Note: while the GUI will let you do it, it is a bad idea to share the same volume or dataset using multiple types of
access methods. Different types of shares and services use different file locking methods. For example, if the same
volume is configured to use both NFS and FTP, NFS will lock a file for editing by an NFS user, but a FTP user can
simultaneously edit or delete that file. This will result in lost edits and confused users. Another example: if a volume
is configured for both AFP and CIFS, Windows users may be confused by the extra filenames used by Mac files and
delete the ones they don’t understand; this will corrupt the files on the AFP share. Pick the one type of share or service
that makes the most sense for the types of clients that will access that volume, and configure that volume for that one
type of share or service. If you need to support multiple types of shares, divide the volume into datasets and use one
dataset per share.