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Forum Discussion
thecleartech
Dec 13, 2018Aspirant
OS6 on ReadyNAS Pro 4 (RNDP4000)
Is OS6 supported on legacy ReadyNAS models, specifically the RNDP4000? The NAS in question currently runs RAIDiator 4.2.31 ... but the lack of support for SMB2 (SMB1 appears to be the only SMB protoc...
StephenB
Apr 26, 2019Guru - Experienced User
Edw_CPA wrote:
Maybe the system just uses as much as you give it.
Generally that is the case. "Surplus" memory will be allocated for caching the RAID arrays.
Where you get into trouble is when the memory used by the readynas software itself and apps (including file indexing and antivirus) exceeds the physical memory. There isn't a big swap area, and the swapping will kill the performance.
Edw_CPA
Apr 26, 2019Aspirant
As a general rule do folks turn on the indexing and antivirus features? We have a couple of users and 200GB (4% usage) of files, All the machines have antivirus turned on and we don't use any of the apps that would bring files onto the NAS. I'm wondering if I shouldn't turn off the antivirus and indexing. Thus far we have no performance issues.
Thanks for any feedback.
- StephenBApr 26, 2019Guru - Experienced User
Edw_CPA wrote:
All the machines have antivirus turned on and we don't use any of the apps that would bring files onto the NAS.
I'd turn it off then (and it is off on my ReadyNAS).
Edw_CPA wrote:
As a general rule do folks turn on the indexing ...
Indexing allows you to do file search from the admin web ui. Personally I turn that on, but you could turn it on later if when you find a need for it. The main consequence is that you'd have to wait for the indexing to finish before you could search.
- jjcf89_2Apr 26, 2019Tutor
So far the antivirus feature has been a huge mess. It regularly flags files which no other antivirus flags, tested via virustotal.com. It also uses up 100% of cpu usage most of the time. Regardless I have left it on for now and put up with reporting the false positives to clamav.
- BrendanSimon2Sep 26, 2019Aspirant
Just a quick question. Do the RAID disks (I have 6 installed) get erased? Is any data lost from those disks?
I'm assuming the upgrade is just the firmware on board the CPU board, and the storage disks are left untouched. Is that correct?
Thanks, Brendan.
- StephenBSep 26, 2019Guru - Experienced User
BrendanSimon2 wrote:
Just a quick question. Do the RAID disks (I have 6 installed) get erased? Is any data lost from those disks?
I'm assuming the upgrade is just the firmware on board the CPU board, and the storage disks are left untouched. Is that correct?
If you are asking about 4.2.x to 6.x conversion, then your assumption is NOT correct. All data on the disks is lost (OS 6 uses a different file system).
Also, the firmware for all ReadyNAS is not just saved in the flash on the system board. That firmware is installed on the disks (and the NAS boots from the disks). The installation package on the system board is for OS reinstalls and factory defaults - and is not used in normal operation.
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