Example of Synology DiskStation system information output, with a five disk array:
| General |
| Serial number |
XXXXXON001918 |
| Model name |
DS1813+ |
| Total physical memory |
4096 MB |
| DSM version |
DSM 4.3-3810 |
| System time |
2013-11-16 12:25:55 |
| Operating time |
0 hour(s) 39 minute(s) 35 second(s) |
| Thermal status |
Normal (32 °C / 90 °F) |
| Network |
| Server name |
DiskStation |
| DNS |
192.168.1.1 |
| Default gateway |
192.168.1.1 |
| Workgroup |
WORKGROUP |
| LAN 1 |
| MAC address |
00-11-32-1E-69-9F |
| IP address |
192.168.1.22 |
| Subnet mask |
255.255.255.0 |
| IPv6 address |
fe80::211:32ff:fe1d:699f/64 Scope:link |
| LAN 2 |
| MAC address |
00-11-32-1E-69-A0 |
| IP address |
169.254.151.19 |
| Subnet mask |
255.255.0.0 |
| LAN 3 |
| MAC address |
00-11-32-1E-69-A1 |
| IP address |
169.254.149.219 |
| Subnet mask |
255.255.0.0 |
| LAN 4 |
| MAC address |
00-11-32-1E-69-A2 |
| IP address |
169.254.52.95 |
| Subnet mask |
255.255.0.0 |
| Volume 1 |
| Status |
Normal |
| Capacity |
14.42 TB |
| Used |
4.22% / 623.24 GB |
| Available |
95.78% / 13.81 TB |
| Disk 1 |
| Status |
Normal |
| Model |
WD40EFRX-68WT0N0 |
| Temperature |
25 °C / 77 °F |
| Disk Size |
3.64 TB |
| Volume / Disk Group |
Volume 1 |
| Disk 2 |
| Status |
Normal |
| Model |
WD40EFRX-68WT0N0 |
| Temperature |
25 °C / 77 °F |
| Disk Size |
3.64 TB |
| Volume / Disk Group |
Volume 1 |
| Disk 3 |
| Status |
Normal |
| Model |
WD40EFRX-68WT0N0 |
| Temperature |
25 °C / 77 °F |
| Disk Size |
3.64 TB |
| Volume / Disk Group |
Volume 1 |
| Disk 4 |
| Status |
Normal |
| Model |
WD40EFRX-68WT0N0 |
| Temperature |
24 °C / 75 °F |
| Disk Size |
3.64 TB |
| Volume / Disk Group |
Volume 1 |
| Disk 5 |
| Status |
Normal |
| Model |
WD40EFRX-68WT0N0 |
| Temperature |
22 °C / 72 °F |
| Disk Size |
3.64 TB |
| Volume / Disk Group |
Volume 1 |
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Hi
I have a similar setup on a DS1515.
I wonder how come the 4TB disk become 3,64TB.
Du you know the answer to that?
Best regards and happy new year
Anders, Denmark
Hey Anders, happy new year (a bit late)! The difference between 4TB and 3.64TB is the standard hard drive marketing vs. actual usable capacity gap. Drive manufacturers count 1TB as 1,000,000,000,000 bytes, but operating systems and NAS firmware count 1TB as 1,099,511,627,776 bytes (base 2). So a “4TB” drive is actually about 3.64TB in real binary terms. Totally normal and expected.