![]() Windows 10 does come out of the box with sufficient firewalling and AV capabilities - and we know it's not killing other functionality. Not a secret: I'm not a friend of this kind of Winodws "Internet Security" security and even less firewall software. With the otherwise known working NAS on other systems - you might check if the NAS security has blocked the other computer IP address - not visible in both Qfinder and as a server. With a properly Windows integrated 3rd party firewall, accessing the \\\ in Explorer would change the network profile, and change the services active. If there is a firewall software on the Windows (wor whatever) system, if there are some more or less sophisticated power line or wireless based network extenders, things can be blocked. Any thoughts or suggestions would be greatly appreciated.īoth Qfinder and the NetBIOS name resolution (making the blue PC icon visible in the Explorer network section, and allowing name -> IP address resolution in a work group) are based on Broadcast. I am pretty much at a loss as to how all of a sudden I could lose the map of the drive but given everything else is connecting to the NAS, I have to assume it is some random setting in my firewall that I have not yet identified. I did adjust the default port for port forwarding. I am using Norton 360 as my firewall app on a Windows 10 computer. I have gone back and added the IP address of the NAS as a trusted location in my firewall, still no joy. Also of interest when I try to go thru my QNAP cloud through a web interface on that computer, it seems to just time out. QFinder Pro is also unable to find the drive on the network. Then when I turned it off a second time, I was again not able to map the drive. I took down the firewall after and was able to map once. I did not make any setting changes on the computer including to the firewall. ![]() Q Finder Pro will not find the drive on my network. I am still able to see the NAS via my phone apps and another computer in the house continues to have the drives mapped to it. Up until yesterday, I had no issues, but then all of a sudden I could no longer map to the drive. raid scrubbing is recommended to be run at least once each month.I have a QNAP TS-451+ running on my network. I wonder, could it be a raid scrubbing that was scheduled that was running in background? this is one possible cause for slow downs. you need to find out what that is by going a checklist of things in order to troubleshoot to then rectify the issue. The tool to test performance between your NAS and PC is like iperf qpkg which you can download from Īnyway there must be a reason why you are getting slow downs. you can also check smart test that the hdds are in good condition or not. there is a benchmark you can do, and compare the results vs the hdd reviews for what expected performance you should be getting. is cpu 100% ? or did the memory trigger a memory swap (basically you over use your ram, so now it begins dumping onto the hdd which slows down performance)Ģ. ![]() If you feel the nas is slow, few things you can doġ.
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