DoctorGroover
Cadet
- Joined
- Jan 28, 2016
- Messages
- 3
I am a first time poster but I have been a long time reader of the forum. I have been using redundant storage for my homemade photo's and video's with separate backups since the beginning. I started out with a Drobo, attracted to the redundancy and ability of using different sized disks in an automated system connected through FireWire to a Q6600 Hackintosh and later with real Macs. My experience with FreeNAS began in 2009-2010 when the data on the Drobo had become strangely corrupted. Further reading led me to distrust the Drobo so I sold it and repurposed the Hackingtosh to a FreeNAS fileserver since I had bought a iMac as a workstation.
Specs of the Hackingtosh server:
Gigabyte GB-EP45-DS3L
Q6600
8GB DDR2
5 Samsung Spinpoint F1 1GB
Antec 550W PSU
I use the server relatively rarely so most of the time it is off. I only turn it on if I need access to those particular files. It contains photo's and video's I've made (inreplacable), my archive of files gathered over the years that I rarely use anymore but which I don't want to delete (inreplacable), downloaded films (replacable) and my download archive of applications and ISO's (hard to replace but no disaster if lost).
With the exception of a USB bootdrive failure on two separate occasions, the server had been happily working with my pool (named 'Atlas') in a RAID Z2 configuration until at some point I began getting storage warnings. I can't recall exactly which, yellow warnings that led me to decide to buy new drives since I wanted to add more capacity anyway. I bought six new 2TB WD Red to upgrade. Because I used only 5 of the 6 SATA ports on the motherboard I could elegantly replace the Samsung disks one by one without ever being in a degraded state. The sixth WD drive is a cold spare. I've kept the Samsung disks and have been extensively testing them the last couple of days concluding them to be healthy disks.
With the RAID Z2 setup and the SMART/SCRUB/mail settings Cyberjock advised in an other post the system continued to run smoothly and quietly. I make manual backups to an USB 4TB disk that is mostly at my parents' house. A couple of weeks ago I began hearing repeated clicking from all the drives simultaneously at 2-3 second intervals. Extensive SMART testing showed no problems at al. But since I now have had recurring problems with this motherboard/cpu/memory configuration (1. the Drobo corrupting, 2. the hackingtosh installation becoming corrupt, 3. the yellow storage warnings, 4. on two occasions failing USB bootdrives, 5. now the clicking) I decided to build a new server and do it right. I have been reading up a lot on the forum including the presentations and posts of Cyberjock.
The first thing was ECC and I started looking for an affordable motherboard/cpu/memory combination. Buying new turned out to be way to expensive for me at the moment. So I got a combination of second hand and new hardware. I was able to find a Xeon server platform through a local tech forum that had been running well and was decommissioned due to age and I was able to get a great deal.
My current hardware:
Supermicro X7DBE
Dual Xeon 5150
32GB Hynix FB-DIMM ECC DDR2-667 (on the approved memory list)
Arcea ARC-1210 (4 port SATA in JBOD mode)
Antec 550W PSU
Fractal Design case with adequate cooling (drivetemps <30 degrees)
Two Lacie 16GB bootdrives (mirrored)
Powerusage 66W while writing 200MB/s from the network at 40% CPU load
So far so good right? I will be adding a UPS when the system becomes live. Currently I am testing the server with different operating systems just for LOL's. Within a Windows 2012 R2 environment I have been testing the five Samsung disks with a handful of different harddisk testing tools to see if they are healthy enough to be deployed. And those results lead me to conclude the disks are in good shape, also making me wonder why I was getting the warnings back then but then I wasn't so well versed in FreeNAS as I am now.
So with the server grade platform I have a large amount of disks available to build a new pool. For now my data resides on the Atlas pool with a full backup on a 4TB external USB drive. The plan is to use as much of all my available drives.
I plan to use two different vdevs to be able to combine the different disk sizes. In option 1 four of the five Samsung disks will be connected to the ARC-1210 and the last Samsung disk on the remaining SATA port on the motherboard. The life expectancy of the Samsung drives is shorter than the WD drives.
Option 1 has the advantage of using all 10 SATA ports and having spare disks in case of a failure.
Option 2 maximizes the available storage. The WD Reds are new and reliable drives and I expect to have a spare 2 TB on hand in the next couple of months. A RAID Z2 configuration for 4 drives has a lower risk of dataloss in the case of 2 drive failing.
I am leaning towards using option 2 to be more futureproof with having 9,3 TB of available storage assuming I buy a spare drive in next couple of months.
But this is not the end of my thought process. Because I am also thinking backups. At the moment my backups are manual and intermittent. This is not a big deal because the pool doesn't change that often. However I have a hybrid manual/offsite backup system. The external 4 TB usb harddrive is at my home and I take it to my parents every once in a while where it stays for some time before I pick it up to update the backup. I am considering another option and that is to has the same amount of storage I have now but allows me to add an backup server in between.
Server 1: Dual Xeon setup with five 2 TB WD Red RAID Z2 with 5,5 TB
Server 2: Q6600 setup with five 1 TB drives RAID Z2 with 3,7 TB (or some kind of RAID 6 with another OS since it doesn't meet the requirements for FreeNAS)
Offsite Backup: external 4 TB drive at my parents' made with data from server 1
This has the downside of using an unreliable non-ECC system as a backup server. Although having some kind of backup may be better than having no backup at al. I don't expect to be running out of space soon given the speed of the growth of the data. Right now about 3-3.5TB is in use.
Offsite backup to Crashplan with an intermediary computer is also a possibility. Because the server is not used say 80-90% of the time I choose to simply turn it of instead of using it as a glorified space heater. On average I turn the server on about 3 times a week for a couple of hours.
Another way of doing offsite backups is place a low power atom netbook at my parents' and plug in the 4 TB external harddrive, configure it with linux and let it do nightly backups from server 1.
So what do you guys think about all this? Should I build one massive storage server and just buy a second 4 TB external harddrive to keep up with the intermittent manual and semi-offsite solution? Or do I setup server 1 as the optimally configured system with a cold spare on hand and have a possibly-unreliable server 2 with daily backups and a dedicated off-site backup on a 4 TB external USB drive in a low-power atom laptop at my parents' house? I have to make do with the equipment I have on hand and I'm trying not to end up in the hall of infamy ;)
Specs of the Hackingtosh server:
Gigabyte GB-EP45-DS3L
Q6600
8GB DDR2
5 Samsung Spinpoint F1 1GB
Antec 550W PSU
I use the server relatively rarely so most of the time it is off. I only turn it on if I need access to those particular files. It contains photo's and video's I've made (inreplacable), my archive of files gathered over the years that I rarely use anymore but which I don't want to delete (inreplacable), downloaded films (replacable) and my download archive of applications and ISO's (hard to replace but no disaster if lost).
With the exception of a USB bootdrive failure on two separate occasions, the server had been happily working with my pool (named 'Atlas') in a RAID Z2 configuration until at some point I began getting storage warnings. I can't recall exactly which, yellow warnings that led me to decide to buy new drives since I wanted to add more capacity anyway. I bought six new 2TB WD Red to upgrade. Because I used only 5 of the 6 SATA ports on the motherboard I could elegantly replace the Samsung disks one by one without ever being in a degraded state. The sixth WD drive is a cold spare. I've kept the Samsung disks and have been extensively testing them the last couple of days concluding them to be healthy disks.
With the RAID Z2 setup and the SMART/SCRUB/mail settings Cyberjock advised in an other post the system continued to run smoothly and quietly. I make manual backups to an USB 4TB disk that is mostly at my parents' house. A couple of weeks ago I began hearing repeated clicking from all the drives simultaneously at 2-3 second intervals. Extensive SMART testing showed no problems at al. But since I now have had recurring problems with this motherboard/cpu/memory configuration (1. the Drobo corrupting, 2. the hackingtosh installation becoming corrupt, 3. the yellow storage warnings, 4. on two occasions failing USB bootdrives, 5. now the clicking) I decided to build a new server and do it right. I have been reading up a lot on the forum including the presentations and posts of Cyberjock.
The first thing was ECC and I started looking for an affordable motherboard/cpu/memory combination. Buying new turned out to be way to expensive for me at the moment. So I got a combination of second hand and new hardware. I was able to find a Xeon server platform through a local tech forum that had been running well and was decommissioned due to age and I was able to get a great deal.
My current hardware:
Supermicro X7DBE
Dual Xeon 5150
32GB Hynix FB-DIMM ECC DDR2-667 (on the approved memory list)
Arcea ARC-1210 (4 port SATA in JBOD mode)
Antec 550W PSU
Fractal Design case with adequate cooling (drivetemps <30 degrees)
Two Lacie 16GB bootdrives (mirrored)
Powerusage 66W while writing 200MB/s from the network at 40% CPU load
So far so good right? I will be adding a UPS when the system becomes live. Currently I am testing the server with different operating systems just for LOL's. Within a Windows 2012 R2 environment I have been testing the five Samsung disks with a handful of different harddisk testing tools to see if they are healthy enough to be deployed. And those results lead me to conclude the disks are in good shape, also making me wonder why I was getting the warnings back then but then I wasn't so well versed in FreeNAS as I am now.
So with the server grade platform I have a large amount of disks available to build a new pool. For now my data resides on the Atlas pool with a full backup on a 4TB external USB drive. The plan is to use as much of all my available drives.

I plan to use two different vdevs to be able to combine the different disk sizes. In option 1 four of the five Samsung disks will be connected to the ARC-1210 and the last Samsung disk on the remaining SATA port on the motherboard. The life expectancy of the Samsung drives is shorter than the WD drives.
Option 1 has the advantage of using all 10 SATA ports and having spare disks in case of a failure.
Option 2 maximizes the available storage. The WD Reds are new and reliable drives and I expect to have a spare 2 TB on hand in the next couple of months. A RAID Z2 configuration for 4 drives has a lower risk of dataloss in the case of 2 drive failing.
I am leaning towards using option 2 to be more futureproof with having 9,3 TB of available storage assuming I buy a spare drive in next couple of months.
But this is not the end of my thought process. Because I am also thinking backups. At the moment my backups are manual and intermittent. This is not a big deal because the pool doesn't change that often. However I have a hybrid manual/offsite backup system. The external 4 TB usb harddrive is at my home and I take it to my parents every once in a while where it stays for some time before I pick it up to update the backup. I am considering another option and that is to has the same amount of storage I have now but allows me to add an backup server in between.
Server 1: Dual Xeon setup with five 2 TB WD Red RAID Z2 with 5,5 TB
Server 2: Q6600 setup with five 1 TB drives RAID Z2 with 3,7 TB (or some kind of RAID 6 with another OS since it doesn't meet the requirements for FreeNAS)
Offsite Backup: external 4 TB drive at my parents' made with data from server 1
This has the downside of using an unreliable non-ECC system as a backup server. Although having some kind of backup may be better than having no backup at al. I don't expect to be running out of space soon given the speed of the growth of the data. Right now about 3-3.5TB is in use.
Offsite backup to Crashplan with an intermediary computer is also a possibility. Because the server is not used say 80-90% of the time I choose to simply turn it of instead of using it as a glorified space heater. On average I turn the server on about 3 times a week for a couple of hours.
Another way of doing offsite backups is place a low power atom netbook at my parents' and plug in the 4 TB external harddrive, configure it with linux and let it do nightly backups from server 1.
So what do you guys think about all this? Should I build one massive storage server and just buy a second 4 TB external harddrive to keep up with the intermittent manual and semi-offsite solution? Or do I setup server 1 as the optimally configured system with a cold spare on hand and have a possibly-unreliable server 2 with daily backups and a dedicated off-site backup on a 4 TB external USB drive in a low-power atom laptop at my parents' house? I have to make do with the equipment I have on hand and I'm trying not to end up in the hall of infamy ;)
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