NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.

Forum Discussion

dave1234's avatar
dave1234
Aspirant
Jul 19, 2020
Solved

Partitioning Ready NAS?

I have a Ready NAS Pro 4 and I was wondering if it is possible to partition the disks like with a local hard drive?  I was wanting to create a partition use something like Truecrypt to encrypt the en...
  • StephenB's avatar
    Jul 20, 2020

    dave1234 wrote:

    I have a Ready NAS Pro 4 and I was wondering if it is possible to partition the disks like with a local hard drive?  I was wanting to create a partition use something like Truecrypt to encrypt the entire partition. 


    It is not possible.  But you could convert the NAS to run OS-6, which does support hard drive encryption.

     


    dave1234 wrote:

     It just seems without the encryption, the data may be susceptable to hacking a lot easier. 


    No, encrypting the disks doesn't make the NAS less hackable.  The primary defense of your data is your network security - for instance, disabling anonymous access, using strong passwords for SMB and web access, turning off services you don't use, etc.  Upgrading to OS 6 would improve your network security - it supports SMB 3, and you can enforce transport encryption and authentication.  OS 4.2.x only supports SMB 1.

     

    What encrypting the disks do accomplish is making it more difficult for someone who physically steals the NAS to gain access to your data.  Though if the thief steals the encryption USB key along with the NAS, they could still regain access.  Personally I don't see much benefit - and there are signficant drawbacks.  Disk Encryption can make it impossible to recover data if that is needed.  Plus encrypted volumes on the NAS can't be vertically expanded, so if you run out of space you'd have to offload all the data, rebuild the NAS volume, and restore it.

     

    If you are mostly concerned about hacking, then a better plan is to put a veracrypt container on the NAS and use that for your sensitive data.  That is better because the NAS cannot decrypt the files - that can only be done on the client PC.   So there is better network security.  Someone stealing both the PC and the NAS could still potentially gain access (by hacking into the PC).  The downside is that only one device can access the veryacrypt container at a time.

NETGEAR Academy

Boost your skills with the Netgear Academy - Get trained, certified and stay ahead with the latest Netgear technology! 

Join Us!

ProSupport for Business

Comprehensive support plans for maximum network uptime and business peace of mind.

 

Learn More