![]() Do you refer to which USB 2 or to which USB 3 port of your assumed ReadyNAS model?.So which issues do you have now with ReadyNAS OS 6.10.7 for local backup via USB 2, via USB 3 and via local network on your old ReadyNAS model after it reached EOL how much time ago?.They offer another service as follow up as announced in the end of support for the former. So it is expected that Netgear won't provide support to ReadyNAS Data after November 2020. ReadyNAS Replicate reached end of service in 2017 and ReadyNAS Data reached end of service by 1st November 2020 Opens a new window. And I remind you that two former standard services reached EOL several years ago. ![]() That's why I don't understand to which service you refer in which version and how you compare that to which service now in which version now. And the available services several years ago were either different services or different versions. The current version for ReadyNAS 312 is ReadyNAS OS 6.10.7. And I doubt the the ReadyNAS OS version 6.0, 6.3, 6.5 or 6.10 all come with the same issues. You did not yet reply which version of the operating system / firmware that assumed ReadyNAS model is using. They went down the route of backing it up via its USB ports years ago and there were threads on here and weeks of trying to get support from Netgear. Did you have the opportunity to lookup the model or when do you expect to become able?.What they don't have is the ability to install 3rd party apps like data protector, they do have apps, but they are a lot more basic than Qnap and Synology, that's not to say the built-in tools wont do what the OP needs for a little while longer. They are good units if all you want is a basic NAS. (X6, NV, NV+, Duo, Ultra, Pro, 2 bay, 4 bay, 6 bay, 8 bay. I have owned at least one of most of the desktop range of ReadyNAS units since Netgear's takeover of Infrant Technologies. It can also be scheduled to Rsync, FTP or HTTP copy the data elsewhere, but since we don't know the reason it was failing or the errors in the logs, I am unable to assist in getting this working again until the OP can get the company to buy new. The ReadyNAS units come with a built-in backup too, to copy data from the NAS to a USB drive, they even have (like most NAS units) a dedicated backup button on the front for ad-hoc backups. So one way is to map the NAS drives to a PC then backup up the whole PC with mapped drives or backup the mapped drives. but it seems that the NAS does not have its own native backup solution. I tried to delete 400gb worth of stuff off the external drive yesterday remotely and it took all night to remove it They didnt want to format the drive as it still had a valid backup on it.Īdrian, I think the OP is asking how to backup the NAS, not to it. Netgear got involved and it was horrendous. There is a thread on here from years back that went on for months where there were issues in the MACs accessing the data on the READYNAS and it taking ages to show up. Its compounded problem wise even further by them being a cross platform design studio with Macs and Pc's. Probably they need a complete new NAS to something more modern with a cloud backup solution but even that is not straight forward with the file sizes and amount of data. I have seen the backup issue with Netgear NAS on other sites also. Yes you are supposed to be able to with this one but its just totally unreliable. I don't know if that is an option on Netgear. I know with newer NAS's you have the option to back it up to another NAS. 400gb and growing and of course some of the artwork files are pretty big. One Drive perhaps? The issue of course being the amount of data. I tried Easeus Todo backup a while ago and wondered if that would do a better job but I also wondered if it would be possible to perhaps move the backups to the cloud. They are using an old version of Cobian backup which also is not really working for them anymore and is no longer supported. I know here is a backup facility within Readynas but its never worked properly which is why they use this method. ![]() so it backs up slowly across the network. Currently to back up the NAS they are using an old Version of Cobian backup running on one of the PCs which each night is supposed to backup the NAS to a 3gb USB drive connected to that machine. ![]() They have about 400gb of data on it and some of the files are pretty big. I have an client that uses a netgear Readynas for storing artwork files on a peer to peer network (mixture of Macs and PC's).
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