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Small Computer System Interface (SCSI) is a widely used protocol for controlling hard drives. Internet SCSI (iSCSI) uses the SCSI protocol on network volumes. In the iSCSI paradigm, the controller is known as the initiator and the network volume is the target.
Because SCSI offers greater speed than network file systems such as SMB and NFS, consider creating iSCSI targets for users with unique applications. For example, a PC on the network used for editing audio or video can take advantage of the faster protocol. Using an iSCSI target as opposed to standard direct-attached storage provides a centralized pool of storage that is easier to manage.
Professional versions of Windows have iSCSI built into the operating system. Third-party software is also available for Macs. When an initiator is paired with a target, the target volume must be formatted for the operating system, similar to standard SCSI hard drives. For example, a Windows initiator can format the target as NTFS, and a Mac initiator can use HFS+.
WSS 2012 can also act as a name server for multiple iSCSI targets on the network. Targets register with the server, allowing initiators to connect to one device rather than search for multiple targets on the network. The WSS 2012 feature that manages iSCSI targets is called Internet Storage Name Service (iSNS). Your Seagate server can manage the naming for iSCSI targets created on its own pool of storage as well as other Windows and Linux servers on the network.
An iSCSI initiator is the server or computer that writes data to the iSCSI target. An initiator can search for and connect to a target on the network. It is also possible for a target to associate itself with an initiator.
An iSCSI initiator has an iSCSI Qualified Name (IQN) that can be useful when identifying the computer that is using the target. To find the initiator’s IQN on Windows:
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Important: Connecting an iSCSI target to more than one computer on the network and sharing files can cause file corruption. The one exception is a network that includes an iSCSI cluster server with file-sharing management. WSS 2012 cannot act as an iSCSI cluster server.
The iSNS provides discovery services for iSCSI initiators and targets on the network. Before you can start iSNS, you must add it as a feature to WSS 2012.
Make sure that iSNS has been added as a feature WSS 2012.
Important: Third-party or compatible NAS devices can have specific settings to join an iSCSI target to an iSNS server. Seagate NAS OS devices have a setting to join iSCSI targets to an iSNS server.
Make sure that iSNS has been added as a feature WSS 2012.