Seagate blackarmor ps 110 Guia Do Utilizador

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36                                                                 Copyright (c) 2000-2009 Acronis. All rights reserved. 
Copyright (c) 2009 Seagate Technology LLC. All Rights Reserved. 
 
 
If you frequently back up data to Seagate BlackArmor NAS, think of limiting the network 
bandwidth used by Seagate BlackArmor Backup. To set the desired data transfer speed, drag 
the slider or enter the bandwidth limit for transferring backup data in kilobytes per second.  
5.3.6  Archive splitting 
Sizeable backups can be split into several files that together form the original backup.  
5.3.7  File-level security settings 
Preserve files' security settings in archives 
By default, files and folders are saved in the archive with their original Windows security 
settings (i.e. permissions for read, write, execute and so on for each user or user group, set 
in file Properties -> Security). If you restore a secured file/folder on a computer without 
the user specified in the permissions, you may not be able to read or modify this file. 
To eliminate this kind of problem, you can disable preserving file security settings in 
archives. Then the restored files/folders will always inherit the permissions from the folder to 
which they are restored (parent folder or disk, if restored to the root). 
Or, you can disable file security settings during restoration, even if they are available in the 
archive (see 
 below). The result will be the same. 
In archives, store encrypted files in decrypted state 
The preset is disabled
If you do not use the encryption feature available in Windows XP and Windows Vista 
operating systems, simply ignore this option. (Files/folders encryption is set in Properties -
> General -> Advanced Attributes -> Encrypt contents to secure data
). 
Check the option if there are encrypted files in the backup and you want them to be 
accessed by any user after restore. Otherwise, only the user who encrypted the files/folders 
will be able to read them. Decryption may also be useful if you are going to restore 
encrypted files on another computer. 
These options relate only to file/folder backups. In addition, they are unavailable for zip 
backup archives. 
5.3.8  Error handling 
1. Ignore bad sectors 
The preset is disabled
This option lets you run a backup even if there are bad sectors on the hard disk. Although 
most disks do not have bad sectors, the possibility that they might occur increases during 
the course of the hard disk’s lifetime. If your hard drive has started making strange noises 
(for example, it starts making quite loud clicking or grinding noises during operation), such 
noises may mean that the hard drive is failing. When the hard drive completely fails, you can 
lose important data, so it is high time to back up the drive as soon as possible. There may be 
a problem though – the failing hard drive might already have bad sectors. If the Ignore 
bad sectors
 box is left unselected, a backup task is aborted in case of read and/or write 
errors that could occur on the bad sectors. Selecting this box lets you run a backup even if