CRU RTX Secure 610-IR User Manual

Page 11

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RTX220 QR - Manual

Page 11

c. All available Free Disks will be displayed. Check the drives that

you wish to add to the RAID Group, then click “Confirm”.

d. The selected Physical Disks will now be displayed in the

RAID Group creation screen. Enable or Disable Write Cache,

Standby, Readahead, and Command Queuing based on

your needs. Most RAID Groups will be fine with the default

settings. Then click “Next” to proceed to the confirmation

screen.

e. On the confirmation screen, verify that the RAID level is correct

and all of the disks you selected are displayed under “RAID PD

slot”, then click “Confirm” to create the RAID Group.

f. The RAID Group will now display on the main RAID Group

screen. To finish manually creating a RAID set, a Virtual Disk

still must be created and a Logical Unit must be attached. Go to

the next section, “Creating a Virtual Disk”.

If you opted to create JBOD drives, skip to Section 8.3.3,

“Manually Attaching a Logical Unit” as Virtual Disks have

already been created for each JBOD drive.

8.3.2 Creating A Virtual Disk

After a RAID Group has been created, you can create associated

Virtual Disks. You must create at least one Virtual Disk to access

the drives of the RTX Secure with a computer.

a. Click the “Create” button at the bottom of the page to open the

Virtual Disk creation screen.

b. You will see the screen below. Fill in the information and then

click “Confirm”. Each field is explained below the picture.

Name

Enter a name for the Virtual Disk.

RG Name

Choose the RAID Group to which the Virtual Disk will be added

Capacity

Enter the capacity of the Virtual Disk. The default uses the

maximum capacity of the associated RAID Group. If you wish

to create multiple Virtual Disks on the selected RAID Group,

you will need to reduce the capacity below the maximum so

that there is space left on the RAID Group for additional Virtual

Disks.

Stripe Height (KB)

Determines how the RTX Secure organizes the RAID. Normally

the default option is preferred.

Block Size

Determines the minimum file size for files that will be stored

on the Virtual Disk. Higher block sizes can result in more

wasted space if many small files are saved to the drive, but

are necessary to take advantage of high capacity RAIDs. If

you are creating a Virtual Disk over 2TB in size for use

with MacOS 10.4.x or older, or for use with Windows

XP, you must increase the block size to 4096KB to take

advantage of the full capacity of the Virtual Disk. For

more information, see Section 14.

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