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Dell PowerFlex Appliance with PowerFlex 4.x Administration Guide

NAS server

NAS servers provide access to file systems. Each NAS server supports Windows (SMB) file systems, Linux/UNIX (NFS) exports, or both.

To provide isolated access to a file system, you can configure a NAS server to function as independent file server with server-specific DNS, NIS, and other settings. The IP address of the NAS server provides part of the mount point that users and hosts use to map to the file system storage resource, with the share name providing the rest. Each NAS server exposes its own set of files systems through the file system share, either SMB or NFS.

Once a NAS server is running, you can create and manage file systems and shares on that NAS server.

You can create file system only if there is a NAS server running on the storage system. The types of file systems that you can create are determined by the file sharing protocols (SMB, NFS, or multiprotocol) enabled for the NAS server.


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