I'm noticing my DNS-345 resets every file handle it has open on it every 12 hours after my last reboot.
Now, if you have the DNS-345 mapped to a drive, or directly link to it, you won't notice a problem because you may not have a file actively opened.
Let's say I rebooted my NAS at 9:00 am. Then every 9:00 am and 9:00 pm, any files I have open from my NAS get the network shares killed.
So if I started watching a movie off my NAS at 8:30pm, then at 9:00pm the video will stop playing and I will get an error that the network share is no longer available.
This also poses a problem with file I need to keep open over this "reset" period such as a large encrypted file, or any sort of file I'm editing (photos, word documents, videos, etc).
Even copying files to the NAS has a problem if I just happen to be copying a file and it crosses this 12-hour reset event.
Right now I reset my NAS at 6:00pm, so that the likelyhood of me having a file open at 6:00pm and 6:00am at home is unlikely. I do have to remember not to keep a file open over this time period.
I've even tried setting up a security cam to write a image every 30 seconds to the NAS, then every 12 hours, one image does not get written. Then I check my log files (from the security cam), and it says network share not available.
I've turned off all power saving options, nothing unusual shows up in the log files during this mysterious 12 hour mark.
Actively reading or writing a file does not change the reset time.
The network share reset happens on the DNS_345. Every single network device I have hooked up to the DNS-345 has a problem. PC's (running WinXP, Win7, Win7-x64, Ubuntu, CentOS), Mac G4, iPads, iPhones, network security cams, my TV, my Denon receiver, etc.
I've been trying for months going through D-Link's tech support to figure out this problem, but they have literally stopped answering my e-mails. The last response I got seemed to be a canned response to call them. This was after they asked me to send them a VISO drawing of my network topology and it took me a while to get to drawing it up. So it may have crossed a time-out threshold for closing the ticket.
Anyways, from a design standpoint, it sounds like they're periodically resetting some task on board in the NAS to cover up a bug thinking no one would notice.
Has anyone seen funny things like this? This mystery reset time would be easy to determine if you don't remember when you reset your NAS. Play an audio file on your NAS in a loop, and leave it open for more than 12 hours. I bet you would get a "network share lost" error or something similar, then that's the mystery 12-hour reset time.
??!?!??!
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SLam