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Post by blurence on Jul 18, 2007 14:30:05 GMT 7
I setup JBOD with one 750GB drive. and set 50% HD used for Target USB ,others for Data Percentage.
I login the NAS via SSH, and try to find a way to access the Target USB partition, but failed.
I noticed that /dev/vg0/lv0 was mounted to /raid/data, and guess that /dev/vg0/lv1 is partition of Target USB , but also failed when I try to mount it.
Any idea?
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Post by blurence on Jul 25, 2007 13:07:53 GMT 7
Nobody knows?
Any other issues with Target USB partition?
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Post by omega on Aug 27, 2007 0:56:01 GMT 7
Wrong guess.....
When you plug in a USB stick or hard disk there will be a mount point for it in the directory /raid/data/usbhdd.
I just tried it and I got /raid/data/usbhdd/sdf1 which holds the data on the first partition on my USB stick.
Andreas
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Post by kniteowl on Aug 28, 2007 11:14:08 GMT 7
Actually /raid/data/usbhdd is the mount point for any storage device that you attach to the USB A ports or the ESATA port, yes I know ESATA is not a USB device, but that is where it mounts it. This is not the one for the Target USB. For the Target USB, you must use the USB B port on the back of the N5200 to access it according to Thecus.
blurence, you are correct in that /dev/vg0/lv1 is the target USB partition.
Now, I didn't setup a Target USB on mine, so I can't confirm, if you can mount it from within the device. According to Thecus, you are not suppose to be able to do this, but then again, they weren't planning on SSH access.
After you allocated the space from the WEBGUI, did you attach the N5200 to your computer using the single USB B port on the back (not any of the USB A ports, this does not work) and put a file system on it first, or just try to mount it from within the SSH terminal. You must put it on a computer and create a partition and file system before it is usable. Typically it is created as FAT32 to be compatible with more OSes, but you should be able to create other file system also if needed. Once you create the file system on this, if possible, then you should be able to mount it somewhere inside to access it normally.
Teng
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