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Entry-Level NAS Storage Servers Compared

snydeq writes "InfoWorld's Desmond Fuller provides an in-depth comparison of five entry-level NAS storage servers, including cabinets from Iomega, Netgear, QNAP, Synology, and Thecus. 'With so many use cases and potential buyers, the vendors too often try to be everything to everyone. The result is a class of products that suffers from an identity crisis — so-called business storage solutions that are overloaded with consumer features and missing the ease and simplicity that business users require,' Fuller writes. 'Filled with 10TB or 12TB of raw storage, my test systems ranged in price from $1,699 to $3,799. Despite that gap, they all had a great deal in common, from core storage services to performance. However, I found the richest sets of business features — straightforward setup, easy remote access, plentiful backup options — at the higher end of the scale.'"

13 of 182 comments (clear)

  1. one-page version by larry+bagina · · Score: 5, Informative
    --
    Do you even lift?

    These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    1. Re:one-page version by beelsebob · · Score: 3, Informative

      This is one segment where build-your-own is still *way* cheaper than any of these crazy setups:

      Intel Pentium G620T: $83
      Intel DB65AL: $85
      8GB DDR3: $50
      Hyper 212+ with fans removed: $20
      Fractal Design Mini: $100
      Corsair CX430: $40
      FreeBSD: $0
      Total without disks: $378

      5 * Hitachi 5k3000: $700

      Stick the disks in a raid-z, and wham bam, there's $1078 for 12TB of RAIDed NAS.

  2. Synology is nice by SirMasterboy · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have a DS1010+ 5-bay model and absolutely love it. It's got 10TB in it right now but I may replace the drives with 3TB models eventually. With a dual-core 1.6GHz atom and 1GB DDR2 ram it easily reads and writes at 100+MB/s via a RAID5 array on my simple home gigabit network.

    Also the new NAS' that are Intel-based can run most CLI linux servers and programs which is great. You may need to add more RAM if you run lots of heavy servers or have lots of concurrent users but most have spare ram slots.

    The best thing I find about Synology is their every updating and cutting edge Web GUI. They are already using HTML-5 features to support things like dragging and dropping files right into your web-browser to upload files to the NAS remotely.

    1. Re:Synology is nice by sortius_nod · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I did have a NAS a while ago, but I got rid of it in favour of building up a linux server. I found that NAS performance is slow at best, abysmal at worst, even with 1gbps networking & a decent controller. Unless you go corporate style you're always going to suffer from speed problems.

      Having 3 network cards and enough space for 15 drives makes up for the few hundred extra dollars you pay for a DIY NAS. Plus, a DIY NAS has a lot more flexibility than the consumer grade NAS.

  3. No mention of SMB2 support by Trongy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The newer SMB2 protocol in post Vista version of windows is much more efficient in network usage. Samba 3.6 now has SMB2 support, but the article doesn't say which (if any) of these devices support the newer protocol.

  4. Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Holy cow! $1,699 to $3,799" for "10TB or 12TB" of storage?

    Case with 8 internal bays: $40
    600 Watt Power supply: $35
    MB with 8 SATA3 ports: $115
    2.5gig dual core processor: $73
    8 2TB drives: $800
    1 Gig of RAM: $30

    Total: $1093, for 16TB of storage. Yeah, yeah, you need one of them as a spare drive for redundancy, and you need an OS. You also need a few minutes to assemble and install. But for that price? Why pay twice as much? Hell yeah, roll my own, baby!

  5. Horrible article, No Metrics by bigdady92 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is no mention of speed, performance, file copy replication, the ins and out of each solution, just a list of features they all share and how the author went about determining them at his whim. Without metrics this article is just a sales blurb for links. Other websites do it better: Storagereview for one, Smallnetbuilder is the other.

    Another wretched sales brouchure disguised as a review by Infoworld.

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    Wheel of Time: Book by Book and Sumview (summary review) Bigdady92 style: http://bigdady92.blogspot.com/
  6. Re:price by failedlogic · · Score: 5, Funny

    Quick and easy tip to increase storage space on a budget: buy the 3.5" model and punch a hole in the top corner. When the first side is full flip over the disk and use the other side. You will need to periodically flip the disk over and make note of what side contains the data you want.

  7. That PSU is to cheap and more ram can help as well by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 4, Informative

    That PSU is to cheap at least get a $50+ one and don't just go for high watts.

    get 2-4 GB ram mini should only be about $50-$60 for good 8 GB DDR 3 you want at least dual channel ram.

    8 sata ports you may want to get a pci-e raid card / sata card. Maybe even SAS.

    redundancy you may want raid 6 on a raid card and not on board fake raid and most south bridges only have 6 ports any ways.

    Also some low end MB only have 10/100'.

  8. unRAID by jtownatpunk.net · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's definitely more work to set up than a pre-built appliance and I wouldn't use it in a production environment but it has some advantages and works well as my media server. I particularly like that multiple drives developing a few bad sectors won't render the entire array unrecoverable. That's a bit of a concern when combining multi-terabyte consumer level drives. I currently have 20tb of fault-tolerant storage with room for another 6tb before I run out of ports. With more ports and a larger case, I could go up to 40tb.

    1. Re:unRAID by afidel · · Score: 3, Informative

      The other nice thing about ZFS is L2ARC and ZIL, throw in one or two cheap SSD's and your TB's of cheap storage start to perform like a 5-6 figure array =)

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  9. Yes, you can get a Dell for this price by bigtrike · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A Dell T710 is $900 and can take 16 2.5" drives or 8 3.5". If you're not a fan of linux software raid, toss in a PERC controller ($599) and bump the ram up to 4GB ($65) and 8 1.5TB disks at $520 and you're at $2084 for 12TB of storage, in any type of RAID you want.

  10. No one cares about your server by Lifix · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Dear Slashdoters. I know that you can build a better, faster, cheaper NAS that will perform fellatio over SSH and wipe your ass for you. But, I don't care... at all. According to you, I overpaid for my two NAS devices, a Drobo FS (serving media) and a Synology DS211+ (photo backups (profoto)). But I'm exceedingly happy with them. Transfer speed is sufficient on the Drobo to serve 1080p content to 2 tv's and an iPad simultaneously, and the Synology keeps up with my image editing software just fine. I've upgraded the drives in the drobo once so far, and just like their videos claim, everything just worked. The Drobo survived a drive failure last year, in the middle of 'movie night,' and video playback from the drobo was unaffected. - I'm glad that these NAS devices were reviewed, but I can't imagine why so many have come to this thread to post their server builds. The people, like myself, buying these NAS devices are buying them so we don't have to build our own servers.

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    In nature, there are neither rewards or punishments, there are only consequences.