Open media vault. There may be, but in the webui is doesn't give much at all.
Varies... I do take my time and watch eBay a lot. I am a Hardware Addict. :)Who do you buy from..? I guess a *slightly* used enterprise grade drive is actually more reliable than a new consumer grade drive.
By WD you mean your red's I assume? Still no answer on the viability of blues.
I only run HGST UltraStar Models; so I can't really speak on that particular model. For the record the 4TB HGST SAS Drives I recently purchased are "HUS724040ALS640". Which are technically Nearline-SAS Drives. I struck a deal with the Seller since I bought 13. Think the total with shipping ended up being ~ $1,800.00; so it was like $135.00/Each.Well, from a quick google search and ebay comparison, it looks like a VERY solid choice would be HMS5C4040ALE640
Hard Drives are one of the major expenses and it would be prudent to take your time.Ok. Well. This "which drive to buy" game is not an easy one!
You can narrow it down a lot by limiting yourself to NAS drives. The reason to do this is to benefit from TLER. A failing desktop drive can make your whole system unresponsive, which makes addressing the problem much harder.This "which drive to buy" game is not an easy one
As far as I can tell, you have at least 9 ST3000DM001. Expect them all to fail early and with little warning. The upside is, your vdev layout decisions no longer have to factor in 'what to do with all my existing 3TB drives'.
You can narrow it down a lot by limiting yourself to NAS drives. The reason to do this is to benefit from TLER. A failing desktop drive can make your whole system unresponsive, which makes addressing the problem much harder.
I swear I have googled the crap out of it, and I know I came across this before. But until I had the correct "CCTL" I was just hitting a brick wall.Meh, should have known @jgreco already covered this here: "Checking for TLER, ERC, etc. support on a drive"
Meh, should have known @jgreco already covered this here: "Checking for TLER, ERC, etc. support on a drive"
Are you planning on putting the drives into Standby Mode? FWIW all of mine have always been set to "Always On".
I would do my best to stick with a real NAS drive but honestly, others have reported good results using non-NAS drives. For me, saving $30 per drive was not worth the gamble. What do you get besides the small savings, normally a shorter warranty which means you are on the hook if the drive fails early.
Also, don't take one site review of 1% failure rate as gospel. If this were the magic drive then we all would have already heard of it and be pushing it on everyone. Check out many other sites for good reviews.
It would be silly to set it so short, so this should be a non-issue.The minimum CCTL is 50ms.
And I don't know what the minimum is for TLER (WD), but on my Reds it defaults to 7 seconds.The minimum time limit is 6.5 second.
No, but a desktop drive will try for much longer to return data when it has a problem, and this can lead to the whole box becoming unresponsive. Imagine trying to figure out which drive to replace, and to actually hit the buttons for replacement in the GUI, when every click takes several minutes to respond, or ends up timing out. We've seen this happen to people in these forums.is CCTL a make or break feature?
And I don't know what the minimum is for TLER (WD), but on my Reds it defaults to 7 seconds.
You may be overthinking this. If the limit can be set to minutes and you set it to minutes, you'd end up with the same potential for an unresponsive system, but I can't imagine a NAS drive coming from the factory that way. My assumption is that the out-of-the-box value is suitable for the way the drives are intended to be used.I guess if the max limit is on the order of minutes ... that is what would cause a system hang, correct?