Seagate Business Storage 1-Bay NAS Seagate Business Storage 1-Bay, 2-Bay, and - Page 24

group account, hot-swap, HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) - manual

Page 24 highlights

Glossary group account In Seagate NAS Manager, a collection of user accounts grouped together to make it faster and easier to manage access to shared folders. All users in a group have the same level of access to any particular share. See also user account. hot-swap To remove and replace a disk drive without first powering off the server. HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) Rules for exchanging the most common form of documents (hypertext documents) over the Internet. HTTPS (Hypertext Transfer Protocol over Secure Socket Layer) Rules for exchanging HTTP documents over encrypted connections. JBOD Just a Bunch of Drives. See span. IP address The identifier of a computer, server, or other device on a TCP/IP network. IP addresses are a sequence of four numbers separated by periods. (For example, 123.456.78.1.) Every device on your local network has a unique IP address. link aggregation A method of increasing the speed of a device's network connection by using more than one Ethernet port simultaneously to connect to the network. If you connect both of your Seagate NAS LAN ports to your network router or switch and set Aggregation in Seagate NAS Manager, both connections work simultaneously and in parallel to move data more quickly-similar to filling a bucket using two hoses instead of one. local access Access to the server from a computer on your local network. Or, manual access to the server, which involves physical contact with the server or its cables. See also remote access. mirror A level of RAID protection also known as RAID 1. A mirror is built from two disk drives, where one disk drive is a mirror of the other (the same data is stored on each disk drive). Compared to independent disk drives, a mirrored volume provides faster performance, but has only 50% of the capacity. NFS Network File System. An application that lets all users on a network share files that are stored on different types of computers. Seagate Business Storage NAS User Guide 24

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Glossary
Seagate Business Storage NAS User Guide
24
group account
In Seagate NAS Manager, a collection of user accounts grouped together to make it faster
and easier to manage access to shared folders. All users in a group have the same level of
access to any particular share. See also user account.
hot-swap
To remove and replace a disk drive without first powering off the server.
HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol)
Rules for exchanging the most common form of documents (hypertext documents) over the
Internet.
HTTPS (Hypertext Transfer Protocol over Secure Socket Layer)
Rules for exchanging HTTP documents over encrypted connections.
JBOD
Just a Bunch of Drives. See span.
IP address
The identifier of a computer, server, or other device on a TCP/IP network. IP addresses are a
sequence of four numbers separated by periods. (For example, 123.456.78.1.) Every device
on your local network has a unique IP address.
link aggregation
A method of increasing the speed of a device’s network connection by using more than one
Ethernet port simultaneously to connect to the network.
If you connect both of your Seagate NAS LAN ports to your network router or switch and set
Aggregation in Seagate NAS Manager, both connections work simultaneously and in parallel
to move data more quickly—similar to filling a bucket using two hoses instead of one.
local access
Access to the server from a computer on your local network. Or, manual access to the server,
which involves physical contact with the server or its cables. See also remote access.
mirror
A level of RAID protection also known as RAID 1. A mirror is built from two disk drives, where
one disk drive is a mirror of the other (the same data is stored on each disk drive). Compared
to independent disk drives, a mirrored volume provides faster performance, but has only 50%
of the capacity.
NFS
Network File System. An application that lets all users on a network share files that are stored
on different types of computers.