CRU Rax RAX Secure 3QJ 사용자 설명서 - 페이지 4

{카테고리_이름} CRU Rax RAX Secure 3QJ에 대한 사용자 설명서을 온라인으로 검색하거나 PDF를 다운로드하세요. CRU Rax RAX Secure 3QJ 7 페이지.

3 LED Behavior

LED
Color
State
Name
Power
Green
Solid
Solid
Drive
Green
Power
Flashing Indicates a bay fan failure
Drive
Inter-
Amber
Activity
mittent
R/W Mode
Green
Solid
Activation*
WP Mode
Amber
Solid
Activation*
Drive Temp
Red
Solid
Drive
Red
Solid
Health
Fan
Red
Solid
Solid
Key Error
Red
Flashing
Solid
Encryption
Green
Off
*Feature only available on 3QJp products
4 Usage with Mac and Windows Operating
Systems
4.1 Usage with Mac OS X
4.1.1 Formatting a Drive
To format, use Disk Utility (pictured below), which can be
found in the Applications folder.
a. Click on the drive in the window to the left.
b. Click the Erase tab in the window to the right.
c. Select the format type. Most users prefer Mac OS
Extended with Journaling (HFS+), which is
required for compatibility with Time Machine (OS
10.5 or newer). If you need to use your RAX unit with
both Mac and Windows computers, select MS-DOS
File System instead.
d. Enter a name for the new volume and then click
Erase to start the process.
Page 4
Description
Enclosure is powered on
Bay is powered on
Flashes when the drive is being
accessed
Read/Write (R/W) Mode is activated
Write Protect (WP) Mode is activated
Indicates when a drive has exceeded
the preset alarm temperature of 155° C
Indicates a drive failure
Indicates a unit fan failure
Encryption engine error. Contact Tech-
nical Support.
The Security Key is not present or is
not functioning.
The Security Key is present and
encryption is enabled
Encryption is disabled
4.1.2 Mounting and Unmounting Volumes
If the hard drive installed in the RAX unit is already
formatted, an icon representing the drive's volume will
appear (mount) on the desktop. You can begin using
the volume right away. If the drive is unformatted, a
message will appear on the desktop saying that the disk
is unreadable. Use OS X's Disk Utility to easily format the
drive (see section above).
Unmount the volume before
powering down the unit by
dragging the volume's icon to the
Trash, or by selecting the volume
Command-E.
then
pressing
Disconnecting the unit without
first unmounting the volume can
result in data loss.
4.1.3 Creating a Boot Drive
To activate this feature, you must first install OS X on the
hard drive in your carrier. The easiest way to do this is
to clone an existing system drive using a utility such as
Carbon Copy Cloner or Super Duper. Next, go to System
Preferences → Startup Disk. A window will list the
available bootable volumes. Select the volume from
which you wish to boot. Another method is to hold down
the Option key during boot up. A screen should appear
that allows you to select the volume you wish to use. This
is useful if you are only sporadically booting from the RAX
unit hard drive.
4.2 Usage with Windows Operating Systems
4.2.1 Formatting a Drive
When you first mount a drive to a Windows operating
system, a pop-up window will ask you if you would like
to format it. Click Format Disk and skip to Step E. If the
prompt does not pop up, use the Disk Management utility
by following these steps:
a.
Right-click on the My Computer icon on the
desktop (Windows XP) or the Computer button in
the Start Menu (Windows Vista, 7, Server 2008 and
2012 product families), then select Manage. In the
left pane of the Computer Management window that
opens, left-click on Disk Management (labeled
'A' in the picture below). For Windows 8.1, press
WINKEY + X, then select Disk Management from
the menu that pops up.
b. The drive should appear in the list of Disks in the
lower pane. You may need to scroll down to see it.
If the drive is already formatted, you can identify it
easily by its volume name. If the Device Properties
Box (labeled 'B' in the picture below) says "Not
Initialized", you'll need to initialize the disk before
formatting it.
Right-click on the Device Properties Box and
CRU Mark
10.25.12
PMS 711
2 cyan