gbdavidx Posted April 17, 2018 Share Posted April 17, 2018 (edited) Currently, i have a two drives on my server, mnt 1 and a mnt 2, my tv shows are in here: /mnt/disk2/Media/TV/ does this have my disk 1 or disk 2 only? I thought when i set this up it was a mesh of both drives, i also have /mnt/disk2/Media/Movies which have my movies in it when i navigate to /MNT/DISK1/TV theres nothing there so i assume it is merged because the drive is about half full, i am pretty new to unraid so any advice or knowledge shared my way would be very helpful! Sigh... my shit is a mess, i apparently have a media/movies here too /MNT/DISK1/MEDIA/MOVIES Edited April 17, 2018 by gbdavidx Quote Link to comment
JonathanM Posted April 17, 2018 Share Posted April 17, 2018 Old post, but the principle for disk aggregation is the same. User shares are now the default and preferred method to access the server, everything you do over the network should be accomplished using user shares, only mess with individual disks if you fully understand what you are dealing with. Quote Link to comment
gbdavidx Posted April 17, 2018 Author Share Posted April 17, 2018 how does the share know to reference my folders? it would be nice if everything related to my "movies" folder could be /tower/Movies Quote Link to comment
Jcloud Posted April 17, 2018 Share Posted April 17, 2018 20 minutes ago, gbdavidx said: how does the share know to reference my folders? On your server, in the webui you can make user shares http://TOWER/shares during creation process, or editing the rules later you actually setup the rules you want user shares to follow. User share wiki is here https://lime-technology.com/wiki/UnRAID_Manual_5#Shares As an example here's a screen shot of the user share I use for Steam games. In this case, I specified a single disk for the Steam, and it won't use the other disks in my array (I did this because that particular is a WD Black, and most of my drives are Reds). By default all drives are selected in your disk array. Another example I've, my media stuffs, I've done the opposite. In both cases I the shares show up as: /mnt/user/Games /mnt/user/media If I go looking in /mnt/disk#/media I will get the broken up directories, but typically one does not need to look at those - just bother with /mnt/user/. I hope that help clear things up for you. Quote Link to comment
Frank1940 Posted April 17, 2018 Share Posted April 17, 2018 (edited) Disk shares are normally turned off!!! This is because there is a very easy way to lose data by copying between disk shares and User shares. See here: https://lime-technology.com/forums/topic/32836-user-share-copy-bug/#comment-316512 User Shares are the recommended method for all file operations If you are using disk shares, you had best be a experienced Linux user and understand exactly what you are doing and how to do it. ANY top level folder automatically becomes a User Share. It does not matter how it was created. If you are creating folder under Linux, you have to be careful about capitalization of Folder names. Linux considers movies and Movies to be two different folders/directories. Window only recognizes (and shows) only one of them! Plus, it is a turkey shoot as to which one. Any files in the other folder will be inaccessible! Edited April 17, 2018 by Frank1940 Quote Link to comment
Iceman24 Posted January 5, 2020 Share Posted January 5, 2020 (edited) Are user shares still the preferred method if you have only 1 data drive? Edit: I ask I've heard about user shares adding overhead and I only have 1 disk anyways, so it's straightforward. Edited January 5, 2020 by Iceman24 Quote Link to comment
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