (Repair RAID): Select Disks (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Next Click Next to go to the next step. Cancel Click Cancel to close the screen without saving any settings. Step 2 Summary Use this screen to review the settings you configured in the last step. Figure 42 Manage Volume (Repair RAID): Summary The following table describes the labels in this screen. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Figure 43 Manage Volume (Expand the volume by adding disk(s)) Step 1 Select Disks Figure 44 Manage Volume (Expand the volume by adding disk(s)): Select Disks The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 19 Manage Volume (Expand the volume by adding disk(s)): Select Disks LABEL DESCRIPTION This shows the name of the volume you have selected. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 19 Manage Volume (Expand the volume by adding disk(s)): Select Disks (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Status This field displays the status of the disk. Disk Name This field displays the name of the disk. Size This field displays the total capacity of the disk. Model Name This field displays the model of the disk. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 20 Manage Volume (Expand the volume by adding disk(s)): Summary (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Disk Selected This field displays the hard disks you have selected. Volume This field displays the total available size of the volume. Capacity Back Click Back to go to the previous step. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Figure 47 Manage Volume (Expand the volume with unallocated disk space) The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 21 Manage Volume (Expand the volume with unallocated disk space) LABEL DESCRIPTION Action This field displays for what the configuration is. Volume Name This field displays the name of the volume. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Figure 48 Manage Volume (Change RAID Type) Step 1 Select Disks and RAID Type Figure 49 Manage Volume (Change RAID Type): Select Disks and RAID Type NAS Series User’s Guide... Chapter 5 Storage Manager The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 22 Manage Volume (Change RAID Type): Select Disks and RAID Type LABEL DESCRIPTION This shows the name of the volume you have selected. Status This field displays the status of the volume. RAID Type This field displays the type of RAID on which the volume is built. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Step 2 Summary Figure 50 Manage Volume (Change RAID Type): Summary The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 23 Manage Volume (Change RAID Type): Summary LABEL DESCRIPTION Action This field displays for what the configuration is. Volume Name This field displays the name of the volume. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Figure 51 Create a Volume on an Existing Disk Group Step 1 Create Volume Figure 52 Create a Volume on an Existing Disk Group: Create Volume NAS Series User’s Guide... Chapter 5 Storage Manager The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 24 Create a Volume on Disk Group: Create Volume LABEL DESCRIPTION Disk group information Name This field displays the name of the disk group. Unallocated capacity This field displays the percentage of the available size, the size in use, and total size of the disk group. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 25 Create a Volume on Disk Group: Summary (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Back Click Back to go to the previous screen. Apply Click Apply to save the settings. Cancel Click Cancel to close the screen without saving any settings. 5.3.1.9 Create a Volume on a New Disk Group Select New disk group to create a disk group and then a volume on the disk group. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Step 1 Select Disks and RAID Type Figure 55 Create Volume on a New Disk Group: Select Disks and RAID Type The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 26 Create Volume on Disk Group: Select Disks and RAID Type LABEL DESCRIPTION Select disks... Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 26 Create Volume on Disk Group: Select Disks and RAID Type (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Choose a RAID Select a RAID type from the drop-down list box. The corresponding space allocations of type available size, data protection area, and wasted size display. Use Basic with one disk. Chapter 5 Storage Manager The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 27 Create Volume on Disk Group: Create Volume LABEL DESCRIPTION Step 2. Create Volume Disk group information Name This field displays the name of the disk group. Unallocated capacity This field displays the percentage of the available size, the size in used, and total size of the disk group. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 28 Create Volume on Disk Group: Summary (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Volume Type This field displays the type of the volume, Multiple volumes on RAID (Disk Group X) where Disk Group X is the disk group’s name. Volume Name This field displays the name of the volume.
  • Page 70: Disk Group Screens Chapter 5 Storage Manager 5.3.2 Disk Group Screens Use the Disk Group screen to configure and manage disk groups. Click Storage Manager > Internal Storage > Disk Group screen to open the screen as shown. Figure 59 Disk Group The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 30 Disk Group LABEL DESCRIPTION... Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 30 Disk Group (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Status This field shows the status of the hot-spare disk. This field shows the name of the disk group and whether it is normal, degraded, crashed, Creating, Deleting, Expanding, Repairing or Changing the RAID type. Normal: A green circle represents a healthy volume. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Step 1 Select Disks and RAID Type Figure 60 Create Disk Group: Select Disks and RAID Type The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 31 Create Disk Group: Select Disks and RAID Type LABEL DESCRIPTION Select disks... Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 31 Create Disk Group: Select Disks and RAID Type (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Choose a RAID Select a RAID type from the drop-down list box. The corresponding space allocations of type available size, data protection area, and wasted size display. Use Basic with one disk.
  • Page 74: Hard Disk Screens Chapter 5 Storage Manager The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 32 Create Disk Group: Summary LABEL DESCRIPTION Disk Selected This field displays the hard disk(s) on which the RAID array will be built. RAID Type This field displays the type of RAID on which the volume will be built. Volume Type This field displays the type of the volume, Multiple volumes on RAID (Disk Group X) where Disk Group X is the disk group’s name. Chapter 5 Storage Manager 5.3.3.1 S.M.A.R.T Use the S.M.A.R.T screens to view hard disk health indicators. Self Monitoring, Analysis, and Reporting Technology (S.M.A.R.T) detects and reports the reliability of hard disks using standard indicators (called “attributes”), to help you anticipate possible disk failures. Note: The available S.M.A.R.T information varies from one hard disk vendor to another.
  • Page 76: Smart Info Chapter 5 Storage Manager The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 34 S.M.A.R.T Overview LABEL DESCRIPTION This shows the current status of the hard disk (a green circle with a check mark indicates healthy). This shows the overall health of the hard disk based on S.M.A.R.T diagnostics. This shows the temperature of the hard disk in degrees celsius ( C) and fahrenheit ( Status... Chapter 5 Storage Manager Figure 64 S.M.A.R.T Info The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 35 S.M.A.R.T Info LABEL DESCRIPTION This is the identification number used to tag a hard disk attribute. This is standard across all S.M.A.R.T-enabled storage devices. However it depends on the storage vendor which attributes it will allow S.M.A.R.T to diagnose. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 35 S.M.A.R.T Info LABEL DESCRIPTION Updated This indicates when the hard drive updates the value for this attribute. • Always means the hard drive updates this attribute during normal operation and during offline activities. • Offline means the hard drive only updates this attribute when no one is accessing the hard drive. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 36 S.M.A.R.T. Attributes (continued) ATTRIBUTE BETTER DESCRIPTION NAME Spin Retry Count This is the total number of spin start retry attempts. This is the number of attempts to spin up to fully operational speed the hard drive has made when the first attempt did not succeed.
  • Page 80: Iscsi Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 36 S.M.A.R.T. Attributes (continued) ATTRIBUTE BETTER DESCRIPTION NAME Flying Height This is the height of the hard drive’s read/write heads above the disk surface. Spin High Current This is the quantity of high current used to spin up the drive. Spin Buzz This is the number of buzz routines to spin up the drive.
  • Page 81: Iscsi Luns Screens Chapter 5 Storage Manager The configuration steps are as follows: Create an iSCSI LUN Volume for the iSCSI target in NAS1. Configure NAS1 as an iSCSI target. Figure 65 iSCSI Connection Example NAS1 VOL1 5.4.1 iSCSI LUNs Screens This section enables you to create, up-map, and delete LUN volumes, as well as display the volumes’ information. Chapter 5 Storage Manager The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 37 Storage Manager > iSCSI > iSCSI LUNs LABEL DESCRIPTION Create Click this to create a new LUN on a volume. See more details on Section 5.4.1.1 on page Un-map Click this to open the following screen where you can up-map the LUN from the iSCSI target. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 37 Storage Manager > iSCSI > iSCSI LUNs (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Delete Click this to open the following screen where you can delete an existing LUN. Key in DELETE and click Delete to remove an existing LUN. Click Cancel to close this screen. Info Click this item to check detailed information about the LUN. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Step 1 Set up LUN Properties Figure 67 Creating a New LUN: Set up LUN Properties The following table describes the labels in these screens. Table 38 Create a New LUN: Set up LUN Properties LABEL DESCRIPTION Name Type a LUN name in this field.
  • Page 85: Iscsi Targets Screens Chapter 5 Storage Manager Figure 68 Creating a New LUN: Summary The following table describes the labels in these screens. Table 39 Create a New LUN: Summary LABEL DESCRIPTION Name Displays the name of the LUN. Location Displays the name of the volume the LUN is located in. Capacity Displays the size of the LUN. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Figure 69 Storage Manager > iSCSI > iSCSI Targets The following table describes the labels in these screens. Table 40 Storage Manager > iSCSI > iSCSI Targets LABEL DESCRIPTION Create Click this to create a new iSCSI target. See more details on Section 5.4.2.1 on page Edit... Maximum send segment bytes - Displays the maximum data segment length in bytes that the iSCSI target can send. This feature is for the NAS326 only. Mapped iSCSI Luns - Displays the LUNs mapped with the target. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Step 1 Set up Target Properties Figure 70 Creating a new Target: Set up Target Properties The following table describes the labels in these screens. Table 41 Create a New Target: Set up Target Properties LABEL DESCRIPTION Name Enter the name of your iSCSI target. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 41 Create a New Target: Set up Target Properties (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Allowed initiator The allowed initiator name is in the iSCSI Qualified Name (IQN) format. (IQN) To check the initiator name, open the iSCSI Initiator program on your computer. Select the Configuration tab and you can see the initiator name as shown in the following screen. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 41 Create a New Target: Set up Target Properties (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable mutual Mutual CHAP is a two-way authentication between the iSCSI initiator and the target. If the CHAP initiator has configured CHAP authentication, the target must enter the secret that’s set up by the initiator when attempting connection. Chapter 5 Storage Manager The following table describes the labels in these screens. Table 42 Create a New Target: Map iSCSI LUNs LABEL DESCRIPTION Status Displays the status of the iSCSI LUN(s). LUN Name Displays the LUN name. Capacity Displays the size of the iSCSI LUN(s). Back Click Back to go to the previous step. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 43 Create a New Target: Summary (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Apply Click Apply to save the settings. Cancel Click Cancel to close the screen without saving any settings. 5.4.2.2 Edit a Created Target You can edit iSCSI target settings such as allowed initiator (IQN), CHAP, and CRC checksum after you create a target. Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 44 Storage Manager > iSCSI > iSCSI Targets > Edit > Properties (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION CHAP Username - The user name is for the initiator to authenticate the initiator when attempting connection. Password - The password is for the target to authenticate the initiator when attempting connection. Chapter 5 Storage Manager The following table describes the labels in these screens. Table 45 Storage Manager > iSCSI > iSCSI Targets > Edit > Map iSCSI LUNs LABEL DESCRIPTION Status Displays the status of the iSCSI LUN. LUN Name Displays the iSCSI LUN name.
  • Page 95: External Storage Maximum send Select the maximum send segments allowed in bytes. segment bytes Four options are applied: 262144, 65536, 9182, 4092. Note: This feature is for the NAS326 only. Apply Click Apply to save your changes. Cancel Click Cancel to close the screen without saving any settings. Chapter 5 Storage Manager The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 47 Storage Manager > External Storage LABEL DESCRIPTION Format Click this to format the connected USB disk. Section 5.5.3 on page 97 for more information. Edit Click this to modify the volume name.
  • Page 97: Format The External Volume Chapter 5 Storage Manager Table 47 Storage Manager > External Storage (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Capacity This field shows total disk size, the percentage of the volume being used and the percentage that is available. If the status is Unsupported, the capacity displays “Unknown”. If the status is Unformatted, the capacity displays “--”.
  • Page 98: Technical Reference Chapter 5 Storage Manager 5.6 Technical Reference This section contains background on JBOD and the RAID levels used on the NAS. JBOD • Minimum number of disks: 1 • Total capacity: Sum of the member disks • Advantages: Maximum storage capacity, especially for disks of mixed sizes. Flexibility (you can add disks to the JBOD •... Chapter 5 Storage Manager RAID 0 capacity is the size of the sum of the capacities of the disks in the RAID 0. For example, if you have four disks of sizes 1 TB, 2 TB, 3 TB and 2 TB respectively in one RAID 0 array, then the maximum capacity is 8 TB. Chapter 5 Storage Manager the array is the capacity of the smallest drive (1TB, 1TB, 2TB, 2TB) * (Number of disks - 2) = 1TB * (4-2) = 2TB. The remaining space (2 TB) is unused. Table 52 RAID 6 RAID 6 DISK 1 DISK 2...
  • Page 101: Raid And Data Protection Chapter 5 Storage Manager stripped across three disks (A1 to A3 in the first strip for example) with parity information (AP) on the fourth disk. Table 54 RAID 5 DISK 1 DISK 2 DISK 3 DISK 4 The capacity of a RAID 5 array is the smallest disk in the RAID set multiplied by one less than the number of disks in the RAID set.
  • Page 102: Control Panel: Overview H A P T E R Control Panel: Overview 6.1 Overview This chapter discusses the Control Panel screens. Use the Control Panel screens to configure administrator settings. The Control Panel icon displays on the Desktop when you log in with an administrator account. Chapter 6 Control Panel: Overview Figure 78 Control Panel > Overview The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 55 Control Panel > Overview LABEL DESCRIPTION Privilege and Sharing Users Use this section to display and manage a list of user accounts created on the NAS. Groups Use this section to display and manage a list of groups created on the NAS. Chapter 6 Control Panel: Overview Table 55 Control Panel > Overview (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION System Server Name Use this section to specify the NAS’s server and workgroup names. Date/Time Use this section to set up date/time and choose a time zone for the NAS. FW Upgrade Use this section to upgrade the NAS firmware.
  • Page 105: Control Panel: Privilege And Sharing H A P T E R Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing 7.1 Overview This chapter introduces the Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing screens. 7.2 What You Can Do • Use the Users screens (Section 7.3 on page 105) to display and manage a list of user accounts created on the NAS.
  • Page 106: User Icons Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing User Icons The following table describes the user icons. Table 56 User Icons ICON DESCRIPTION This icon is for an administrator account. This icon is for a user account. This icon is for a myZyxelCloud account. Usernames Enter a username from one to 32 characters.
  • Page 107: Users Screen Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing pc-guest If you give the pc-guest user read-only access or full access to files in a share. The share becomes a public share. Everyone on the network can use Windows Explorer to access a public share without a login user name and password.
  • Page 108: Add An Account Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Table 57 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Users (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Username This field displays the username of each account. Description This field displays the description of each account. 7.3.2 Add an Account Use this screen to create a NAS user account with NAS access password. Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Table 58 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Users > Add a User: General Settings (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Next Click this to go to the next step. Cancel Click this to return to the previous screen without saving. Step 2 Groups Figure 81 Control Panel >... Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Step 3 Shared Folder Access Figure 82 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Users > Add a User: Shared Folder Access The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 60 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Users > Add a User: Shared Folder Access LABEL DESCRIPTION Shared Folder... Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Step 4 Quota Figure 83 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Users > Add a User: Quota The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 61 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Users > Add a User: Quota LABEL DESCRIPTION Volume Name...
  • Page 112: Edit An Account Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Step 5 Summary Figure 84 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Users > Add a User: Summary Use this screen to view your account settings. Click Back to return to the previous step. Click Apply to save your changes.
  • Page 113: User Info Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Click General Settings, Groups, Shared Folder Access or Quota to edit the account settings. Refer to Section 7.3.2 on page 108 for more information on the screens. Click Apply to save your changes. Click Cancel to return to the previous screen without saving.
  • Page 114: Groups Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing 7.4 Groups Use the Groups screens to create and manage groups. You can assign users to groups and grant individual groups access rights to specific shares. Group Names Enter a group name from 1 to 32 characters. The first character must be alphabetical (case insensitive, [A-Z a-z]);...
  • Page 115: Add A Group Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Figure 87 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Groups The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 63 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Groups LABEL DESCRIPTION Add Group Click this to open a screen where you can configure a new group. Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Step 1 General Settings Figure 88 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Groups > Add a Group: General Settings The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 64 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Groups > Add a Group: General Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Group Name... Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Step 2 Members Figure 89 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Groups > Add a Group: Members The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 65 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Groups > Add a Group: Members LABEL DESCRIPTION Type... Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Step 3 Shared Folder Access Figure 90 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Groups > Add a Group: Shared Folder Access The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 66 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Groups > Add a Group: Shared Folder Access LABEL DESCRIPTION Shared Folder...
  • Page 119: Edit A Group Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Step 4 Summary Figure 91 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Groups > Add a Group: Summary Use this screen to view your group settings. Click Back to return to the previous step. Click Apply to save your changes.
  • Page 120: Group Information Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Click General Settings, Members, or Shared Folder Access to edit the group settings. Refer to Section 7.4.2 on page 115 for more information on the screens. Click Apply to save your changes. Click Cancel to return to the previous screen without saving.
  • Page 121: Shared Folders Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing 7.5 Shared Folders A share is a set of access permissions mapped to a specific folder on a volume. It is equivalent to the Windows concept of a shared folder. You can map a share to a network drive for easy and familiar file transfer for Windows users. Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Figure 94 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Shared Folders The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 68 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Shared Folders LABEL DESCRIPTION Add Share Click this to create a new share.
  • Page 123: Add A Share Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Table 68 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Shared Folders (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Type This field displays the type icons. represents built-in or user-created or predefined shares on the internal hard drives. Predefined shares include music, video, and photo, always exist as long as there is a volume. Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Table 69 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Shared Folders > Add Share: General Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Location You should have already created volumes (a single accessible storage area with a single file system) on the NAS. Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Table 70 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Shared Folders > Add Share: Shared Folder Access LABEL DESCRIPTION No Access Click the check box to block access (users/groups cannot read, modify, nor execute) to all files contained within this share. Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Table 71 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Shared Folders > Add Share: Shared Folder Publishing LABEL DESCRIPTION Publish to Web This option is available when you enable the Web Publish (Section 10.8 on page 168).
  • Page 127: Edit A Share Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Figure 99 Control Panel > Privilege and Sharing > Shared Folders > Add Share: Summary: Access Right Click Back to return to the previous step. Click Apply to save your changes. Click Cancel to return to the previous screen without saving.
  • Page 128: Shared Folder Information Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing Click General Settings, Shared Folder Access or Shared Folder Publishing to edit the share settings. Refer Section 7.5.3 on page 123 for more information on the screens. Click Apply to save your changes. Click Cancel to return to the previous screen without saving.
  • Page 129: Recycle Bin Screen Chapter 7 Control Panel: Privilege and Sharing 7.5.6 Recycle Bin Screen Use this screen to periodically clean up items in all recycle bins. Recycle Bins Recycle bins in the NAS help users recover accidentally deleted files or folders in the shares. When you delete an item, a recycle folder is created within the share to hold the deleted item.
  • Page 130: Control Panel: Network H A P T E R Control Panel: Network 8.1 Overview This chapter discusses the Control Panel > Network screens. Use the Network screens to configure network settings. 8.2 What You Can Do • Use the TCP/IP screens (Section 8.4 on page 131) to configure the NAS’s TCP/IP network connection settings such as the IP addresses.
  • Page 131: Tcp/Ip Screens Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network 8.4 TCP/IP Screens Use the TCP/IP screens to have the NAS use a dynamic or static IP address, to configure its subnet mask, default gateway, PPPoE and DNS servers, and to test the network connection. 8.4.1 Configure General TCP/IP Settings Click Control Panel >...
  • Page 132: Configure Network Interface Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Table 74 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > General Settings (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Apply Click this to save your TCP/IP configurations. After you click Apply, the NAS restarts. Wait until you see the Login screen or until the NAS fully boots and then use the NAS Starter Utility to rediscover it. Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 75 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > Network Interface LABEL DESCRIPTION Create This button is available only on the NAS which has multiple Ethernet ports. Click it to open the following screen to set up a port trunking. Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Figure 106 Creating a Port Trunking The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 76 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > Network Interface > Create LABEL DESCRIPTION Automatically Select this option to have the interface get IP address information automatically. If no IP address information is assigned, the NAS uses Auto-IP to assign itself an IP address and subnet mask. Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Figure 107 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > Network Interface > LAN1: IPv4 The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 77 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > Network Interface > LAN1: IPv4 LABEL DESCRIPTION Automatically... Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Figure 108 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > Network Interface > LAN1: IPv6 The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 78 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > Network Interface > LAN1: IPv6 LABEL DESCRIPTION Configure IPv6...
  • Page 137: Configure Web Configurator Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Figure 109 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > Network Interface > PPPoE The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 79 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > Network Interface > PPPoE LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable PPPoE to...
  • Page 138: Configure Network Diagnosis Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Figure 110 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > Web Configurator The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 80 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > Web Configurator LABEL DESCRIPTION HTTP connection Port Number Specify the port number of HTTP connection.
  • Page 139: Upnp Port Mapping Screens Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Figure 111 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > Network Diagnosis The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 81 Control Panel > Network > TCP/IP > Network Diagnosis LABEL DESCRIPTION Host Select a specific host to perform the diagnosis. Ping Click this to test the network connection.
  • Page 140: Upnp And The Nas's Ip Address Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network In the above example, UPnP creates a firewall rule and NAT port forwarding mapping to send FTP traffic (using TCP port number 21) from the public IP address a.b.c.d to the NAS’s private IP address of 192.168.1.20.
  • Page 141: Upnp And Security Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network 8.5.2 UPnP and Security UPnP’s automated nature makes it easier to use than manually configuring firewall and NAT rules, but it is also less secure. Using UPnP may make your network more susceptible to snooping and hacking attacks.
  • Page 142: Configure Upnp Port Mapping Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Figure 115 Network > UPnP Port Mapping > UPnP Router The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 82 Network > UPnP Port Mapping > UPnP Router LABEL DESCRIPTION Status This displays whether a UPnP router is found. IP address This displays the IP address of the UPnP router. Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Figure 116 Network > UPnP Port Mapping > UPnP Port Mapping The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 83 Network > UPnP Port Mapping > UPnP Port Mapping LABEL DESCRIPTION Click this to add a service and create a port mapping rule. See more details on Section 8.5.5.1 on page 144. Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Table 83 Network > UPnP Port Mapping > UPnP Port Mapping (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION WAN Port When you enable one of the NAS’s services, specify the port number (1~65,535) Internet uses need to use to connect to the Internet gateway’s WAN port in order to access the service on the NAS.
  • Page 145: Terminal Screen Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Note: The default of the WAN port for the newly created service displays -1. Specify the port number from 1 to 65,535, or you cannot access that service from the Internet. 8.6 Terminal Screen Use this screen to enable or disable Telnet and SSH (Secure SHell) access to the NAS. Telnet or SSH access lets you use line commands to configure the NAS.
  • Page 146: Dydns Screen Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Figure 117 Control Panel > Network > Terminal The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 84 Control Panel > Network > Terminal LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Telnet Select this to enable Telnet access to the NAS. Clear it to not allow Telnet access to the NAS. Service To use Telnet, log in as “admin”... Chapter 8 Control Panel: Network Figure 118 Control Panel > Network > DyDNS The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 85 Control Panel > Network > DyDNS LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable DyDNS Select this to use dynamic DNS. You need to have registered a dynamic DNS account with a service provider such as www.dyndns.org.
  • Page 148: Control Panel: System H A P T E R Control Panel: System 9.1 Overview This chapter gives an overview of the various features included in the system screens. 9.2 What You Can Do • Use the Server Name screen (Section 9.4 on page 149) to specify the NAS’s server and workgroup names.
  • Page 149: Server Name Screen Chapter 9 Control Panel: System 9.4 Server Name Screen Click Control Panel > System > Server Name to open the following screen. Use this screen to configure your CIFS settings. In this screen you can set your server name and specify if your NAS is a part of a workgroup.
  • Page 150: Date/Time Screen Chapter 9 Control Panel: System 9.5 Date/Time Screen Use this screen to select a time zone and a time server from which your NAS can get the time and date. This time is then used in NAS logs and alerts. 9.5.1 Configure Date/Time Click the Control Panel >...
  • Page 151: Configure Daylight Saving Time Chapter 9 Control Panel: System Table 87 Control Panel > System > Date/Time (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Date/time This field displays the last updated date and time from the time server or the last date and time configured manually. When you set Date/time setting to Manually, enter the new date and time in this field and then click Apply.
  • Page 152: Fw Upgrade Screens Chapter 9 Control Panel: System The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 88 Control Panel > System > Date/Time > Daylight Saving Time LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable daylight Select this option to use daylight saving time. saving Auto daylight Select this option to have the NAS automatically retrieve Daylight Saving Time settings from saving the Internet.
  • Page 153: Manual Firmware Upgrade Chapter 9 Control Panel: System Figure 122 Control Panel > System > FW Upgrade > Latest Firmware Check The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 89 Control Panel > System > FW Upgrade > Latest Firmware Check LABEL DESCRIPTION Model Name...
  • Page 154: Ssl Screens Chapter 9 Control Panel: System Figure 123 Control Panel > System > FW Upgrade > Manual Firmware Upgrade The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 90 Control Panel > System> FW Upgrade > Manual Firmware Upgrade LABEL DESCRIPTION Browse Click this to find the file on your computer.
  • Page 155: Modify The Existing Certificate Chapter 9 Control Panel: System Figure 124 Control Panel > System > SSL > Install System CA 9.7.2 Modify the Existing Certificate Click Control Panel > System > SSL > Modify the Existing Certificate to show the following screen. Click Edit, then follow the on-screen instructions for creating a public key certificate signed by the NAS as the local certificate authority.
  • Page 156: Create A Certificate Chapter 9 Control Panel: System Figure 125 Control Panel > System > SSL > Modify the Existing Certificate 9.7.3 Create a Certificate Click Control Panel > System > SSL > Create Certificate to show the following screen. Click Create, then follow the on-screen instructions to install a certificate that has been authorized by a third-party certificate authority. Chapter 9 Control Panel: System Figure 126 Control Panel > System > SSL > Create a Certificate Edit or Create a Certificate When you click the Edit button in the SSL > Modify the Existing Certificate screen, a screen opens to allow you to make adjustments to the NAS’s public key certificate. Chapter 9 Control Panel: System Figure 127 Maintenance > SSL > Create or Edit a Certificate The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 91 Maintenance > SSL > Create or Edit a Certificate LABEL DESCRIPTION Common Name This name describes the certificate’s origin, either in the form of an IP address or a domain name.
  • Page 160: Media Server Screens Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Figure 128 FTP Client Example Media Server The media server feature lets anyone on your network play video, music, and photos from the NAS (without having to copy them to another computer). The NAS can function as a DLNA-compliant media server and/or an iTunes server.
  • Page 161: Media Server Share Publish Screen Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Click Control Panel > Service > Media Server to open the following screen. Use this screen to view the media server’s status and rebuild the media server database. Figure 129 Control Panel > Service > Media Server > Media Server The following table describes the labels in this screen.
  • Page 162: Itunes Server Screen Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Figure 130 Control Panel > Service > Media Server > Share Publish The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 93 Control Panel > Service > Media Server > Share Publish LABEL DESCRIPTION All Publish Select this to have the media server share a share’s media files with media clients.
  • Page 163: Ftp Screens Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Figure 131 Control Panel > Service > iTunes Server The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 94 Control Panel > Service > iTunes Server LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable iTunes Check this to let anyone on your network use iTunes to play music files in the published shares. Server Apply Click this to save your changes.
  • Page 164: Transfer Settings Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Figure 132 Control Panel > Service > FTP > General Settings The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 95 Control Panel > Service > FTP > General Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable FTP You can use FTP to send files to the NAS or get files from the NAS. Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Figure 133 Control Panel > Service > FTP > Transfer Settings The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 96 Control Panel > Service > FTP > Transfer Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Port range for data Select to Use the default port range.
  • Page 166: Character Set Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service 10.6.3 Character Set Click Control Panel > Service > FTP > Character Set to open the following screen. Figure 134 Control Panel > Service > FTP > Character Set The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 97 Control Panel >...
  • Page 167: How To Use Netdrive With The Nas Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Figure 135 Control Panel > Service > WebDAV The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 98 Control Panel > Service > WebDAV LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable WebDAV Select this to allow remote users to work with files stored on the NAS. Edit the access privileges in Privilege and Sharing >...
  • Page 168: Web Publishing Screens Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Figure 136 NetDrive Example Name the drive and specify the URL of the share to access. Select SSL if the NAS forces HTTPs use. Specify your user name and password for accessing the share on the NAS. Figure 137 NetDrive Add Drive 10.8 Web Publishing Screens Use this screen to turn web publishing on or off and select shares to publish.
  • Page 169: Share Publish Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Figure 138 Control Panel > Service > Web Publishing > Status The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 99 Control Panel > Service > Web Publishing > Status LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Web Select this option to turn on web publishing to let people access files in the published shares Publishing using a web browser, without having to log into the Web Configurator.
  • Page 170: How To Configure Web Publishing Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Figure 139 Control Panel > Service > Web Publishing > Share Publish The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 100 Control Panel > Service > Web Publishing > Share Publish LABEL DESCRIPTION Publish Select the share(s) to publish for web browser access. Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Figure 140 Control Panel > Service > Web Publishing > Status (Example) Figure 141 Control Panel > Service > Web Publishing > Share Publish (Example) Now open your web browser and type in the address of the NAS’s FamilyPhotos web page. In this example, the NAS’s IP address is 192.168.1.57, and the name of the web-published share is FamilyPhotos.
  • Page 172: Print Server Screen Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Figure 142 Browsing to an NAS Share Example • Click a file’s link to open the file. • Right-click a file’s link and select Save Target As.. to save a copy of the file. • Click a label in the heading row to sort the files by that criteria. •...
  • Page 173: Print Server Edit Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 101 Control Panel > Service > Print Server LABEL DESCRIPTION Edit Select a printer and click this to change the name the NAS uses for the printer. Delete Select a printer and click this to remove a printer from the NAS’s printer list. Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Note: You may need to configure any firewalls between the NAS and the syslog clients in order to let the syslog traffic go to the NAS. Click Control Panel > Service > Syslog Server to open the following screen. Figure 145 Control Panel >...
  • Page 175: Technical Reference Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Table 103 Control Panel > Service > Syslog Server (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Path Use this if you want to further specify a folder within the share. This field displays the share folder’s path. Type the location of the folder using forward slashes as branch separators or use Browse to find or create a folder on the NAS.
  • Page 176: Web Publishing Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service • Publish shares to let others play the contained media files. • The media server is a convenient way to share files you download. • Hardware-based media players can also play the files. See Supported Media Server Content Formats on page 335 for the supported multimedia file formats.
  • Page 177: Printer Sharing Chapter 10 Control Panel: Service Accessing Web-published Shares from the Internet You need to use a public address to access the NAS’s web-published shares from the Internet. If your NAS uses a private IP address, you may need to use the public IP address of your Internet gateway and configure NAT or port forwarding on your Internet gateway and possibly firewall rules in order to let people access the NAS’s web-published shares from the Internet.
  • Page 178: Control Panel: Maintenance H A P T E R Control Panel: Maintenance 11.1 Overview This chapter discusses the Maintenance screens. The Maintenance screens allow you to manage system configurations. 11.2 What You Can Do • Use the Power screen (Section 11.3 on page 178) to configure power settings for the NAS, including power saving, UPS, power on/off after power failure, power on/off schedule, and Wake on LAN. Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Figure 148 Control Panel > Maintenance > Power > Power Management The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 104 Control Panel > Maintenance > Power > Power Management LABEL DESCRIPTION Power Management Turn off hard Enter the number of minutes to wait when the NAS is idle before spinning the hard disks down to disk(s)
  • Page 180: Power On/Off Schedule Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Table 104 Control Panel > Maintenance > Power > Power Management (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Keep Former Select this option to have the NAS automatically restart only if it was operating when the power Status failed. The NAS remains off if it was already off when the power failed. Always Power Select this option to keep the NAS operating as much of the time as possible.
  • Page 181: Add The Power Control Schedule Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Table 105 Control Panel > Maintenance > Power > Power On/Off Schedule (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION This table lists the power on, power off, and reboot schedules. For example, you could have one schedule to turn the NAS on every morning, at 8:00, another schedule to turn it off every evening at 18:00, and a third schedule to have it reboot every Friday at 14:00.
  • Page 182: Log Screen Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Table 106 Control Panel > Maintenance > Power > Power On/Off Schedule: Add (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Execute Time Enter the time, day, and/or day of the month as appropriate for this power control schedule (hh:mm) entry.
  • Page 183: Log Report Configuration Screen Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Figure 151 Control Panel > Service > Maintenance > Log The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 107 Control Panel > Service > Maintenance > Log LABEL DESCRIPTION Refresh Click this to update the log display. Purge all Logs Click this to erase all logs from the NAS.
  • Page 184: Email Setting Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance • Use the Syslog Server Setting screen (Section 11.4.4 on page 185) to enable the syslog server and select the categories to include in the log report. 11.4.2 Email Setting You can enable and configure e-mail alerts from the NAS. In the Log Report Configuration screen, click the Email Setting tab to open the following screen.
  • Page 185: Report Setting Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance 11.4.3 Report Setting You can have the NAS email you alerts and reports. In the Log Report Configuration screen, click the Report Setting tab to open the following screen. Figure 153 Control Panel > Service > Maintenance > Log > Report Config: Report Setting The following table describes the labels in this screen.
  • Page 186: Configuration Backup Screens Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Figure 154 Control Panel > Service > Maintenance > Log > Report Config: Syslog Server Setting The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 110 Control Panel > Service > Maintenance > Log > Report Config: Syslog Server Setting LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Syslog...
  • Page 187: Configuration Restore Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Figure 155 Control Panel > Service > Maintenance > Configuration Backup 11.5.2 Configuration Restore Click Control Panel > Service > Maintenance > Configuration Backup > Configuration Restore to open the following screen. Restore Configuration allows you to upload a new or previously saved configuration file from your computer to your NAS.
  • Page 188: Factory Reset Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Figure 156 Control Panel > Service > Maintenance > Configuration Backup > Configuration Restore Click Browse to locate a previously-saved configuration file. Then click Restore to load the previously- saved configuration file to the NAS. This replaces your current NAS configuration settings with the settings in the previously-saved configuration file.
  • Page 189: Technical Reference Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Figure 157 Control Panel > Service > Maintenance > Configuration Backup > Factory Reset Click Restore Factory Defaults to clear all user-entered configuration information and return the NAS to its factory defaults. A warning screen appears asking you to confirm. Enter “FACTORY” and click OK to continue or click Cancel to quit.
  • Page 190: Log Classes Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance 11.6.1 Log Classes The following table shows information on log classes. Table 111 Log Classes DESCRIPTION CATEGORY Users This log class shows information on user access to the NAS. Shares This log class shows information on shares being created or deleted. Services This log class shows information on the operation of the NAS’s built-in services. Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Table 113 Log Messages (continued) CLASS SEVERITY MESSAGE Copy/Sync Button ERROR [USB Sync] Failed at %s: It is a Folder in Internal Volume. But It is not a Folder in USB. Copy/Sync Button ERROR [USB Sync] Failed at %s: It is a Folder in USB. But It is not a Folder in Internal Volume. Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Table 113 Log Messages (continued) CLASS SEVERITY MESSAGE Download Service INFO Download service suspend %s because of no data income detected or to limit max download slot Download Service INFO Download service add comment %s to %s by user Download Service INFO Download service set min upload/download ratio to %d%... Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Table 113 Log Messages (continued) CLASS SEVERITY MESSAGE Services INFO HTTP management port has changed to %s Services INFO Clock timezone is set to GMT%s Services INFO Clock timezone is set to default Services INFO Clock daylight saving is enabled Services INFO... Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Table 113 Log Messages (continued) CLASS SEVERITY MESSAGE storage Info Create raidType [Volume1]: SUCCESS storage error Create raidType [Volume1]: FAILED storage Info Create raidType [Disk group 1]: SUCCESS storage error Create raidType [Disk group 1]: FAILED storage Info Create Internal Volume [Volume1] (Size=512MB): SUCCESS... Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Table 113 Log Messages (continued) CLASS SEVERITY MESSAGE System NOTICE Hostname is set to '%s'. System NOTICE System description is changed. System NOTICE System description is empty now. System NOTICE DNS server setting is changed System NOTICE DNS server address is changed to be given from DHCP server... Chapter 11 Control Panel: Maintenance Table 113 Log Messages (continued) CLASS SEVERITY MESSAGE Power INFO Job [%s] is finished successfully Management Power INFO Job [%s] is pending because other job is running Management Power INFO Job [%s] is canceled by user Management Power INFO...
  • Page 198: Network Chapter 12 Status Center Table 114 Status Center > System Information (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Firmware Version This is the NAS firmware version. MAC Address This displays the NAS’s unique physical hardware address (MAC) for the LAN Ethernet port. You need the MAC address to register the product at myZyxel.com. Customer support may also request it for troubleshooting purposes. Chapter 12 Status Center The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 115 Status Center > Network LABEL DESCRIPTION Type Displays the type of the user account. User Displays the user name. WAN/LAN Displays whether the connection is from the WAN or the LAN. Service Name Displays the service name.
  • Page 200: App Center And Packages H A P T E R App Center and Packages 13.1 About Packages Packages extend the functions of your NAS. Your NAS supports various packages that let you do more. The App Center screen includes a list of packages to add. This chapter also describes the screens for features you can add to the NAS by installing packages.
  • Page 201: App Center Screens Chapter 13 App Center and Packages • Memopal - Use this to back up files on the NAS to your Memopal online backup and storage account. Section 13.9 on page 227. • ownCloud - Use this to store, synchronize, and share files, photos, calendars, and more with computers and mobile devices using an ownCloud client.
  • Page 202: Installed Applications Chapter 13 App Center and Packages 13.2.1 Installed Applications Use this screen to view the applications that you have installed in the NAS. Click App Center > My Apps > Installed on the Desktop to open the following screen. The Enable/Disable button is only for non built-in packages and available only if you have previously installed the package.
  • Page 203: Application Update Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 162 App Center > My Apps > Installed: Package Information The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 116 App Center > My Apps > Installed: Package Information LABEL DESCRIPTION The left side shows the screenshots of the application web configurator. It also shows the name, version number and a brief description of the application at the right side.
  • Page 204: Browse All Apps Chapter 13 App Center and Packages You can upgrade an application at a time, or click Update All to upgrade all the previously installed applications to the latest version. Figure 163 App Center > My Apps > Update 13.2.3 Browse All Apps This screen shows a list of packages supported by the NAS.
  • Page 205: Dropboxclient Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 164 App Center > Browse > All Apps 13.3 DropboxClient Use DropboxClient to synchronize NAS local shared folders and your Dropbox accounts. You need to assocate a shared folder and user account with your Dropbox account before the NAS can copy or synchronize files between the folder and the associated Dropbox account.
  • Page 206: Configure Account Setting Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 165 DropboxClient 13.3.1 Configure Account Setting Click DropboxClient > Account Setting to open the following screen. Use this screen to associate the NAS shared folder and account with a Dropbox account. Figure 166 DropboxClient > Account Setting NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 207: How To Associate Nas Share/Account With Dropbox Account Chapter 13 App Center and Packages The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 117 DropboxClient > Account Setting LABEL DESCRIPTION Linked Account This displays the e-mail address of the owner of the Dropbox account the NAS is configured to use. Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Step1 Local Sync Folder Use this screen to specify the folder on the NAS to synchronize with Dropbox for the local user. Figure 167 DropboxClient > Account Setting > Add: Step1 Local Sync Folder The following table describes the labels in this screen. Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Step2 Binding User Use this screen to select the local NAS user account to link with Dropbox. Click Next to continue. Figure 168 DropboxClient > Account Setting > Add: Step2 Binding User Step3 Authorization Click the link in this screen to get the authorization code from Dropbox. Chapter 13 App Center and Packages The user must sign into the Dropbox account. You may need to sign out of Dropbox’s services first if another user account is already signed in. Click Allow when the following screen displays to allow access to the files in your Dropbox. NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 211: Configure Update Period Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Copy the code and paste it into the field in the Web Configurator screen. Click Apply to have the NAS connect to Dropbox and complete the authorization. In the DropboxClient > Account Setting screen, select the Enable DropboxClient option and click Apply to start synchronizing your files with Dropbox.
  • Page 212: Googledriveclient Chapter 13 App Center and Packages The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 119 DropboxClient > Update Period LABEL DESCRIPTION Update Period Specify how frequently the NAS synchronizes the local sync folders and the linked Dropbox accounts. The range is 1 to 4320 minutes (3 days). Apply Click this to save your changes. Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 171 GoogleDriveClient > Account Setting The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 120 GoogleDriveClient > Account Setting LABEL DESCRIPTION Linked Account This displays the e-mail address of the owner of the Google account the NAS is configured to use.
  • Page 214: How To Link Nas Account, Share And Google Account Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Table 120 GoogleDriveClient > Account Setting (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Status This shows the current status of the GoogleDrive feature for the selected Google account. • Disabled - The GoogleDrive feature is turned off. During this state you can use the other sections of this screen to add or delete linked accounts or enable Google Drive. Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 172 GoogleDriveClient > Account Setting > Add: Step1 Local Sync Folder The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 121 GoogleDriveClient > Account Setting > Add: Step1 Local Sync Folder LABEL DESCRIPTION Share The name of a share on the NAS containing the folder the NAS synchronizes with Google... Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 173 GoogleDriveClient > Account Setting > Add: Step2 Binding User Step3 Authorization Click the link in this screen to get the authorization code from Google. Figure 174 GoogleDriveClient > Account Setting > Add: Step3 Authentication NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 217: Configure Update Period Chapter 13 App Center and Packages The user must sign into the Google account. You may need to sign out of Google’s services first if another user account is already signed in. Click Allow when the following screen displays to allow access to the files in your Google Drive. Copy the code and paste it into the field in the Web Configurator screen.
  • Page 218: Nfs Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 175 GoogleDriveClient > Update Period The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 122 GoogleDriveClient > Update Period LABEL DESCRIPTION Update Period Specify how frequently the NAS synchronizes the local sync folders and the linked Google Drive accounts. Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 176 NFS The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 123 NFS LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Click this to employ NFS in your NAS. Disable Click this to stop using NFS. This makes all NFS shares unavailable. Add NFS Share Click this to add an NFS share.
  • Page 220: Add/Edit Nfs Share Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 177 Delete an NFS Share 13.5.1 Add/Edit NFS Share Use this screen to add or edit an NFS share. Note: Some attributes of the NFS share cannot be edited. Click Add NFS Share or Edit NFS Share in the NFS screen to open the following screen. Step 1 General Settings Use this screen to set the NFS share name and location. Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Table 124 NFS: Add/Edit: Step 1 General Settings (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Volume Name Select the volume where the folder you want to add as an NFS share is located. Full Path This shows the location of the NFS share in the NAS. The NFS server assigns this path to the share folder you input.
  • Page 222: Nfs Session Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Table 125 NFS: Add/Edit: Step 2 Shared Folder Access (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Next Click this to go to the next screen. Cancel Click this to close the screen without saving. Step 3 Summary This screen is not available when you are editing an existing NFS share. Use this screen to review the settings you configured.
  • Page 223: Php-Mysql-Phpmyadmin Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 181 NFS: NFS Session The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 126 NFS: NFS Session LABEL DESCRIPTION NFS Share Path This shows the location of the share in the NAS. IP Address This shows the IP address of the user accessing the NFS share.
  • Page 224: Tftp Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 182 PHP-MySQL-phpMyAdmin The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 127 PHP-MySQL-phpMyAdmin LABEL DESCRIPTION Get Started Click this to access and log into phpMyAdmin to manage your databases. Enter 'root' as the username and '1234' as the password to log in. Reset MySQL Database If you change and forget your password, you will need to use this button. Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 183 TFTP The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 128 TFTP LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable TFTP Server Select this to have the NAS accept log files from TFTP clients. Clear it to stop the NAS from accepting log files from TFTP clients.
  • Page 226: Pyload Chapter 13 App Center and Packages 13.8 pyLoad Use this screen to configure the NAS so you can use pyLoad to manage your downloads, including those from one-click hosting sites. Click pyLoad on the Desktop or the Launch button in the App Center screen to open the following screen.
  • Page 227: Memopal Chapter 13 App Center and Packages 13.9 Memopal Install the Memopal package to back up folders of files on the NAS to your Memopal online backup and storage account. Note: Deleting files from your Memopal account’s online backup set does not delete the files from the NAS, just as deleting a file from the NAS does not delete a backup copy in your Memopal account’s online backup set.
  • Page 228: Memopal Settings Chapter 13 App Center and Packages The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 130 Memopal > Status LABEL DESCRIPTION Status This shows the status of the Memopal application’s interaction with the Memopal server. Disabled: The NAS Memopal application is turned off. Starting: The backup job is initializing and the NAS is getting ready to back up. Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Figure 186 Memopal > Settings The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 131 Memopal > Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Memopal Select this to back up files to your Memopal account. The rest of the configuration fields display.
  • Page 230: Owncloud Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Table 131 Memopal > Settings (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Path This field displays the share folder’s path. Identify the folder to back up to the Memopal server. Use Browse to find or create a folder on the NAS or type the location of the folder using forward slashes as branch separators. Chapter 13 App Center and Packages Note: Get ownCloud desktop clients from owncloud.org and ownCloud mobile apps from Google Play or the Apple App Store. NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 232: Download Service H A P T E R Download Service 14.1 Overview This chapter discusses the features in the Download Service screens. Use the Download Service screen to download files from the Internet. 14.2 What You Need to Know Download Service The NAS’s download service downloads files from the Internet directly to the NAS. You do not have to download to your computer and then copy to the NAS. Chapter 14 Download Service Figure 187 Download Service > Download Service The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 132 Download Service > Download Service LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Download Use this option to turn the download service off or on. If you turn off the service, all downloads Service are paused. Chapter 14 Download Service Table 132 Download Service > Download Service (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Completed Click this to see the list of files that the NAS has finished downloading. The Location column shows where a downloaded file is saved on the NAS. Click on the location link to open the share browser and access the file.
  • Page 235: Add A Download Task Chapter 14 Download Service Table 132 Download Service > Download Service (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Priority This is the download’s priority on the NAS. Select Auto to have the NAS automatically determine the task’s priority. Select High to have the NAS download this file before the other files.
  • Page 236: Configure General Download Settings Chapter 14 Download Service The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 133 Download Service > Download Service > Add LABEL DESCRIPTION Paste the URL or magnet link of the file you want to download into this field. The URL can be for an HTTP, FTP, or P2P download. Chapter 14 Download Service Figure 189 Download Service > Download Service > Preferences > General Settings NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 238: Configure The P2P Download Settings Chapter 14 Download Service The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 134 Download Service > Download Service > Preferences > General Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Put incomplete Set the default folder location where you “Put incomplete downloads in” and “Move downloads in/ complete downloads to”: Move completed... Chapter 14 Download Service Figure 190 Download Service > Download Service > Preferences > P2P download The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 135 Download Service > Download Service > Preferences > P2P download LABEL DESCRIPTION Port Number Assign a port number for P2P downloads.
  • Page 240: Configure The Ip Filter Settings Chapter 14 Download Service Table 135 Download Service > Download Service > Preferences > P2P download (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Keep Sharing While With P2P download, the NAS starts sharing a file while you are downloading it. Set how long to continue sharing a file after the NAS finishes the download. Select Upload/Download Ratio to keep sharing a file until the NAS has uploaded a specific percent compared to the download.
  • Page 241: Configure The Email Notifications Settings Chapter 14 Download Service The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 136 Download Service > Download Service > Preferences > IP Filter LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable IP Filter Click this to enable or disable IP filtering for P2P downloads. Update IP Filter Select this option and enter a URL to use an online IP filter table.
  • Page 242: Select Files To Download Chapter 14 Download Service Click Apply to save your changes. Click Reset to restore your previously saved settings. Click Cancel to return to the previous screen without saving. 14.3.6 Select Files to Download Select an item in the Download Service > Download Service screen’s list and click Select Files to open the following screen. Chapter 14 Download Service Figure 194 Download Service > Download Service > Task Info The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 138 Download Service > Download Service > Task Info LABEL DESCRIPTION Status This is the current status of the task. Name This is the name of the task.
  • Page 244: Download Notify Screen Chapter 14 Download Service Table 138 Download Service > Download Service > Task Info (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Health This field displays how many full copies of the file are available for this task. The NAS can download a file with a higher health value more efficiently. If the health value is less than 1 (0.65 for example), there is no full copy of the file, and the NAS may not be able to complete downloading the file.
  • Page 245: Technical Reference Chapter 14 Download Service The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 139 Download Service > Download Notify LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Select this to keep track of downloaded files on the NAS. Download Notify At the time of writing, the NAS supports RSS 2.0 feeds. Click this to get and subscribe to the NAS channel feed.
  • Page 246: P2P Download Security Chapter 14 Download Service After your P2P download and sharing are finished, you can go to the incoming folder within the destination share or folder and delete the .torrent file if you need to free up hard disk space. 14.5.2 P2P Download Security When you download using P2P, you reveal your IP address. Chapter 14 Download Service Figure 197 Firewall Blocking Incoming P2P Download Requests Incoming BitTorrent requests blocked Outgoing BitTorrent requests allowed Corresponding BitTorrent reply allowed To speed up P2P download file transfers, configure your firewall’s port forwarding to send incoming TCP port 9090 and UDP port 9089 connections to the NAS.
  • Page 249: Flickr/Youtube Screen Chapter 15 Upload Manager 15.4 Flickr/YouTube Screen Use this screen to upload photos and videos to your Flickr and YouTube accounts. Click Upload Manager > Flickr/YouTube to open the following screen. Figure 199 Upload Manager > Flickr/YouTube The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 140 Upload Manager >... Chapter 15 Upload Manager Figure 200 Linking NAS to Flickr The web browser opens the Yahoo! Flickr login page. Enter your Yahoo account’s information and click Sign In. Figure 201 Yahoo! Flickr Login Page The following page displays asking for your authorization. Click NEXT to go to the next page. Figure 202 Flickr Authorization NAS Series User’s Guide... Chapter 15 Upload Manager Click OK, I’LL AUTHORIZE IT to establish a link between the NAS and your Flickr account. Figure 203 Flickr Authorization A confirmation page displays indicating successful authorization. Return to the NAS web configurator. Click Get Ready in the following screen to complete the authorization process. Figure 204 Confirming Flickr Authorization Once the NAS is associated with your Flickr account, you can configure auto upload settings in the following screens. Chapter 15 Upload Manager Folder Selection Figure 205 Upload Manager > Flickr/YouTube > Config (Flickr): Folder Selection NAS Series User’s Guide... Chapter 15 Upload Manager The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 141 Upload Manager > Flickr/YouTube > Config (Flickr): Folder Selection LABEL DESCRIPTION Click this to set a folder that contains files you want the NAS to automatically upload. •... Chapter 15 Upload Manager General Settings Figure 206 Upload Manager > Flickr/YouTube > Config (Flickr): General Settings The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 142 Upload Manager > Flickr/YouTube > Config (Flickr): General Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Grace Period N Specify how long the NAS should wait when you add a new file for auto upload.
  • Page 255: Configure The Youtube Settings Chapter 15 Upload Manager 15.4.2 Configure the YouTube Settings In the Upload Manager > Flickr/YouTube screen, select YouTube from the list and then click the Config button. Note: Your YouTube account must be associated with a Google account. Get a Google account and use it to log into YouTube. You can then merge the existing YouTube account to your Google account. Chapter 15 Upload Manager The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 143 Upload Manager > Flickr/YouTube > Config (YouTube): Folder Selection LABEL DESCRIPTION Click this to set a folder that contains files you want the NAS to automatically upload. •...
  • Page 257: Ftp Uploadr Screen Chapter 15 Upload Manager General Settings Figure 209 Upload Manager > Flickr/YouTube > Config (YouTube): General Settings The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 144 Upload Manager > Flickr/YouTube > Config (YouTube): General Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Grace Period N Specify how long the NAS should wait when you add a new file for auto upload. Chapter 15 Upload Manager Figure 210 Upload Manager > FTP Uploadr The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 145 Upload Manager > FTP Uploadr LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable FTP Uploadr Click this to enable or disable the FTP Uploadr. When you disable the FTP Uploadr, a screen opens requesting confirmation.
  • Page 259: Add Or Edit An Ftp Server Entry Chapter 15 Upload Manager 15.5.1 Add or Edit an FTP Server Entry Use this screen to add or edit an FTP server entry for auto upload. In the FTP Uploadr screen, click the Add Server or Edit Server button to open the following screen. Figure 211 Upload Manager >... Chapter 15 Upload Manager Folder Watch List Figure 212 Upload Manager > FTP Uploadr > Preferences: Folder Watch List NAS Series User’s Guide... Chapter 15 Upload Manager The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 147 Upload Manager > FTP Uploadr > Preferences: Folder Watch List LABEL DESCRIPTION Click this to set a folder that contains files you want the NAS to automatically upload. •... Chapter 15 Upload Manager General Settings Figure 213 Upload Manager > FTP Uploadr > Preferences: General Settings The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 148 Upload Manager > FTP Uploadr > Preferences: General Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION Grace Period Grace Period Specify how long the NAS should wait when you add a new file for auto upload.
  • Page 264: Synchronize Files Chapter 16 Backup Planner • Use Memopal (Section 13.9 on page 227) to back up files on the NAS to your Memopal online backup and storage account. 16.1.5 Synchronize Files Besides backups, the NAS also provides pure synchronization solutions. Note: Synchronization is not backup. When you delete a file in one location, synchronization deletes it in the other location. Chapter 16 Backup Planner Figure 214 Backup Planner > Backup > Backup The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 149 Backup Planner > Backup > Backup LABEL DESCRIPTION Add Job Click this to create and customize a backup job. Edit Job Select a backup job in the list and click this to make some changes to it.
  • Page 266: Add A New Backup Job Chapter 16 Backup Planner 16.3.1 Add a new backup job Click Add Job in the Backup Planner > Backup > Backup screen to create a backup job. Step 1 Properties Use this screen to specify the job information, backup type and purge policy. Figure 215 Backup Planner >... Chapter 16 Backup Planner Table 150 Backup Planner > Backup: Add Job Step 1 Properties (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Type Choose the backup type the NAS implements for the backup job. Archive - This is a backup of the source folder in an archive format. Once you backup your files in the target folder, you cannot access the files individually unless you have the extracting tool used by the NAS. Chapter 16 Backup Planner Figure 216 Backup Planner > Backup: Add Job Step 2 Source The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 151 Backup Planner > Backup: Add Job Step 2 Source LABEL DESCRIPTION Source Select an (internal) volume and the folders and files to back up using this tree interface. Click to browse through folders, sub-folders and files. Chapter 16 Backup Planner Step 3 Destination Use this screen to set where you want the backup to be stored. Figure 217 Backup Planner > Backup: Add Job Step 3 Destination The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 152 Backup Planner >... Chapter 16 Backup Planner Table 152 Backup Planner > Backup: Add Job Step 3 Destination (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Remote Select this to back up to another device. For Archive: The remote device can be another NAS in the network. Fill in the following fields in order to be able to access it. Chapter 16 Backup Planner Figure 218 Backup Planner > Backup: Add Job Step 4 Schedule and Options The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 153 Backup Planner > Backup: Add Job Step 4 Schedule and Options LABEL DESCRIPTION Schedule Frequency...
  • Page 272: Edit Job Screens Chapter 16 Backup Planner Table 153 Backup Planner > Backup: Add Job Step 4 Schedule and Options LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable data Select this option if you want the NAS to compress the files for your backup. Otherwise, clear it. compression In an Archive backup, compression is a method of packing computing files in a way that saves hard disk space. Chapter 16 Backup Planner Select a backup job from the list in the Backup Planner > Backup screen and click Edit Job to open the Edit Job screen. Edit Job: Properties Click the Properties tab to open the following screen. Figure 220 Backup Planner >... Chapter 16 Backup Planner Edit Job: Source and Destination Click the Source and Destination tab to open the following screen. This screen is read-only. It shows the path of the source folder for backup and on which volume (whether internal or external) the backup files are stored. Chapter 16 Backup Planner Figure 222 Backup Planner > Backup > Edit Job: Schedule and Options The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 155 Backup Planner > Backup > Edit Job: Schedule and Options LABEL DESCRIPTION Schedule Frequency Select from Hourly, Daily, Weekly and Monthly backup intervals.
  • Page 276: Restore Screens Chapter 16 Backup Planner Table 155 Backup Planner > Backup > Edit Job: Schedule and Options (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Data compression This field is read-only and shows whether the backup employs compression. Compression reduces the size of the file that you want to back up. Backup is then faster, but restoring may be slower, so if backup space is not a concern and recovery speed is, then turn off compression. Chapter 16 Backup Planner Figure 224 Backup Planner > Backup > Restore Restore Job: Step 1 Source If you set the NAS to restore a backup based on the pre-configured backup job in the previous screen, the following screen displays. Select a backup job’s name from the list and the time point at which the backup job was done. Chapter 16 Backup Planner Figure 226 Backup Planner > Backup > Restore Job: Step 1 Source: Enter Password (Backup Job) If you set the NAS to restore a backup based on the selected backup file(s) in the previous screen, the following screen displays. Chapter 16 Backup Planner Figure 229 Backup Planner > Backup > Restore Job: Step 2 Folders/Files to Restore Restore Job: Step 3 Destination Select the location in the NAS where you want to restore your backup. If you set the NAS to restore a backup based on the pre-configured backup job, you can either select Original to restore the files to their original location in the NAS, or select Other location and choose a folder where you want to place the restored files. Chapter 16 Backup Planner Figure 230 Backup Planner > Backup > Restore Job: Step 3 Destination (Backup Job) Figure 231 Backup Planner > Backup > Restore Job: Step 3 Destination (Backup File) Restore Job: Step 4 Summary Use this screen to review the settings you configured. Click Apply to save your settings. Otherwise, click Back to return to the previous screen, or click Cancel to close the screen without saving. Chapter 16 Backup Planner Figure 232 Backup Planner > Backup > Restore Job: Step 4 Summary The restore progress and result display in the Restore screen. The related information will disappear right after the specified backup is restored successfully. Figure 233 Backup Planner > Backup > Restore: Result NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 282: Copy/Sync Button Screens Chapter 16 Backup Planner 16.4 Copy/Sync Button Screens The Copy/Sync button on the front panel allows you to copy or synchronize files between a connected USB or SD device and the NAS. Use the Backup Planner > Copy/Sync Button screen to configure the copy/sync settings.
  • Page 283: Sync Settings Chapter 16 Backup Planner Table 156 Backup Planner > Copy/Sync Button > Copy Settings (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Backup Target Select a share in which to save the backup files. Note: The NAS will not create a new folder to store the backup files. It is recommended to create a specific share (such as “backup”) for backup purposes.
  • Page 284: How To Copy Files Chapter 16 Backup Planner Table 157 Backup Planner > Copy/Sync Button > Sync Settings (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Backup Files to be Select this option to save the files that will be replaced by the source files. Replaced or Removed Backup Target Select a share in which to save the backup files.
  • Page 285: How To Synchronize Files Chapter 16 Backup Planner 16.4.4 How to Synchronize Files Synchronization makes the contents on the target device identical to the ones on the source device. You can synchronize files from a USB device to the NAS or from the NAS to a USB device. In addition, you may also synchronize files in both directions simultaneously.
  • Page 286: Time Machine Screen Chapter 16 Backup Planner The following figure illustrates how synchronization works when you synchronize files in both directions simultaneously. Figure 238 Synchronizing Files Example 2 Before Sync (new) (new) After Sync (new) (new) (new) (new) A on the USB device and B on the NAS are modified more recently. •... Chapter 16 Backup Planner Figure 239 Backup Planner > Time Machine The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 158 Backup Planner > Time Machine LABEL DESCRIPTION Enable Time Select this to allow Macs to use Time Machine to back up to the NAS. Clear it to turn off Machine Time Machine support.
  • Page 288: File Browser, Photo, Music & Video H A P T E R File Browser, Photo, Music & Video 17.1 Overview This chapter introduces the File Browser, Photo, Music, and Video screens for sharing media files. It also describes the Playzone Settings and Application Zone screens which are only available with user accounts. Chapter 17 File Browser, Photo, Music & Video Figure 240 File Browser The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 159 File Browser LABEL DESCRIPTION Create New Click this to open the following screen where you can create a new folder within the share. Folder Specify a name to identify the folder.
  • Page 290: Photo Chapter 17 File Browser, Photo, Music & Video Table 159 File Browser (continued) LABEL DESCRIPTION Upload Click this to open the following screen where you can add files to the share. Use the Browse button to locate your file/s and click Apply to upload the file. Click Cancel to close this screen. Chapter 17 File Browser, Photo, Music & Video Figure 241 Photo (Thumbnail) NAS Series User’s Guide... Chapter 17 File Browser, Photo, Music & Video Figure 242 Photo (List) The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 160 Photo Screen LABEL DESCRIPTION Zyxel The path of the current view. Click an underlined link to go to that location in the path. Music, Photo, or Video indicates the category of files.
  • Page 293: Exif And Google Maps (Photos) Chapter 17 File Browser, Photo, Music & Video 17.3.1 Exif and Google Maps (Photos) Double-click a photo file to display it. Thumbnails of all photos in the view display across the bottom of the screen. Click a photo’s EXIF button to display or hide the photo’s Exchangeable image file format (Exif) data.
  • Page 294: Slideshow (Photos) Chapter 17 File Browser, Photo, Music & Video 17.3.2 Slideshow (Photos) In a Photo menu click the SlideShow button to display the menu’s files as a slideshow. Move your cursor over the slideshow’s screen to display full screen, previous, pause, and next buttons for controlling the slideshow. Chapter 17 File Browser, Photo, Music & Video Figure 246 Music (Thumbnail) Figure 247 Music (List) NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 296: Now Playing (Music) Chapter 17 File Browser, Photo, Music & Video This table describes common labels in the Playzone media server screens. Not every item displays in every screen. Table 161 Music Screen LABEL DESCRIPTION Zyxel The path of the current view. Click an underlined link to go to that location in the path. Music, Photo, or Video indicates the category of files. Chapter 17 File Browser, Photo, Music & Video Figure 249 Video (Thumbnail) Figure 250 Video (List) NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 298: Playzone Settings Chapter 17 File Browser, Photo, Music & Video The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 162 Video Screen LABEL DESCRIPTION Zyxel The path of the current view. Click an underlined link to go to that location in the path. Music, Photo, or Video indicates the category of files.
  • Page 299: Application Zone Chapter 17 File Browser, Photo, Music & Video The following table describes the labels in this screen. Table 163 Playzone Settings LABEL DESCRIPTION This field displays “Installed” if you already have Windows Media Player installed or a link for installing it if you do not already have it installed. Double Click Behavior Select Replace current playlist and start to play to have double clicking a song cause the Setting...
  • Page 300: Access Your Cloud Remotely Via Myzyxelcloud And Zyxel Drive App H A P T E R Access Your Cloud Remotely via myZyxelCloud and Zyxel Drive App Use the NAS to set up your own secure personal cloud. Keep your videos, photos, music, and files safely at home and under your control. Access, share, and stream files from anywhere using your PC, Mac computer, and mobile devices.
  • Page 303: Ddns Setup Chapter 18 Access Your Cloud Remotely via myZyxelCloud and Zyxel Drive App When the NAS is successfully paired, the screen displays as shown next. Figure 256 myZyxelCloud > Pairing: Successfully Paired 18.1.3 DDNS Setup Use the free DDNS service to get a domain name mapped to the NAS’s IP address. With DDNS, you can use the domain name to remotely access the NAS’s Web Configurator through the Internet.
  • Page 304: Nas Information Chapter 18 Access Your Cloud Remotely via myZyxelCloud and Zyxel Drive App Figure 257 myZyxelCloud > DDNS Setting 18.1.4 NAS Information After setting up your NAS’s host name, the My Devices screen appears. Use this screen to view the NAS’s information.
  • Page 305: Upnp Setup Chapter 18 Access Your Cloud Remotely via myZyxelCloud and Zyxel Drive App 18.1.5 UPnP Setup Use this screen configure the UPnP settings your Internet gateway uses to allow access from the WAN (Internet) to services on the NAS. You can also set which port Internet users need to use in order to access a specific service on the NAS.
  • Page 306: Zyxel Drive Welcome Chapter 18 Access Your Cloud Remotely via myZyxelCloud and Zyxel Drive App 18.2.1 Zyxel Drive Welcome Community Sharing - Send invitation links to friends and family to conveniently share selected NAS folders. DirectConnect - Privately and securely access your NAS content from anywhere. Figure 260 Zyxel Drive Welcome 18.2.2 NAS and File List My own NAS - Access and share files from your own NAS.
  • Page 307: Uploading And Media Streaming Chapter 18 Access Your Cloud Remotely via myZyxelCloud and Zyxel Drive App Figure 261 NAS and File List 18.2.3 Uploading and Media Streaming Use Zyxel Drive to upload photos and videos from your mobile device to the NAS. You can also stream videos and music stored on the NAS.
  • Page 308: Instant Upload Chapter 18 Access Your Cloud Remotely via myZyxelCloud and Zyxel Drive App Figure 262 Uploading and Media Streaming 18.2.4 Instant Upload Intant Upload allows you to back up all of the photos and videos on your mobile device to the NAS immediately. Chapter 18 Access Your Cloud Remotely via myZyxelCloud and Zyxel Drive App Figure 263 Zyxel Drive: Home > Settings Android Figure 264 Zyxel Drive: Enable Instant Upload Android NAS Series User’s Guide... Chapter 18 Access Your Cloud Remotely via myZyxelCloud and Zyxel Drive App Figure 265 Zyxel Drive: Select the NAS to which you want to upload photos and videos Android Figure 266 Zyxel Drive: All photos and videos on the phone are copied to the NAS Android NAS Series User’s Guide... Chapter 18 Access Your Cloud Remotely via myZyxelCloud and Zyxel Drive App Figure 267 Zyxel Drive: Files are backed up to the “Photo Backup” folder in the NAS Android NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 312: Play Media Files On Tvs Using Zcloud App H A P T E R Play Media Files on TVs Using zCloud App Zyxel zCloud app lets you play your favorite multimedia files on the NAS on your big screen TV. Use TV streaming devices such as Apple TV, Google Chromecast, Roku 3, and Amazon Fire TV; or play files directly on smart TVs like those from Samsung, LG and Sony.
  • Page 313: Zcloud Tv Streaming Chapter 19 Play Media Files on TVs Using zCloud App Figure 269 zCloud Main Menus Find a NAS - use your NAS’s IP address and your user name and password to connect to it. NASxxx - access the NAS’s default photo, music, and video shares. You can play, download, upload and manage files. Chapter 19 Play Media Files on TVs Using zCloud App Go to the NAS’s published media files and tap the Remote Player icon to display a list of players that you can use to play the files on your TV. NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 315: Zcloud Instant Upload Chapter 19 Play Media Files on TVs Using zCloud App When you finish viewing the NAS’s media files you can press your mobile device’s menu button to get the option to log out from the NAS (Logout). 19.3 zCloud Instant Upload Tap Settings and then turn on Instant Upload to upload music, photo, or video files from your mobile device to the NAS. Chapter 19 Play Media Files on TVs Using zCloud App For example, if you selected Photo, select the folder containing the photos you want to upload to the NAS. NAS Series User’s Guide... Chapter 19 Play Media Files on TVs Using zCloud App NAS Series User’s Guide...
  • Page 320: Nas Starter Utility Chapter 20 Troubleshooting • If the problem continues, contact the vendor. Table 2 on page 13 for a description of NAS LEDs. The NAS turns off or reboots by itself. Check the Control Panel > Maintenance > Power > Power Management screen. This is where you configure power settings for the NAS, including power saving, UPS, power on/off during power failure and power on/off schedule.
  • Page 321: Nas Login And Access Chapter 20 Troubleshooting The NAS Starter Utility discovered my NAS but the status is always unreachable, even though I can access it. You may need to add the NAS Starter Utility to your software firewall’s allow list or lower your software firewall or anti-virus scanner’s security level.
  • Page 322: Enabling Scripting Of Safe Activex Controls Chapter 20 Troubleshooting • If you are trying to log in directly by typing the server name into your web browser’s address field, make sure you are using the correct server name as the web site address. • The default server name is ‘NAS’ followed by the number of your model (‘NAS540’ for example). If you have changed the server name, use the new one. Chapter 20 Troubleshooting Figure 270 Internet Options: Security Click the Custom Level... button. Under Script ActiveX controls marked safe for scripting, make sure that Enable is selected (the default). Click OK to close the window. Figure 271 Security Settings - Script Safe ActiveX Controls I can see the login screen, but I cannot log in to the NAS.
  • Page 324: I Cannot Access The Nas Chapter 20 Troubleshooting • Make sure you have entered the username and password correctly. The default username is admin, and the default password is 1234. These fields are case-sensitive, so make sure [Caps Lock] is not on. • Turn the NAS off and on. •...
  • Page 325: Users Cannot Access The Nas Chapter 20 Troubleshooting 20.6 Users Cannot Access the NAS A local user cannot access a share. • Check that the NAS is turned on and connected to the network. The local user should try to ping the NAS or use the NAS Starter Utility to discover it. •...
  • Page 326: External Usb Drives Chapter 20 Troubleshooting A user can access a share but cannot access individual folders or files within the share. • Check the read/write permissions associated with the share’s specific files and/or folders. Account names added to the list are linked to the files and folders that they are allowed to access, along with what kinds of actions they are allowed to perform with those files and folders (delete, move, rename, and so on).
  • Page 327: Firmware Chapter 20 Troubleshooting 20.9 Firmware I want to know the firmware version on the NAS. Go to the Status Center screen. The Firmware Version field shows you the current firmware version running. 20.10 File Transfer I want to transfer my file(s) from my local computer or storage device to the NAS. •...
  • Page 328: Networking Chapter 20 Troubleshooting 20.11 Networking I want to control who can access my folder(s)/file(s). • If you are an administrator, you can configure a user’s access rights. Use the Shared Folders screens (Section 7.5 on page 121) to do this. •...
  • Page 329: Media Server Functions Chapter 20 Troubleshooting 20.13 Media Server Functions I set the media server function to publish a folder, but some of the files in the folder do not display in the list on the media client. Files with formats that are not supported on the media server may not display in the list. See page 335 the file formats that the media server supports. Chapter 20 Troubleshooting Figure 272 iTunes Eject Button Then click the NAS’s link to reconnect. Figure 273 iTunes Reconnected Another way to get the NAS’s iTunes server function to scan the published media server folders for files is to go to Control Panel > Service > iTunes Server and disable and re-enable the iTunes server option. If you uploaded many files, it may take awhile for the NAS to find and list all of them.
  • Page 331: Download Service Functions Chapter 20 Troubleshooting If you are connecting through a NAT router, make sure that TCP port 3689 and UDP port 5353 are open for traffic on both the server and the client and all points in between (especially the NAT router). If your router includes a firewall, make sure it also allows TCP port 3689 and UDP port 5353 traffic.
  • Page 332: Auto Upload Chapter 20 Troubleshooting • Make sure the firewall’s public IP address is static or that the firewall uses a Dynamic Domain Name (DDNS). • Web publishing uses TCP protocol and the port number you specify. Make sure there is not another service using TCP protocol with the same port number.
  • Page 333: App Center Chapter 20 Troubleshooting If the log message displays “filename is queued”, the file may still be waiting for auto upload. Check the grace period setting in the service’s Configuration screen. You can set a smaller grace period to shorten the queue time. If you cannot find any log messages about the file: •...
  • Page 334: Google Drive Chapter 20 Troubleshooting • Check that enough space is available on the external disk. If there isn’t you may need to purge older backups or delete other files on the backup USB disk or NAS. • If you are using the Backup screen (Section 16.3 on page 264): •...
  • Page 348: Index Index Index port number authorization Flickr 249, 250 access rights YouTube Flickr auto upload YouTube Flickr/YouTube activation activation download service authorization 249, 255 Flickr/YouTube configuration 253, 254, 255 FTP Uploadr FTP Uploadr activation recycle bins bandwidth limit web publishing configuration adding channels server entry Amazon Fire TV... Index print server preferences recycle bins URL, download service YouTube downloading files contact information duplexing control panel 102, 130 COPY/SYNC button 15, 282 configuration 282, 283 example synchronization Exchangeable image file format, see Exif copyright Exif temperature usage creating groups 115, 116, 117, 118 shares 122, 127... Index lag, time 24, 150 Google Chromecast latitude Google Drive login Google Maps logs longitude grace period 254, 257, 262 groups adding 115, 116, 117, 118 editing 116, 117, 118 names maintenance backup settings 186, 187, 188 logs power management failure hot spare resume... Index TCP/IP data protection RAID 0 RAID 10 RAID 5 RAID 5 spare rebuild media server database one-way incremental backup recycle bins online backup activation configuration 122, 128, 129 registration product reset 15, 186, 187, 188 restoring P2P download by backup files IP filtering 240, 241 protection... Index folder creation zone 24, 150 names Time Machine recycle bins 122, 128, 129 159, 248 activation torrent files 236, 245 configuration health status info-hash uploading files trackers smart TVs trademarks Transport Layer Security, see TLS certificate troubleshooting editing domain user status domain user share access shares... Index video category, YouTube video playback volume RAID 1 volumes status warranty note web configurator login web publishing 160, 168, 176 activation example port number troubleshooting workgroup name YouTube access rights activation authorization configuration grace period video category zCloud Zyxel Drive NAS Series User’s Guide... This manual is also suitable for: Table of Contents 2 3 3 4

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Frequently Asked Questions

  • Is the Manual of the Zyxel nas326 available in English?

    Yes, the manual of the ZyXEL NAS326 is available in English . Is your question not listed? Ask your question here

  • What is included in the nas326 2-bay basic personal cloud storage package?

    Quick Start Guide NAS326 2-Bay Basic Personal Cloud Storage ENGLISH Copyright © 2016 ZyXEL Communications Corp. All Rights Reserved. Package Contents Packege includes: You need to prepare: Power cables 3.5" or 2.5" Hard Disk Phillips Cross-head Screwdriver Ethernet cable 3.5" screws / 2.5" screws...

  • How do I Find my Nas on Zyxel?

    Page 6 Start Using ZyXEL NAS Open a web browser and type https://findme.zyxel.com. Computer User Alternatively, on a smartphone, scan the QR code. Click the Find NAS button. https://findme.zyxel.com Press the Copy button on the NAS within 5 minutes. Your NAS is now discovered.

  • How do I contact Zyxel customer support?

    North America +1 800 978 7222 [email protected] + 44 118 9121 700 myZyXELcloud [email protected] Get the most out of your home network and storage devices with myZyXELcloud. Germany + 49 2405 6909 0 Get roaming access to your devices mycloud.zyxel.com [email protected] from this website so that you can easily...

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