1) Click the IFS tab. The IFS Hosts field shows the host machine on which the service is running. You cannot modify this.
2) Select or clear the IFS Settings check box to provision or de-provision this service for the domain.
• Base Quota—The default disk quota, in MB, for all users in this domain. It is only effective if domain users do not have individual disk quotas or class base quotas.
• Quota Enabled—Specifies whether the quota validation for this domain is enabled or disabled.
• Soft Quota—The percentage of quota padding that users are allotted as a warning that they are nearing the quota threshold.
• Class Name—The name of the class to which this domain’s users belong.
• Notification Server—The NS host to use for this domain’s IFS notifications.
• Template Domain—The domain in which the template structures are stored.
• Notifications—Select the notification types to provision or de-provision for this domain.
• SSL Required—This determines whether SSL is required, forbidden, or optional.
• SSL Host IP—The IP address exclusively assigned to a domain. This IP address should not conflict with that of any other domain. If you set the SSL Required field to either “Yes” or “Optional”, then this field is required.
• SSL Certificate File—The full path to the PEM-encoded certificate file for this domain. If you set the SSL Required field to either “Yes” or “Optional”, then this field is required.
• SSL DSA Key File—The full path to the DSA key for this domain. This field is optional.
• SSL RSA Key File—The full path to the PEM-encoded private RSA key for this domain. This field is always optional.
• SSL Password Phrase—The passphrase used to encrypt the private key. The password phrase is set at the time the keys are generated. It is required at IFS startup. If you set the SSL RSA Key File field, then this field is required.
4) Click Save Changes.