Ask Slashdot: DIY NAS For a Variety of Legacy Drives?
An anonymous reader writes "I have at least 10 assorted hard drives ranging from 100 GB to 3 TB, including external drives, IDE desktop drives, laptop drives, etc. What's the best way to setup a home NAS to utilize all this 'excess' space? And could it be set up with redundancy built-in so a single drive failure would cause no data loss? I don't need anything fancy. Visibility to networked Windows PCs is great; ability to streak to Roku / iPad / Toshiba etc would be great but not necessary. What's the best way to accomplish this goal?"
Those older drives are probably failures just waiting to happen. With the cost of the hard drive space continually dropping, just use new drives. It's not worth screwing around with old ones for anything other than salvaging old data off them, even though the urge to do so is strong in the more frugal among us.
FreeNAS or OpenFiler.
I think FreeNAS (the BSD based one) is lighter and easier, as OpenFiler seems to be going in a more "fully featured" direction with less support for older hardware, but they're both good.
maybe put them in machine, make a glusterFS ?
Hopefully it's not what I think it is...
Not streak to iPad. Stream. Streaking to iPad would require cleaning supplies at the point of impact.
Look at FreeNAS or Unraid. Unraid has a 3-drive limit IIRC for the free version, but supports an unlimited amount of drives for the non-free version.
I recommend FreeNAS - see www.freenas.org or just google FreeNAS
What you're suggesting is a colossal waste of power. Just buy a new drive and junk your ancient old drives.
If you use Windows, the forthcoming Windows 8 "Storage Spaces" feature appears to be perfect for situations like this. http://blogs.msdn.com/b/b8/archive/2012/01/05/virtualizing-storage-for-scale-resiliency-and-efficiency.aspx
FreeBSD has fast ZFS support which is wonderful file system to fight data loss.
Those drives are only free if your time has no value
So after you go to the trouble to set this NAS up and get the data loaded on there and a few of the drives go belly up, how much time did you waste?
What are you running at home? A particle accelerator? Who needs all this storage? For what?
If you just use LVM and group all your disks together into one PV, that would make the array appear as "one big drive" to the system.
Redundancy (RAID) would not work so well because your array would be limited by the smallest disk in the array. Sure, raid the 300GB to the 1TB, but you end up with a RAID-1 array of 300G.
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Ah ha! Who else amongst you has a huge surplus of huge hard drives going unused, now that netflix streaming has displaced 60% of all the crud you had spinning idle in a closet the 3 years before you signed up?
My storage requirements went from about 3 terabytes to about 30 gigabytes over the past 2 years. I believe I am the archetype and that I am doing the same thing as the average geek. I suspect there are piles of huge disks sitting offline because of this streaming displacement.
It cost me about 18 dollars a month to leave my x86 file server online, idle (killawatt meter, nh rates); netflix is cheaper than that.
Come on, who else has a comment related to this.
slashdot: where everyone yells sarcastic metaphors to themselves to understand the issue
Why not a debian installation, with the services you need to share your drives on the network ?
You can also add some apps to make good use of your intelligent NAS, webserver, ssh/SOCKS gateway, some kind of seedbox ...
FreeNAS can use ZFS for aggregating multiples drives, independent of size, technology etc, all with varying degrees of protection.
It's by far the best solution to your case.
Flavio
It would be a good chance to play with the new storage spaces feature of Server 2012. You present it with the drives and let it manage them. if you want redundancy, you can tell it to do so. The release candidate should be out next month.
It gives you thin provisioning and network access. If you have 2 computers, you can create a cluster for added redundancy.
If you feel tempted to work with Server 2012, this is your opportunity. If you have no desire, then keep looking. There may be other solutions, but this is what storage spaces was geared for.
Do you care about your electricity bill at all? If you do, it'll probably be cheaper over the course of 6-12 months to buy a simple NAS box or a cheap atom board and plug in a couple of 2TB hard drives.
However even if you replace the word "streak" with "steak," the sentence still makes no sense.
The power consumption and heat would run your electric bill up higher. It may be cheaper in the long run to just replace those drives with a single disk solution.
As for the RAID size limits you could have multiple RAID arrays, ie.. Two 300gb, Three 500gb, etc. and use LVM to merge those into 1 large volume (if you need one large volume).
Windows Home Server (V1) - mix and match to your hearts content and all the addins you can eat for adding features.
I want a list of atrocities done in your name - Recoil
If you have pairs of drives with reasonably similar size and performance specs, you could deploy them in RAID 1, or RAID 5 if you have three or more similar drives, and have some redundancy. FreeNAS, OpenFiler, or Nexenta will all work, but you're still rolling the dice in a rigged game, man. Old hard drives are for target practice.
http://www.winsupersite.com/article/windows8/windows-8-feature-focus-storage-spaces-142537
FreeBSD + ZFS zpools are exactly what you're after from a software RAID perspective.
Ditch your small drives. A 3TB is equal to 30 100GB drives, so there is absolutely no point in keeping them.
Group your drives into similar sizes and assign into a few different raid arrays. The array will only use the capacity of the smallest drive connected.
I would use RAID 1 if you only have 2 drives in the array. Raid 5 for 4 drives or more.
Hard drives are very reasonable priced these days. It will be much more cost effective to purchase new sata drives then attempt to use any IDEs at all.
Kevin
Why am I the only one saying this? Setup Greyhole, throw a bunch of disks at it, and enjoy! And to all those saying "those drives are going to die soon", you can actually tell Greyhole that you consider a drive "broken" and it will still use most of its storage (albeit redundantly) until it does die and have to be removed.
Take a look at Unraid http://lime-technology.com/home/87-for-system-builders
Disk space is cheap. Running many spindles is energy inefficient.
If you have a 3Tb drive at your disposal, why are you even considering ways to combine it with your 100Gb drive? (100% of the energy consumption, but only 3% of the storage space.) Old lower capacity drives are only "free" if you don't consider any costs other than the cost to acquire the disk.
You're likely better in the not-too-distant timeframe buying a second large capacity disk over running 9 small capacity disks with the same total volume.
I suppose there's some fun to be had as a pure technical challenge to finding ways to network wildly heterogenous disks into a working single logical volume, but if you're doing this for anything other than your personal geek cred you're doing the wrong project.
Just DBAN the drives, put them in a cardboard box in front of your house and write SWAP BOX on it. See if someone else leaves you some marginally interesting hardware they no longer need.
You are running the risk of catastrophic failure or RAID that is limited to the smallest drive. Honestly, why bother?
1. Throw away everything that isn't a standard-sized SATA drive.
2. Buy a Drobo (http://www.drobo.com/products/professionals/drobo-fs/index.php).
3. Put the five (or eight) largest drives in the Drobo.
4. Throw away the rest of the drives.
5. When you get a drive that is larger than the smallest drive in your Drobo, pull the smaller drive out and insert the larger drive.
6. Find peace in the universe.
When I was young and foolish, I tried to keep every drive spinning, even long after its time had passed. I had *nix boxes stuffed with drives and SCSI-attached arrays. I learned a lot about drive management and system administration but, mostly, I learned that there is a value to my time and my time isn't best utilized playing disk administrator.
Drobo doesn't pay me a dime and I am still more excited about Drobo than any technology product since TiVo.
Cheers,
Matt
You are wasting your time, energy, and money.
Windows Home Server v1 (2003). Drive extender will lump all sizes of hard drives into a JBOD. Turn on folder duplication for redundancy. Full integration with Windows 7. Use Plex media streaming to stream to an iPad. That's my setup and works great.
As already mentioned.
1 Freenas if you have the time.
2 old drives are a disaster waiting to happen.
So if you are not going to put anything of value or importance and reliability or your time mean nothing go for it.
But if your data and content are important to you then start with new drives.
I don't have the time or energy to build from scratch anymore.
For the record I am not affiliated with QNAP in any way other than as a satisfied customer. I should but have yet to get a sales commission. Several of my friends have gotten them after seeing mine in action.
Pricy to say the least but I use and recommend QNAP TS-?59-PRO-II. It is available in 4, 5, and 6 drive models.
The pro-II series has a nice mix of features for that both a home user and a small enterprise user would want.
I have set up an ISCSI volume for my DVR ripped all my DVDs and put all my content on it. I am scanning and archived all my important documents. It supports dynamic DNS and with the QNAP "mycloudnas" service you can set up your own personal cloud storage. Many features can host a web site email and a verity or other apps.
They have a link to a to a demo of the management interface on the site.
I have setup my parents with one. Over the years my father has acquired an enormous DVD collection and a very large audio CD collection. now when he travels he can just take the NAS out to his motor home plug it in and all his media travels with him and plays threw his WD live HD+ media player. NO more lost or damaged disks and a substantial space saving over the huge stack of disks he used to lug around the country with him. He also has PDF scans of all his important papers with him and secured and accessible when he needs them.
Set it up in a closet or basement and forget it can access the content from any ware on your network just put a micro HTPC next to the TV add a Silicondust net work attached TV/Cable Card tuner and go from there.
I've been using unRAID for years and it's a great solution for a small home NAS box. If you ever change your mind about using it, you simply turn your parity drive into a regular Linux boot disk, and the remaining drives are just regular Reiserfs2 filesystems. Most RAID systems and/or software would require much gymnastics to de-RAID them, if it could be done at all.
In addition, hardware-based striped RAID makes you dependent on the RAID controller; if it dies and you can't find a replacement compatible with the original's striping mechanism, your data just disappeared.
I have been running a FreeNAS server for 4-5 years. Bought a full tower 12 bay case ($40-$60) to put it in. Old motherboard, DVD drive, CPU and memory...free? Some SATA and IDE controllers ($10-$30 each) to augment what comes on the motherboard and away you go. Some IDE or SATA splitters ($2-5 each) Some extra case fans (4x$5 or salvage.) Or use your existing old desktop case and spin 2-6 of them at a time. I added a 5" 3-bay SATA insert that occupies two of the 4 front bays. So 12 bays + 1 from the insert -1 for the DVD drive, I can spin 12 SATA or IDE drives at a time. Interestingly 3.5" drives don't consume that much power so even a 500 watt power supply is overkill. Brackets to mount your 3.5" drives in 5" bays and 2.5" drives in 3.5" bays are readily available.
Todd
Why are you combining 100GB and 3TB drives? First of all, the 3TB drive is litterally 30 times the size (giving you a space increase of 3%). Second of all, the 100GB is probably fairly old, so shouldn't even be trusted as stable. You are going to spend more on the ATA adapter for that drive than the value of the space it provides. Currently a 3TB drive costs about $100, that's $0.03/GB which means that 100GB drive is worth ... wait for it ... $3. Sata to IDE adapters run about $9 a piece.
I've been in the same situation, it was only a year ago that I was running on multiple 10GB drives and an old 120GB laptop drive because I only had IDE in my server. So I went to newegg and got a low powered an E350-onboard-cpu motherboard (doesn't even need a fan) for $130, 8GB of ram (I use ZFS) for $50 and a 2TB drive for $70 (drives have gone up since then, but not terribly high) and threw the thing into an old case with a cheap power supply. That's basically an entire system with about 15 times the storage space as my old one for $250 shipped to my front door and the system can take 5 more drives without so much as an expansion card.
Once you specify "a", the "d" is redundant.
I use my drives that are less than 1 TB to store critical information from my NAS. The drives sit in my fire proof safe and they are easy to take out when needed. The yellow sticky lists what is on it so I can restore what I truly need or wipe it out.
Don't use FreeNAS. Normally I would recommend it because it's very straightforward and does a good job of what it does, but it's not ideal for your exact situation. It has a fairly old version of the ZFS file system. You'll want a new enough version to use a RAIDZ configuration. This way you can put all the drives in one pool, and it will automatically juggle redundancy and parity to allow a single drive to fail without losing data. That has the end result of presenting some fraction of your total storage as one single mount point.
This will maximize the amount of usable storage you get while keeping things redundant and failure-resistant.
FreeNAS only supports simple striping or mirroring. With striping you'll lose the whole pool if one of your old drives fails, so it's right out. Mirroring works best with matched pairs of drives with the same capacity, and you'll be wasting space to drive pairs of mismatched sizes. Also, even in the best case scenario mirroring leaves you with only half the usable space relative to the total capacity of all your drives.
Some things to keep in mind:
- RAIDZ doesn't allow shrinking pools (I think). So every time one of your old drives dies you need to immediately replace it with *something.* That could get expensive if they're old and you have a lot of them.
- You could probably replace the capacity of all these old drives with $300 of new drives. Is it worth it? Especially knowing that you'll have to replace them with modern drives as they fail anyway, and will likely soon enough end up with a crazy glut of drive space, and an empty bank account from buying all the replacement drives.
- There's a PPA for ZFS on FUSE available for Ubuntu Server, that would probably make setting something like this up pretty trivial.
Seriously, buy a Synology NAS, dump all your data on it and call it a day. The cheapest 2 bay model they make is straight up badass for its price point.
Good-bye
I couldn't agree with you more, but have you seen Synology.
It's a Drobo +++
My favourite feature is the torrent client--just copy/past a link from TPB and it does the rest!
Standard disclaimer also applies: I'm just a happy customer.
Full disclosure: I am the developer
Check out: http://stablebit.com/DrivePool
It's a software disk pooling solution that combines any number of disks of any size into one big virtual pool. You can designate certain folders to be duplicated on the pool. Any files placed in duplicated folders will be stored on 2 disks at the same time.
The implementation is a hard core NT kernel driver with a virtual disk. There is a full NT kernel storage stack, no user mode hacks here.
Unlike RAID and similar solutions, all your pooled files are stored as standard NTFS files on each individual disk in the pool. This means that you can simply plug in any pooled disk to any system that can read NTFS to get at your files in case disaster strikes.
It's commercial software, $20 USD per server.
Put all of the small drives in a JBOD array and use the 3TB as an internal backup because RAID is not a backup solution.
Use FreeNAS or OpenFiler.
Drobo performance sucks (with more than one concurrent user).
Low-end core i3 processor and lots of RAM because RAM is cheap these days.
Competition Good, Monopoly Bad.
look at amahi.org, it is a turn-key Home Server based on fedora and greyhole as it's replication engine.
Dump anything less than a TB except one drive and you are set.
You set the replication level by share and it keeps a full copy on each drive until the replication count is reached for that file on that share.
Example:
you have 4 1TB drives and 1 500Gb drive.
You have the share photo configured to replicate on each drive.
You have replication off on the video share.
You have a replication level of two on the mp3 share.
When you store a photo greyhole write it to your 5 drives.
When you store a video it goes on a random drive.
When you store a mp3 it goes to 2 random drives.
So if you lose a drive you should loose about 25% of your videos, 6.25% of your mp3 and 0% of your pictures.
Jehovah be praised, Oracle was not selected
Though it's not free it is cheap and works well. It supports allot of hardware and is efficient with resources. I have gotten it to run SCSI, ATA, USB, FC-AL, SATA, and SAS drives all at once. A build usually only takes about 5 minutes including a basic configuration. I have been running it for over 7 years now with no real issues to speak of. Mike
The kicker on home storage is always.... "How the heck are you going to back it up?" When you are dealing with large disk space at home, you pretty much need to buy double what you want, unless you don't care about the data. Don't let anyone tell you that RAID is a backup solution.
It looks like l'm going to have to read up on this stuff again.
Given the spread of drive ages I'd definitely want redundancy, and given the variety of capacities, a traditional RAID system isn't going to cut it. I'm actually thinking of cloud computing technology, with it's attendent abilities to duplicate data(and services!) across sites of uneven capability, even optimize resources across different locations to optimize resources.
Basically, you'd be looking a 'cloud' of HDs, with an underlying system that's aware of the different drives and a directive to, say, keep all data on at least 3 different drives. How it does that depends on the alogorithms, but it isn't structured so rigidly like traditional RAID.
I don't read AC A human right
Powering 10 old harddrives for some time is going to be much more expensive than just getting a new one. A modern drive uses about 5W on average. these oldies probably use much more. 10 drives using 10 watts at $0.10 per kwh will set you back $87 per year. You do the math.
0x or or snor perron?!
Pogoplugs are great, can plug in 4 drives via USB or more with a USB hub. I paid $25 for mine, can't really go wrong.
"If you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear." - Every fascist, ever
Use drobo if you are time poor and money rich, use btrfs if you are time rich and money poor.
Btrfs's capabilities are nothing short of amazing. Here is a vid about it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bQc_z-Cb7E
If you don't care about the electricity costs, Illumian, NexentaCore, OpenIndiana or Solaris 11 with Napp-it on top makes a great ZFS file server. If has native CIFS (Windows) file sharing and can share AFS (Apple) and NFS with no problem. ZFS is by far the best file system around, and lets you combine different size drives with no problems. Napp-it turns the whole thing into a web managed appliance.
You can even stream with the minidlna (lightweight), ushare or mediatomb addons! Rock solid and very fast if you give it ample RAM.
My advice would be to find some inexpensive USB or eSATA drive enclosures for the smaller drives and just use them as off-line storage.
Take some data you don't need instant access to, put it on one drive, and make an identical copy on a second for backup. Put them in a corner and only power them up when needed.
Or just use the smaller drives as partial backup for a larger NAS. Can be handy if you suddenly need to grab a collection of files and go.
Like everyone else is saying, no sense keeping them spinning and eating up power. Might even think twice about the larger drives unless they are power efficient models.
The answer to your question is ZFS on FreeBSD.
Look into unraid from lime technology. Same basic premise as drobo but not a ridiculously priced rip off, predates drobo too, plus it is a linux-based distro so you can mess with it if you want, but it isn't necessary. best feature, besides not carrying about differences in drive sizes, is that the data isn't really in a raid, it just appears that way and if one drive fails, you can use parity to recover your data, and even if you cannot, you only lose the data that was on the failed disk since the underlying file system is just ReiserFS.
check out ceph.com imo
...after you wipe them, and buy a real NAS like a ReadyNas, Synology, etc. smallnetbuilder is a great resource for this.
Alternatively, use FreeNAS and build your own, with recent drives.
* power isn't that expensive where I live. We have nukes and hydro power stations. ... meh. Any that are less than 500GB need to be wiped with dban and given away. If you can't wipe them for any reason, drill 3 holes through them. it is therapeudic.
* old hdds are failures just waiting for a chance. also, they are probably IDE which will be a pain.
* 10 old hdds
Ok, now build a RAID6 box or RAID1 box with the larges drives. RAID is not a backup, so you still need a backup hdd available. I find it is easier to use a 2GB USB3 or eSATA drive for backups. That way I only need to keep track of 1 backup hdd for everything.
Do not use WHS. Stock ubuntu does more.
I can't recommend any of the freeNAS or similar distros. They don't work well on low end CPUs and want lots of RAM now. The days of 256MB being enough are gone.
Drobo has a place for people built of money. I made over 6 figures last year, but still can't see blowing any on a drobo. Stock ubuntu does more.
You are getting lots of incomplete advice here, including mine. Visit your local LUG, during their Q&A part, ask a clearly worded question, provide detailed information about your needs and hardware and skills and that group will be able to get you 60+ yrs of experience on the best way to accomplish your goals within your budget. Be certain you have an idea of the budget and required performance too. It is possible to build or buy really poor performance in a solution and still spend $800+ - don't get screwed.
The guys over at http://smallnetbuilder.com/.net (sorry, can't recall) have a 100MBps NAS server build with lots of information.
Create a Truecrypt file filling each old drive, after a full format. Use for full (not incremental backups) every 6 months, starting with the smallest sizes (to use them up). Then put them in your Mum's garage, suitably labelled.
Last tip for backups. Do "dir /on /s > backup_2012_04_23" for each drive after filling it, and keep the list on your main machine, so you can see if you've got a copy of something (and where) before fishing around.
Nope. I'm buying drives and storing as much as I can. Music CD's are hard to come by these days. The best quality you can get most music in is some crappy MP3 DRM download garbage. I'm buying CD's while I can and storing all of my music lossless. Same thing with movies. Movie rental stores are *gone*, Netflix streaming is a joke. Netflix has suggested that they're going to do away with mailing DVD's one day soon. If that happens, good luck being able to watch what you want when you want. I'll have terrabytes of DVD quality movies in my closet. Streaming is absolutely terrible unless you're entertained by watching Transformers movies and Justin Bieber's music.
There are several distributed file systems which are able to cope with a varied array of drive and speeds, and will try to keep as much redundancy as possible.
On need to read a little bit and pick the best candidate up.
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
I find that it's just easier to repurpose older, smaller drives. Case in point: my RMT "gave" me a computer to "recycle", because "it was broken". The old computer had a bad battery and a hard drive that was failing SMART. After running chkdsk I was able to see a file structure, and then I copied the contents to an old 160 GB laptop hdd I had in a bin somewhere. Another example: my Father-in-law wanted a backup of some home videos (weddings, birthdays, holidays, etc...) so I bought a cheap USB enclosure for $10 and copied the movies to an old 500 GB hdd, which he put in a safe.
I was looking around forever for a small, half-decent NAS for 2.5" laptop drives (low power computing experiment) and it's basically not worth it. Another option is to get some random ATX case, cheap mobo/cpu, and stick in some controller cards, but really? My current solution is a hybrid one that involves several external laptop drives, an ikea napkin holder, and an Acer Revo.
#1 - those drives mismatch. Good luck with that.
#2 - Said drives are failure waiting to happen.
#3 - NAS SUCKS - you want to implement NFS / CIFS on that crap?
All - if you don't know storage - go buy a fucking ReadyNAS or some other tripe. Better yet, block storage, and VM away.
Storage IS NOT TRIVIAL. Go play WoW or some shit and get off MY lawn.
I recently had 20 drives across three machines. I was using a combination of raid5, iscsi, mhddfs, and samba. Machine1 mounts the iscsi devices from the other two machines, and then mhddfs combines them into one virtual filesystem. Samba is then used to share files out with laptops.
What I found is that network card drives in 3.2 kernels are currently in a horrible state. They crash left and right under real load. This is after trying different brands, tweaks, version of drivers, etc. In addition it seems iscsi client in Fedora 16 is also not in a great state. Independent of network issues, I would still get failures. The machine running CentOS 6.2 used to be Fedora 16, but was converted to make things more stable.
My latest plan is to do basically the same thing I was doing before, but on a smaller scale. I am going to retire the 1tb drives in Machine3, and replace them with the 2tb drives from Machine1. I am also going to convert Machine3 to CentOS 6.2 for stablility. Then Machine2 will mount Machine3's iscsi device, and use mhddfs and samba. This reduces the number of machines involved from three to two, and takes Fedora 16 out of the mix. It will also reduce the number of drives involved in mass storage from 20 to 14.
I plan to add two 2tb drives to Machine1, for storage, but it end up being only a desktop.
Machine1
Fedora 16
6x2tb raid5
Machine2
CentOS 6.2
5x1.5tb raid5
3tx2tb raid5
Machine3
Fedora 16
6x1tb raid5
Havoc Penington, the bane of my Linux desktop.
Yet another vote for unRAID (http://lime-technology.com/). Super easy to set up, great community, and works absolutely wonderfully with a mix of random drives. The only real requirement is that your parity drive be >= your biggest storage drive. For you to lose data you must lose both your parity drive and a storage drive at once -- and even then you only lose the data on the one drive. Also due to this design your other drives can spin down when you're reading from only one (e.g. normal usage)
- how much power does the PC use when running
- how much does each drive use
- how likely is it that one of the older drives fail
- how much work is it to replace the drive, including the "cost" of the downtime
I would assume that over - say - three years the power usage of a regular PC (especially on that has enough room and power for 10 drives) will easily outweigh the cost for some low-power NAS and something like 3-4 large hard drives, which will most likely run without a glitch for something like 3-5 years ... at least that's the results I came out at, before picking up a 4-bay QNAP NAS that I put 4 1.5TB drives in ... mind you, I do like to tinker with hard and software, but at some points, it's just not worth it ...
People have mentioned electricity and such. They have mentioned the utility of the smaller drives etc...
:)
:)
Let's be frank... any home built PC with the ability to flood a gigabit Ethernet line or two will actually be quite power hungry. These Atom based NAS boxes aren't actually using straight ITX Atom boards, they have precisely what is needed, nothing more, nothing less. They are extremely power efficient as well.
FreeNAS, OpenFiler and several others out there are awesome tools. I have a FreeNAS server myself... though my home file server is running Windows 7 with 8x2TB with a SAS RAID controller, my iSCSI box for VMWare is running FreeNAS. I love it... but to be honest, it is not power efficient. If I spent 6 months to a year focussed on tuning FreeNAS to this specific system, I might be able to get power usage and the function set up to what I could have gotten from QNAP for example for a few hundred bucks.
For my super important file storage, I will very likely this week, after years of FreeNAS simply buy a two drive box with 3TB drives in RAID1 and put it on a different floor of the house. My network in the house is now made up of multiple Cisco Catalyst gigabit switches with four cable etherchannel between each floor. So, a little NAS with a RAID1 that supports etherchannel would be great for backing up parts of my server
No... my house doesn't look like a mess... I have very clean cabling and nice looking racks that blend with the furniture
My problem with old drives is how LOUD they are - I'd rather spend the money for an almost-silent new drive than use old ones. Really hit me hard when I powered up an old box with 3-4 older IDE drives and it sounded like a Harrier jet landing in the room. After that I junked the old stuff and moved to newer drives. One day I actually came home and thought my machines had powered down until I realized that was how quiet they were.
The best thing I ever did with my old drives was to give them to my kids along with a set of screw drivers and a hammer. They a great time and cleaned up everything when they were done.
I literally took a few old drives wrapped them together with duck-tape and use them as a door stop.
Don't recycle old drives buy new. Old drives will just bring sadness and pain.
Drive choice is very important smart desktop drives are not a good choice for a NSA Most nas offerings do the management and may conflict with the drives self management.
WD desktop grade drives are great in a PC but not in a NAS for this reason. Hybride drives like the Seagate Momentus drives are also not suited to a NAS application.
Many of todays Cable/DSL routers have a basic NAS ability just plug in a USB of in some cases an eSata drive. no raid or redundancy.
Do your research I did. After reading a few reviews I rejected drobo and buffalo.
but these 3 all have something to offer.
www.qnap.com/
www.synology.com/
www.thecus.com/
Synology products are so cheap these days, and synology has a proprietary SHR (synology hybrid raid) structure that allows you to mix and match any kind of drive you want, from 100 gigs all the way to 3tb as you mentioned with redundancy built in - consider it a modified raid 5 that allows you to mix and match drives from different sizes and vendors.
http://liquesce.wordpress.com/
Combines multiple drives into a load balanced redundant array
Not tried it though...
a home naval air station (nas) is to live near a large body of water
This summer, Infinit (infinit.io) will be released. The program aggregates local storage across all of your devices and allows you to access the data on them at anytime directly through your file management system and eventually mobile devices. In addition, if your friends or colleagues create Infinit networks with their storage space, you can exchange storage space to ensure that your files are replicated on trusted nodes outside of your own network. All files in the Infinit network are encrypted and distributed in bits across the network so only you have access. You can find out when it's available via twitter @infinitdotio or via FB http://www.facebook.com/infinitdotio
...is why people is still actually saving everything they download? If you have the bandwidth, storing would be only limited to what you really could need fast; and talking in terabyte terms seems unreasonable. If you have the band but capped downloads, well you should only need some kind of temporary storage, sized accordingly to the cap. If you have small bandwidth, that's not your problem.