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Forum Discussion
mrphurious
Nov 03, 2011Aspirant
ReadyNAS Ultra 2 = Waste of my time and money
A little while back I got a ReadyNAS Ultra 2 so that I could create a network accessible file storage drive that would also have redundancy built in, so that I ensure the safety of my core files. I...
PapaBear1
Nov 04, 2011Apprentice
The DGN2200 wireless router is a combo DSL modem and wireless router. While I have not seen any comments previously about problems with it, the 2 wire version also supplied by various telecom companies in notoriously hard to deal with.
I am not familiar with Tetracopy, but do not understand why one would use a third party application since Windows copy/paste is certainly reliable.
One should never, ever trust a single device for storage of important/critical files. I maintain a current/complete backup of all my files. When copy photos off the camera to my NAS, I never delete the originals off the camera until after the first backup of the data - Just In Case. Murphy's law still is out there.
If you connect the NAS directly to your laptop and run RAIDar, what does it inicate as the IP address? Is the NAS set to pull the IP address from the router? Make note of the IP address shown in RAIDar and if it is 192.168.168.168 than it is not pulling an IP address from any DHCP server. (The laptop is not a DHCP server and the NAS can only serve as a DHCP server to OTHER devices not itself.)
If you have direct connected the unit to your laptop, the only way you would connect is if both the NAS and the laptop had static IP addresses set in the same subnet. The IP address is 4 sets of numbers, and the subnet would be the same numbers in the first three positions, with different numbers in the fourth position. For example, my DGN2000 router (wireless router only, modem is separate) uses a subnet of 192.168.1.xxx. All of my devices except my NAS units are DHCP and the router assigns a number to the device, be it printer or PC. My NAS units are set to static IP address with the fourth postiion starting with 201. With multiple NAS units this allows me to determine which NAS is which on the network map.
If you are running Vista or Win7 if you will click on the network icon in the lower right (next to the speaker icon) and then click on "Open Network and Sharing Center" at the top of the window that opens is a stylized map showing your computer name, the network name and then a globe labled "Internet". To the right of that should be the hyperlink of "See full map". This will display a map of your network with icons and name for all the connected devices that are powered up. If you will hover your cursor over the device icon, it will show the IPv4 address (as well as the IPv6 and MAC address which do not concern us here). Please not the address of your laptop and the gateway. The gateway is your router and should be 192.168.1.1. Your laptop should be 192.168.1.xxx where xxx is any number other than 1. If the NAS is shown, it should also be in the subnet with a number fourth position number different from the laptop and router.
With the NAS connected to the network, RAIDar should be able to find it, even if it is in a different subnet. If it is in a different subnet from the laptop, that is why the laptop will not connect.
Please post back with any questions and let us know if the numbers are not what you expect to see.
If you have the Ultra 2 set up as a redundant volume with X-Raid2 or even Raid5, you have a volume of approximately 930GB available to you. You have copied 840GB initially which is quite a load and then apparently added 60GB more. That only leaves you 30GB of available space which means it will be slower than normal since it does not have much free space to work with.
I am not familiar with Tetracopy, but do not understand why one would use a third party application since Windows copy/paste is certainly reliable.
One should never, ever trust a single device for storage of important/critical files. I maintain a current/complete backup of all my files. When copy photos off the camera to my NAS, I never delete the originals off the camera until after the first backup of the data - Just In Case. Murphy's law still is out there.
If you connect the NAS directly to your laptop and run RAIDar, what does it inicate as the IP address? Is the NAS set to pull the IP address from the router? Make note of the IP address shown in RAIDar and if it is 192.168.168.168 than it is not pulling an IP address from any DHCP server. (The laptop is not a DHCP server and the NAS can only serve as a DHCP server to OTHER devices not itself.)
If you have direct connected the unit to your laptop, the only way you would connect is if both the NAS and the laptop had static IP addresses set in the same subnet. The IP address is 4 sets of numbers, and the subnet would be the same numbers in the first three positions, with different numbers in the fourth position. For example, my DGN2000 router (wireless router only, modem is separate) uses a subnet of 192.168.1.xxx. All of my devices except my NAS units are DHCP and the router assigns a number to the device, be it printer or PC. My NAS units are set to static IP address with the fourth postiion starting with 201. With multiple NAS units this allows me to determine which NAS is which on the network map.
If you are running Vista or Win7 if you will click on the network icon in the lower right (next to the speaker icon) and then click on "Open Network and Sharing Center" at the top of the window that opens is a stylized map showing your computer name, the network name and then a globe labled "Internet". To the right of that should be the hyperlink of "See full map". This will display a map of your network with icons and name for all the connected devices that are powered up. If you will hover your cursor over the device icon, it will show the IPv4 address (as well as the IPv6 and MAC address which do not concern us here). Please not the address of your laptop and the gateway. The gateway is your router and should be 192.168.1.1. Your laptop should be 192.168.1.xxx where xxx is any number other than 1. If the NAS is shown, it should also be in the subnet with a number fourth position number different from the laptop and router.
With the NAS connected to the network, RAIDar should be able to find it, even if it is in a different subnet. If it is in a different subnet from the laptop, that is why the laptop will not connect.
Please post back with any questions and let us know if the numbers are not what you expect to see.
If you have the Ultra 2 set up as a redundant volume with X-Raid2 or even Raid5, you have a volume of approximately 930GB available to you. You have copied 840GB initially which is quite a load and then apparently added 60GB more. That only leaves you 30GB of available space which means it will be slower than normal since it does not have much free space to work with.
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