6. Click
Finish
to close the wizard.
The partition will then be formatted. When formatting is complete, the status of the
partition should appear as
Healthy
, and the other properties should appear as:
v
Name:
Maintenance
v
Drive letter:
D:
v
File system:
FAT32
Granting user access to persistent image files
You can give end-users access to files in the persistent images. For example, this
would be helpful to a user who has accidentally corrupted a file and needs to get an
uncorrupted copy of that file.
To enable end-user access to persistent image files:
1. Go into Terminal Services.
2. Click the
My Computer
icon.
3. Select the volume on which you want to enable persistent image access.
4. Go into the persistent images directory and right-click the mouse on the
selected persistent image mount point, select
Sharing
, then specify sharing as
appropriate. If you want to enable the same access to all persistent images on
the volume, right-click the persistent images directory (from the top level of the
volume), select
Sharing
, and then specify sharing as appropriate.
Note:
The share settings are maintained in a persistent image. Therefore, granting
access to all end-users only permits those users to access files and
directories within the persistent image that they had permission to access
originally on the actual drive.
PSM notes
v
You can take and keep a maximum of 250 persistent images at one time. These
can be taken on local drives, or drives on the external storage that are logically
local.
On various panels, such as the New Persistent Image Schedule panel, the
Keep
the last:
field indicates the number of persistent images. The total number of
persistent images that you enter in these fields does not override the maximum
number of persistent images that you set in the Global Settings panel. For
example, if the maximum number of persistent images is 10, and you enter
numbers in other fields that add up to greater than 10, only 10 persistent images
will be taken.
v
You cannot take a persistent image of the maintenance drive (D:). Hence, you
will not see it as a choice in either the New Persistent Image Schedule panel or
the Create Persistent Image panel. Do not take a persistent image of the
clustering Quorum disk. See “Recovering from a corrupted Quorum drive” on
page 52 for information on how to recover from a corrupted Quorum drive.
v
PSM stores the cache file for each drive on the drive itself. The first persistent
image created on a particular drive will require a significant amount of time
because the PSM cache file must be created (pre-allocated) for that drive.
The time required for creation depends on the configured size of the cache file
(15 percent of the total drive size by default). Creation takes roughly three to four
minutes per gigabyte. For example, a 10-GB cache file would require 30 to 40
minutes to create. You should create a persistent image for a drive before
Chapter 6. Managing and protecting the network and storage
69
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