Menu="OtherSettings" Title="Disk Settings" Icon="icon-disks" Tag="icon-disk" ---
_(Enable auto start)_: : :help11 > If set to 'Yes' then if the device configuration is correct upon server start-up, > the array will be automatically Started and shares exported.
> If set to 'No' then you must Start the array yourself. :end _(Default spin down delay)_: : :help12 > This setting defines the 'default' time-out for spinning hard drives down after a period > of no I/O activity. You may override the default value for an individual disk on the Disk Settings > page for that disk. :end _(Enable spinup groups)_: : :help13 > If set to 'Yes' then the [Spinup Groups](/Help) feature is enabled. :end _(Default partition format)_: : :help14 > Defines the type of partition layout to create when formatting hard drives 2TB in size and > smaller **only**. (All devices larger then 2TB are always set up with GPT partition tables.) > > **MBR: unaligned** setting will create MBR-style partition table, where the single > partition 1 will start in the **63rd sector** from the start of the disk. This is the *traditional* > setting for virtually all MBR-style partition tables. > > **MBR: 4K-aligned** setting will create an MBR-style partition table, where the single > partition 1 will start in the **64th sector** from the start of the disk. Since the sector size is 512 bytes, > this will *align* the start of partition 1 on a 4K-byte boundry. This is required for proper > support of so-called *Advanced Format* drives. > > Unless you have a specific requirement do not change this setting from the default **MBR: 4K-aligned**. :end _(Default file system)_: : :help15 > Defines the default file system type to create when an *unmountable* array device is formatted. > > The default file system type for a single or multi-device cache is always Btrfs. :end _(Shutdown time-out)_: : :help16 > When shutting down the server, this defines how long to wait in seconds for *graceful* shutdown before forcing > shutdown to continue. :end _(Tunable (poll_attributes))_: : :help17 > This defines the disk SMART polling interval, in seconds. A value of 0 disables SMART polling (not recommended). :end _(Tunable (enable NCQ))_: : :help18 > If set to **No** then *Native Command Queuing* is disabled for all array devices that support NCQ. > > **Auto** leaves the setting for each device as-is. > > Note: You must reboot after selecting Auto for setting to take effect. :end _(Tunable (nr_requests))_: : :help19 > This defines the `nr_requests` device driver setting for all array devices. > > **Auto** leaves the setting for each device as-is. > > Note: if you set to blank and click Apply, the setting is restored to its default, and you must reboot for setting to take effect. :end _(Tunable (scheduler))_: : :help20 > Selects which kernel I/O scheduler to use for all array devices. > > **Auto** leaves the setting for each device as-is (mq-deadline). > > Note: You must reboot after selecting Auto for setting to take effect. :end _(Tunable (md_num_stripes))_: : :help21 > This is the size of the *stripe pool* in number of *stripes*. A *stripe* refers to a data structure that faclitiates parallel 4K read/write > operations necessary for a parity-protected array. > > Note: if you set to blank and click Apply, the setting is restored to its default, and will take effect after reboot. :end _(Tunable (md_queue_limit))_: : :help22 > This is a number in [1..100] which is the maximum steady-load percentage of the stripe pool permitted to be in use. > > Note: if you set to blank and click Apply, the setting is restored to its default. :end _(Tunable (md_sync_limit))_: : :help23 > This is a number in [0..100] which is the maximum percentage of the stripe pool allocated for parity sync/check in the presence of other I/O. > > Note: if you set to blank and click Apply, the setting is restored to its default. :end _(Tunable (md_write_method))_: : :help24 > Selects the method to employ when writing to enabled disk in parity protected array. > > *Auto* selects `read/modify/write`. :end _(Default warning disk utilization threshold)_ (%): : :help25 > *Warning disk utilization* sets the default warning threshold for all hard disks utilization. Exceeding this threshold will result in a warning notification. > > When the warning threshold is set equal or greater than the critical threshold, there will be only critical notifications (warnings are not existing). > > A value of zero will disable the warning threshold (including notifications). :end _(Default critical disk utilization threshold)_ (%): : :help26 > *Critical disk utilization* sets the default critical threshold for all hard disks utilization. Exceeding this threshold will result in an alert notification. > > A value of zero will disable the critical threshold (including notifications). :end _(Default warning disk temperature threshold)_ (°): : :help27 > *Warning disk temperature* sets the default warning threshold for all hard disks temperature. Exceeding this threshold will result in a warning notification. > > A value of zero will disable the warning threshold (including notifications). :end _(Default critical disk temperature threshold)_ (°): : :help28 > *Critical disk temperature* sets the default critical threshold for all hard disks temperature. Exceeding this threshold will result in an alert notification. > > A value of zero will disable the critical threshold (including notifications). :end   :
_(Global SMART Settings)_
_(Default SMART notification value)_: : :help29 > SMART notifications are generated on either an increasing RAW value of the attribute, or a decreasing NORMALIZED value which reaches a predefined threshold set by the manufacturer. > > This section is used to set the global settings for all disks. It is possible to adjust settings for individual disks. :end _(Default SMART notification tolerance level)_: : :help30 > A tolerance level may be given to prevent that small changes result in a notification. Setting a too high tolerance level may result in critical changes without a notification. > > This section is used to set the global settings for all disks. It is possible to adjust settings for individual disks. :end _(Default SMART controller type)_: : :help31 > By default automatic controller selection is done by smartctl to read the SMART information. Certain controllers however need specific settings for smartctl to work. > Use this setting to select your controller type and fill-in the specific disk index and device name for your situation. Use the manufacturer's documentation to find the relevant information. > > This section is used to set the global settings for all disks. It is possible to adjust settings for individual disks. :end _(Default SMART attribute notifications)_: : _(Custom attributes (use comma to separate numbers))_   : >_(Attribute)_ = :help32 > The user can enable or disable notifications for the given SMART attributes. It is recommended to keep the default, which is ALL selected attributes, > when certain attributes are not present on your hard disk or do not provide the correct information, these may be excluded. > In addition custom SMART attributes can be entered to generate notifications. Be careful in this selection, > it may cause an avalance of notifcations if inappropriate SMART attributes are chosen. > > This section is used to set the global settings for all disks. It is possible to adjust settings for individual disks. :end :