Mannekino
Patron
- Joined
 - Nov 14, 2012
 
- Messages
 - 332
 
Dear FreeNAS community,
I'm a bit of a pickle and reaching the limits of my current FreeNAS knowledge. For the past years I've been using a HP MicroServer N40L but it's time for a nice upgrade. I feel like the parts I currently have for my new NAS build are a bit too powerful for just FreeNAS and I would like to also create VMs for different purposes. I am considering two options:
Here are my questions:
Kind regards,
Mannekino
	
		
			
		
		
	
			
			I'm a bit of a pickle and reaching the limits of my current FreeNAS knowledge. For the past years I've been using a HP MicroServer N40L but it's time for a nice upgrade. I feel like the parts I currently have for my new NAS build are a bit too powerful for just FreeNAS and I would like to also create VMs for different purposes. I am considering two options:
- Running FreeNAS on bare metal and using the VM option in the newest version of FreeNAS
 - Installing VMware ESXi and run FreeNAS in a virtual machine with direct access to my storage drives (if think this is possible but not 100% sure yet with my hardware)
 
- Motherboard: ASRock H87M-ITX (with 4 x SATA3 6.0 Gb/s ports)
 - CPU: Intel Core i7-4785T
 - CPU cooler: Noctua NH-L9x65
 - Memory: Corsair Vengeance Low Profile 16 GB Dual Channel DDR3 Memory Kit
 - Hard drives: 4 x WD Red NAS WD40EFRX (4 TB)
 - Chassis: Fractal Design Node 304 Black
 - PSU: Seasonic FOCUS PLUS Gold 550
 
Here are my questions:
- Is it possible with my hardware to run FreeNAS on top of ESXi and can I give FreeNAS direct access to my hard drives (I assume this is the recommened method)?
 - If this is possible would you recommend I get a PCIe adapter with an NVMe drive? If so, how much storage would I need? Could for example an Intel 32 GB Optane drive work?
 - Do you guys have any recommendations for a PCIe adapter?
 - Should I get a M.2 SATA or NVMe drive? I am correct to assume that a SATA M.2 drive would require a PCIe card with a SATA controller on it whereas an NVMe drive is just a PCIe device that either ESXi or FreeNAS could boot from?
 - Could I use the M.2 drive as both a boot drive for ESXi and also as a SLOG device? I assume if I chose to run FreeNAS directely on bare metal configuring the M.2 drive as a SLOG device would be easier?
 - I watched a review of the new VM functionality in FreeNAS is this feature mature enough yet to use? Would recommend this over an ESXi setup?
 - If I decide not to go the ESXi route but to just run FreeNAS directly on bare metal would you still recommend to get a M.2 drive to install FreeNAS on or should it run fine from a USB 3 key?
 
Kind regards,
Mannekino
			
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