On Tuesday QNAP Systems released Version 3.1 of the firmware-based management software for its line of Turbo NAS storage servers. This free download
-- for owners of most QNAP Turbo NAS models -- adds usability features and a change to the user interface.
New technical features include support for up to eight virtual disks via network iSCSI expansion and QNAP RAID Recovery, which
the company says can deal with unintentionally removed RAID 1, 5, or 6 drives.
In addition, the Version 3.1 update improves Network Discovery Services with support for the zero-configuration Bonjour protocol
for HTTP, SAMBA, FTP, AFP, and SSH-based networks. There's also EXT4 support for large volumes and files, SNMP support, and
bitmap support which, the company claims, will provide faster rebuilding of crashed RAID drives.
To continue reading, register here and become an Insider. You'll get free access to premium content from CIO, Computerworld, CSO, InfoWorld, and Network World. See more Insider content or sign in.
On Tuesday QNAP Systems released Version 3.1 of the firmware-based management software for its line of Turbo NAS storage servers. This free download
-- for owners of most QNAP Turbo NAS models -- adds usability features and a change to the user interface.
New technical features include support for up to eight virtual disks via network iSCSI expansion and QNAP RAID Recovery, which
the company says can deal with unintentionally removed RAID 1, 5, or 6 drives.
In addition, the Version 3.1 update improves Network Discovery Services with support for the zero-configuration Bonjour protocol
for HTTP, SAMBA, FTP, AFP, and SSH-based networks. There's also EXT4 support for large volumes and files, SNMP support, and
bitmap support which, the company claims, will provide faster rebuilding of crashed RAID drives.
Version 3.1 also offers a new, AJAX-based user interface. The company says this web-based interface will ease NAS configuration
for even non-technical users. The interface supports Microsoft Internet Explorer, Safari, Firefox, and Chrome.
For more Mac news, visit Macworld. Story copyright Mac Publishing, LLC.