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OneFS Web Administration Guide
OneFS Event Reference Guide
OneFS Web Administration Guide
The
OneFS
Web Administration Guide describes how to activate licenses, configure network interfaces, manage the file system, provision block storage, run system jobs, protect data, back up the cluster, set up storage pools, establish quotas, secure access, migrate data, integrate with other applications, and monitor
PowerScale
clusters.
About this guide
This guide describes how the
PowerScale
OneFS
web administration interface provides access to cluster configuration, management, and monitoring functionality.
Scale-out NAS overview
The scale-out NAS storage platform combines modular hardware with unified software to harness unstructured data. Powered by the
OneFS
operating system, a cluster delivers a scalable pool of storage with a global namespace.
Where to go for support
This topic contains resources for getting answers to questions about
PowerScale
products.
PowerScale scale-out NAS
PowerScale
OneFS combines the three layers of storage architecture—file system, volume manager, and data protection—into a scale-out NAS cluster.
General cluster administration
Access zones
Data Security overview
The default view of a
PowerScale
cluster is that of one physical machine. But you can partition a cluster into multiple virtual containers called access zones. Access zones allow you to isolate data and control who can access data in each zone.
Base directory guidelines
A base directory defines the file system tree that is exposed by an access zone. The access zone cannot grant access to any files outside of the base directory. Assign a base directory to each access zone.
Access zones best practices
You can avoid configuration problems on the
PowerScale
cluster when creating access zones by following best practices guidelines.
Access zones on a SyncIQ secondary cluster
You can create access zones on a SyncIQ secondary cluster that is used for backup and disaster recovery, with some limitations.
Access zone limits
You can follow access zone limits guidelines to help size the workloads on the
OneFS
system.
Quality of service
You can set upper bounds on quality of service by assigning specific physical resources to each access zone.
Zone-based Role-based Access Control (zRBAC)
You can assign roles and a subset of privileges to users on a per-access-zone basis.
Zone-specific authentication providers
Some information about how authentication providers work with zRBAC.
Managing access zones
You can create access zones on a
PowerScale
cluster, view and modify access zone settings, and delete access zones.
Authentication
Administrative roles and privileges
Identity management
Home directories
When you create a local user, OneFS automatically creates a home directory for the user.
Data access control
OneFS supports two types of permissions data on files and directories that control who has access: Windows-style access control lists (ACLs) and POSIX mode bits (UNIX permissions).
File sharing
You can access files and directories using SMB for Windows file sharing, NFS for Unix file sharing, secure shell (SSH), FTP, and HTTP.
File filtering
File filtering enables you to allow or deny file writes based on file type.
Auditing
Snapshots
Deduplication with SmartDedupe
Data replication with SyncIQ
Data layout with FlexProtect
NDMP backup
File retention with SmartLock
Protection domains
Data-at-rest encryption
S3 Support
SmartQuotas
Storage pools
Pool-based tree reporting in FSAnalyze (FSA)
Job management
Networking
Partitioned Performance Performing for NFS
Antivirus
File system explorer
OneFS Event Reference Guide
Home
OneFS Web Administration Guide
The
OneFS
Web Administration Guide describes how to activate licenses, configure network interfaces, manage the file system, provision block storage, run system jobs, protect data, back up the cluster, set up storage pools, establish quotas, secure access, migrate data, integrate with other applications, and monitor
PowerScale
clusters.
Access zones
Access zones