10400455-002
©2008-14 Overland Storage, Inc.
75
SnapScale/RAINcloudOS 4.1 Administrator’s Guide
4 – Network Settings
3.
Click
OK
to update the settings immediately.
Connect via FTP/FTPS
1.
To connect to the SnapScale cluster:
•
For
standard FTP
, enter the name of the cluster or IP address in the FTP Location
or Address box of a web browser or FTP client application.
•
To connect via a
command line
, enter:
ftp
cluster_name
•
To connect via a
Web browser
, enter:
ftp://
cluster_name
(where
cluster_name
is the name or IP address of the cluster)
•
For
secure FTPS
, configure your FTPS client application to use explicit FTPS (such
as, FTPES or “Auth TLS”) and enter the name of the cluster or IP address.
NOTE: With anonymous login enabled, access to folders is determined by the share access
settings for the guest account. With anonymous login disabled, log into the cluster using
a valid local user name and password.
2.
Press
Enter
to
connect to the FTP root directory.
All shares and subdirectories appear as folders.
NOTE: FTP users cannot manage files or folders in the FTP root directory.
SNMP Configuration
The SnapScale cluster can act as an SNMP agent. SNMP managers collect data from agents
and generate statistics and other monitoring information for administrators. Agents respond
to managers and may also send traps, which are alerts that indicate error conditions. The
Option
Settings
Enable FTP
Check the box to enable standard FTP services; leave the box blank
to disable access to this cluster via standard FTP.
Enable FTPS
Check the box to enable FTPS services; leave the box blank to
disable access to this cluster via FTPS.
Allow Anonymous User
Access
When you allow anonymous login, FTP/FTPS users employ an email
address as the password. When you disallow anonymous login, only
FTP/FTPS users who are configured as local SnapScale users can
access the cluster.
• Check the box to allow users to connect to the cluster using the
anonymous user account. The anonymous user is mapped to the
local guest user account. You can set share access for
anonymous FTP/FTPS users by granting either read-write (the
default access) or read-only access to the guest account on a
share-by-share basis.
• Leave the box blank so users cannot log in anonymously but
must instead log in via a locally created user name and
password.