Scalable File Service
Scalable File Service
- What's New
- Function Overview
- Service Overview
-
Billing
- Billing Overview
- Billing Modes
- Billed Items
- Billing Examples
- Billing Mode Changes
- Renewing Subscriptions
- Bills
- Arrears
- Billing Termination
- Cost Management
-
Billing FAQ
- How Do I Purchase SFS?
- How Do I Renew the Service?
- How Do I Check Whether the Subscriber Is in Arrears?
- Can I Purchase SFS Capacity-Oriented Resource Packages When I Still Have Valid Ones in Use?
- How Do I Check the Usage of an SFS Capacity-Oriented Resource Package?
- How Do I Adjust the Size of an SFS Capacity-Oriented Resource Package?
- Do SFS Capacity-Oriented and SFS Turbo Share One Resource Package?
- Getting Started
- User Guide
- Best Practices
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API Reference
- Before You Start
- API Overview
- Calling APIs
- Calling General Purpose File System APIs
- Getting Started (SFS Capacity-Oriented)
- Getting Started with SFS Turbo
- Getting Started with General Purpose File System
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SFS Capacity-Oriented APIs
- API Version Queries
- File Systems
- File System Access Rules
- Quota Management
- Expansion and Shrinking
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Tag Management
- Adding a Tag to a Shared File System
- Deleting a Tag from a Shared File System
- Querying Tags of a Shared File System
- Querying Tags of All File Systems of a Tenant
- Batch Adding Tags to a Shared File System
- Batch Deleting Tags from a Shared File System
- Querying Shared File Systems by Tag
- Querying the Number of Shared File Systems by Tag
- AZ
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SFS Turbo APIs
- Lifecycle Management
- Connection Management
- Tag Management
- Name Management
- File System Management
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Storage Interworking Management
- Adding a Backend Target
- Querying Backend Targets
- Obtaining Details About a Backend Target
- Deleting a Backend Target
- Updating the Properties of a Storage Backend
- Updating the Auto Synchronization Policy of a Storage Backend
- Creating an Import or Export Task
- Querying Details About an Import or Export Task
- Listing Import and Export Tasks
- Deleting an Import or Export Task
- Updating a File System
- Directory Management
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Permissions Management
- Creating a Permission Rule
- Querying Permission Rules of a File System
- Querying a Permission Rule of a File System
- Modifying a Permission Rule
- Deleting a Permissions Rule
- Creating and Binding the LDAP Configuration
- Querying the LDAP Configuration
- Modifying the LDAP Configuration
- Deleting the LDAP Configuration
- Task Management
- General Purpose File System APIs
- Permissions Policies and Supported Actions
- Common Parameters
- Appendix
- SDK Reference
-
Troubleshooting
- Mounting a File System Times Out
- Mounting a File System Fails
- File System Performance Is Poor
- Failed to Create an SFS Turbo File System
- A File System Is Automatically Disconnected from the Server
- A Server Fails to Access a File System
- The File System Is Abnormal
- Data Fails to Be Written into a File System Mounted to ECSs Running Different Types of Operating Systems
- Failed to Mount an NFS File System to a Windows IIS Server
- Writing to a File System Fails
- Error Message "wrong fs type, bad option" Is Displayed During File System Mounting
- Failed to Access the Shared Folder in Windows
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FAQs
- Concepts
- Specifications
- Restrictions
- Networks
-
Billing
- How Do I Purchase SFS?
- How Do I Renew the Service?
- How Do I Check Whether the Subscriber Is in Arrears?
- Can I Purchase SFS Capacity-Oriented Resource Packages When I Still Have Valid Ones in Use?
- How Do I Check the Usage of an SFS Capacity-Oriented Resource Package?
- How Do I Adjust the Size of an SFS Capacity-Oriented Resource Package?
- Do SFS Capacity-Oriented and SFS Turbo Share One Resource Package?
-
Others
- How Do I Access a File System from a Server?
- How Do I Check Whether a File System on a Linux Server Is Available?
- What Resources Does SFS Occupy?
- Why Is the Capacity Displayed as 10P After I Mount My SFS Capacity-Oriented File System?
- Why the Capacity Is Displayed as 250TB After I Mount My General Purpose File System?
- How Can I Migrate Data Between SFS and OBS?
- Can a File System Be Accessed Across Multiple AZs?
- Can I Upgrade an SFS Capacity-Oriented File System to an SFS Turbo File System?
- Can I Upgrade an SFS Turbo File System from Standard to Standard-Enhanced?
- How Can I Migrate Data Between SFS and EVS?
- Can I Directly Access SFS from On-premises Devices?
- How Do I Delete .nfs Files?
- Why My File System Used Space Increases After I Migrate from SFS Capacity-Oriented to SFS Turbo?
- How Can I Improve the Copy and Delete Efficiency with an SFS Turbo File System?
- How Do Second- and Third-level Directory Permissions of an SFS Turbo File System Be Inherited?
- How Do I Deploy SFS Turbo on CCE?
- Videos
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More Documents
- User Guide (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
- API Reference (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
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User Guide (Paris Region)
- Introduction
- Getting Started
- Management
- Typical Applications
-
Troubleshooting
- Mounting a File System Times Out
- Mounting a File System Fails
- Failed to Create an SFS Turbo File System
- A File System Is Automatically Disconnected from the Server
- A Server Fails to Access a File System
- The File System Is Abnormal
- Data Fails to Be Written into a File System Mounted to ECSs Running Different Types of Operating Systems
- Failed to Mount an NFS File System to a Windows IIS Server
- Writing to a File System Fails
- Error Message "wrong fs type, bad option" Is Displayed During File System Mounting
- Failed to Access the Shared Folder in Windows
-
FAQs
- Concepts
- Specifications
- Restrictions
- Networks
-
Others
- How Do I Access a File System from a Server?
- How Do I Check Whether a File System on a Linux Server Is Available?
- What Resources Does SFS Occupy?
- Why Is the Capacity Displayed as 10P After I Mount My SFS Capacity-Oriented File System?
- Can a File System Be Accessed Across Multiple AZs?
- How Can I Migrate Data Between SFS and EVS?
- Can I Directly Access SFS from On-premises Devices?
- How Do I Delete .nfs Files?
- Why My File System Used Space Increases After I Migrate from SFS Capacity-Oriented to SFS Turbo?
- How Can I Improve the Copy and Delete Efficiency with an SFS Turbo File System?
- How Do Second- and Third-level Directory Permissions of an SFS Turbo File System Be Inherited?
- Other Operations
- Change History
- API Reference (Paris Region)
- User Guide (Kuala Lumpur Region)
- API Reference (Kuala Lumpur Region)
- Glossary
- General Reference
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Auto-renewing a File System
Auto-renewal can prevent file systems from being automatically deleted if you forget to manually renew them. The auto-renewal rules are as follows:
- The first auto-renewal date is based on when the file system expires and the billing cycle.
- The auto-renewal period of a file system depends on the subscription term. For example, if you select a three-month renewal period, the file system subscription will be renewed for three months each time before expiry.
- You can enable auto-renewal any time before a file system expires. By default, the system will make the first attempt to charge your account for the renewal at 03:00 seven days before the expiry date. If this attempt fails, it will make another attempt at 03:00 every day until the subscription is renewed or expired.
- After auto-renewal is enabled, you can still renew the file system manually if you want to. After a manual renewal is complete, auto-renewal is still valid, and the renewal charge will be deducted from your account seven days before the new expiry date.
- By default, the renewal charge is deducted from your account seven days before the new expiry date. You can change this auto-renewal payment date as required.
For more information about auto-renewal rules, see Auto-Renewal Rules.
Prerequisites
The yearly/monthly file system is not expired.
Enabling Auto-Renewal During Purchase
You can enable auto-renewal on the file system creation page, as shown in Figure 1.
Enabling Auto-Renewal on the Renewals Page
- Log in to the management console.
- Hover over Billing & Costs in the upper part of the console and choose Renewal from the drop-down list.
The Renewals page is displayed.
- Set the search criteria.
- You can view the resources for which auto-renewal has been enabled on the Auto Renewals page.
- You can enable auto-renewal for resources on the Manual Renewals, Pay-per-Use After Expiration, and Renewals Canceled pages.
Figure 2 Renewals - Enable auto-renewal for yearly/monthly resources.
- Enabling auto-renewal for a single resource: Select the file system for which you want to enable auto-renewal and choose More > Enable Auto-Renew in the Operation column.
Figure 3 Enabling auto-renewal for a single resource
- Enabling auto-renewal for multiple resources at a time: Select the file systems for which you want to enable auto-renewal and click Enable Auto-Renew above the list.
Figure 4 Enabling auto-renewal for multiple resources
- Enabling auto-renewal for a single resource: Select the file system for which you want to enable auto-renewal and choose More > Enable Auto-Renew in the Operation column.
- Select a renewal period, specify the auto-renewal times, and click OK.
Figure 5 Enabling auto-renewal
Parent topic: Renewing Subscriptions
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