ilike2burnthing wrote:ADM > Storage Manager > Volume > Volume 1 > File System
Thanks. That was helpful. I now know that all four disks have an ext4 filesystem, and I know from experience that ext4
is case sensitive.
I can create a Test file and a test file in the same directory, so it's case sensitive, no setting to enable.
I am mounting the ASUStor on a CentOS 7 client. When I create multiple files with differing capitalization in the same directory, they overwrite each other, so my experience seems to differ from yours, which begs the question, "What am I doing differently?". I have a thought ... Have you joined a domain? That might be the critical factor ... member of a domain, Windows Symantics -- case preserving, not case sensative.
The mount command looks like this: (Please comment on any error I have made.)
Code: Select all
//ASUStor.example.com/d0 /net/nas0/d0 cifs noauto,user,exec,mfsymlinks,credentials=/root.pw.asustor.admin,uid=root,gid=root,fscontext="unconfined_u:object_r:mnt_t:s0" 0 0
Thanks for the help,
Chris.