Deleting a file share, Dfs file shares, File share resource types – Dell PowerVault 775N (Rackmount NAS Appliance) User Manual

Page 77

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Deleting a File Share

1. Click the Start button and select Programs

AdministrativeToolsCluster Administrator.

2. In the Cluster Administrator window console tree, click the Resources folder.

3. In the right window pane, right-click the file share you want to remove and select Delete.

NOTE:

When you delete a resource, Cluster Administrator automatically deletes all the resources that have a a

dependency on the deleted resource.

DFS File Shares

You can use the File Share resource type selection in Cluster Administrator to create a resource that manages a stand-alone

DFS root; however, fault-tolerant DFS roots cannot be managed by this resource. The DFS root File Share resource has

required dependencies on a network name and an IP address. The network name can be either the cluster name or any other

network name for a virtual server.

A cluster-managed DFS root is different from an Active Directory (or domain-based) DFS root. If the data set does not

change very often, using and replicating a domain-based DFS root can be a better selection than a cluster-managed DFS root

for providing high availability. If the data set changes frequently, replication is not recommended, and a cluster-managed DFS

root is the better solution.

Table 5-4

provides a summary for choosing the appropriate DFS root management scheme.

See the Dell PowerVault 77xN NAS Systems Administrator's Guide for more information.

Table 5-4. Selecting the Appropriate DFS Root Management Scheme

Data Set Activity

DFS Root Management

Data changes often

Domain-based

Data does not change very often Cluster-managed

NOTE:

Microsoft Windows Storage Server 2003, Enterprise Edition supports multiple stand-alone DFS roots. The DFS

roots can exist in multiple resource groups and each group can be hosted on a different node in the cluster.

File Share Resource Types

If you want to use a PowerVault NAS SCSI cluster as a high-availability file server, you will need to select the type of file

share for your resource. Three ways to use this resource type are available:

Basic file share — Publishes a single file folder to the network under a single name.

Share subdirectories — Publishes several network names—one for each file folder and all of its immediate subfolders.

This method is an efficient way to create large numbers of related file shares on a single file server.

For example, you can create a file share for each user with files on the cluster node.

DFS root — Creates a resource that manages a stand-alone DFS root. Fault tolerant DFS roots cannot be managed by

this resource. A DFS root file share resource has required dependencies on a network name and an IP address. The

network name can be either the cluster name or any other network name for a virtual server.

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