NAS

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A NAS (Network Attached Storage) is a stand-alone file-level computer data storage device into which you can install one or more hard drives (either internally or externally), and then connect the NAS device directly to your network. The NAS device is given its own IP address and can be configured to share the hard drives and their data contents on the network to multiple client devices, such as XBMC and other computers. With a NAS you do not have to have your computer(s) powered on permanently and your data will still always be available on your network and accessible from multiple devices. It is also possible to 'convert' a modest computer into a dedicated NAS device, and this is often the cheapest way to obtain your own NAS (potential downsides of using a computer as a NAS device are relatively large device size, increased noise levels and electricity consumption).


Contents

1 NAS (Network Attached Storage) and XBMC

XBMC already supports SMB/SAMBA/CIFS (and UPnP) network-protocols, which many NAS devices support. It is also possible to stream via FTP to XBMC, however this is not recommended because the FTP network protocol was never designed for audio/video streaming. Therefore, FTP streaming will not be covered here and is not officially supported. To stream from a NAS device to XBMC simply setup a SMB/SAMBA/CIFS (or UPnP) share on the NAS with an optional username and password, (once you have configured its network settings and connected it to your network), then add a media source for that share in XBMC.

2 The definition of NAS (Network Attached Storage)

NAS (Network Attached Storage) is the name given to dedicated data storage technology that can be connected directly to a computer-network to provide centralized data-access and storage to compatible network-clients. Normally this means a hard-disk-drive storage device that is attached directly to your LAN (Local Area Network), typically a ethernet-based network, and assigned an own IP-address, rather than being attached to a computer that is serving data-files to network users. Network-Attached Storage consists of hard-disk storage, (that can include support for multi-disk RAID systems), and software for configuring and mapping file locations to the Network-Attached Device. NAS software can usually handle a number of network protocols, and share formats. Configuration, including the setting of user access priorities, is usually possible using a web browser.

3 NAS compatible with XBMC

This is a list of NAS (Network Attached Storage) devices and software compatible with XBMC.
Please feel free to add any NAS device or software that you yourself have tested and know if it works with XBMC or not!

3.1 NAS devices that work with XBMC

3.2 NAS software that work with XBMC

3.3 NAS devices and software that don't work with XBMC

4 Converting a cheap old computer into a dedicated NAS

This is a guide on how to make an 'old' computer into a cheap dedicated NAS box by using a free (and simple to use) operating-system/software like FreeNAS, Openfiler or ClarkConnect Community Edition. This guide will hopefully get a little more step-by-step oriented over time as people who test and play with this software add information from their experience, but for now a short description will have to do. So for now please refer to the the respective websites of the mentioned operating-systems/software for more information, documentation (user-manuals) and FAQs.

4.1 Required hardware

4.2 FreeNAS

FreeNAS is a complete operating-system and NAS software package which is free and open source, (so you do not not need any other operating-system on the target computer) and it features a nice web-interface for all configuration, (so no keyboard/video/mouse is needed after the initial installation). The FreeNAS boot-image itself takes up less than 32MB memory and can be booted from a hard drive, a USB-stick, or a Compact Flash card (if you have a Compact Flash to IDE/ATA converter).

4.3 Openfiler

If you have tested this NAS operating-system/software then please contribute some information and your experience here.
good OS because its linux...but the only problem i had with it is that you cant have local user to authenticate ftp.....users have to come from ldap or windows domain controller....and i not fluent enough with linux to make that change via the command line....freenas has no users that you can create either......so remote access is not looking so good unless you just want anonymous aceess or you have to use a ftp server on a seperate computer and share your nas that way so you can have users and passwords

4.4 ClarkConnect Community Edition

If you have tested this NAS operating-system/software then please contribute some information and your experience here.

5 Educational Discussions Regarding NAS

5.1 FreeNAS vs. unRAID

FreeNAS.vs.unRAID

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