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En haut à gauche de la fenêtre, cliquez sur l'icône du menu (trois lignes horizontales), puis sélectionnez
Gestionnaire de périphériques ou la flèche vers le bas > [nom de l'application].
Shares
Your NAS's storage is divided into shares, also known as network folders. The Shares page allows you to
create new shares, assign access rights to users and groups, and to adjust services by share. By default, your
NAS OS device has two shares, admin and Public. You can begin working with these shares immediately and
create new shares as needed.
Note on the admin share name: The name of the share admin will update automatically if the
administrator changes the login name from the default admin. For example, if the administrator
used her name, Sally, during the installation, admin becomes Sally.
Important info: In text fields, you can enter 1 to 20 characters using letters, numbers, hyphens,
and underscores. No other symbols, special characters, punctuation, or spaces may be used. Do
not begin or end with a hyphen or underscore.
Shares, Users, and Groups
Allotting storage and network permissions for multiple departments and users in a branch office or corporate
network can be complicated. It takes forethought and planning to configure which user is part of what group
with access to how many shares. For this reason, the settings Shares, Users, and Groups are closely related in
NAS OS. The cross-functionality between these three settings allows the administrator to add users to
groups in the Users or Groups settings as well as shares to users and groups in the Users and Groups settings.
The wizard for each setting prompts the administrator to choose shares, users, and groups. Additionally,
users and groups can be added to a new share when following the Add share wizard.
However, creating a new share, user, or group requires that the administrator use its respective setting. For
example, the administrator must choose the Shares setting to add a new share and the Users setting to add a
new user. Though each setting can be revised at any time, it is highly recommended that the administrator
plan ahead when first adding shares, users, and groups to NAS OS. With a map of users, groups, and shares,
the administrator can simplify access rights. See the example below.
Sample setup: Shares, Users, and Groups
An administrator has mapped permissions for 40 shares, 20 users, and 10 groups.
Seagate NAS OS 4
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