ciuly
Cadet
- Joined
- May 19, 2013
- Messages
- 3
Hello,
first, I'm a first timer at freenas and alike (but I've done my share part of other under-the-hood things)
Second, I read the
http://forums.freenas.org/showthrea...Virtual-Machine!&p=58364&viewfull=1#post58364
and
http://forums.freenas.org/showthrea...ot-a-guide-to-not-completely-losing-your-data
and
a few others. And I'm still going forward, so let's not debate in that direction.
shortly: I am setting up a storage/fileserver for my existing home esxi. Easiest and cheapest solution is to go for something like freenas. My HW setup is all dual-hdd/dual-ssds in software raid1. As I'm on a consumer grade board, every VM is doing it's own sw-raid.
Target usage for freenas is 80-90% actual data storage (pictures, movies, music, documents and so on) and archiving (old VMs, backups) and the rest, various test VM's that I may need (things like winxp with 256mb ram, nothing fancy and not in requirement of performance).
The key aspect here is data-safety.
At current point, everything is raid-mirrored except for the new freenas VM for which I cannot find any tutorials on how-to-properly do it. I'm an old RH user, now centos based, and except pre-build stuff, I never had to mingle with freebsd and alikes or other linuxes.
So the question is: can I setup a software raid for the freenas OS itself?
If not, would a daily backup of the VM itself do the job in case there is a hdd failure of the SSD it will be installed on? That is, assuming the SSD crashes now and I have a 23 hour old copy of the VM, replace the SSD and copy over the backup and start it, will it function alright, picking up where the crashed one has left of with whatever data-recovery options there are for these kinds of situations? (data virtual disks will be on other drives so the chances for the OS drive and a data drive to crash a the same time should be pretty much 0)
To note that critical data will be automatically and periodically backed up by the current data backup solution running daily. The freenas solution here addresses 2 problems in my environment:
- have the data available easily to all members of the family in one place without moving the external drives all the time from computer to computer
- for me to be able to recover most if not all of my work since the last backup (this is where raid1 comes into play)
The only loose end in this configuration is the freenas itself not being mirrored.
Thank you.
first, I'm a first timer at freenas and alike (but I've done my share part of other under-the-hood things)
Second, I read the
http://forums.freenas.org/showthrea...Virtual-Machine!&p=58364&viewfull=1#post58364
and
http://forums.freenas.org/showthrea...ot-a-guide-to-not-completely-losing-your-data
and
a few others. And I'm still going forward, so let's not debate in that direction.
shortly: I am setting up a storage/fileserver for my existing home esxi. Easiest and cheapest solution is to go for something like freenas. My HW setup is all dual-hdd/dual-ssds in software raid1. As I'm on a consumer grade board, every VM is doing it's own sw-raid.
Target usage for freenas is 80-90% actual data storage (pictures, movies, music, documents and so on) and archiving (old VMs, backups) and the rest, various test VM's that I may need (things like winxp with 256mb ram, nothing fancy and not in requirement of performance).
The key aspect here is data-safety.
At current point, everything is raid-mirrored except for the new freenas VM for which I cannot find any tutorials on how-to-properly do it. I'm an old RH user, now centos based, and except pre-build stuff, I never had to mingle with freebsd and alikes or other linuxes.
So the question is: can I setup a software raid for the freenas OS itself?
If not, would a daily backup of the VM itself do the job in case there is a hdd failure of the SSD it will be installed on? That is, assuming the SSD crashes now and I have a 23 hour old copy of the VM, replace the SSD and copy over the backup and start it, will it function alright, picking up where the crashed one has left of with whatever data-recovery options there are for these kinds of situations? (data virtual disks will be on other drives so the chances for the OS drive and a data drive to crash a the same time should be pretty much 0)
To note that critical data will be automatically and periodically backed up by the current data backup solution running daily. The freenas solution here addresses 2 problems in my environment:
- have the data available easily to all members of the family in one place without moving the external drives all the time from computer to computer
- for me to be able to recover most if not all of my work since the last backup (this is where raid1 comes into play)
The only loose end in this configuration is the freenas itself not being mirrored.
Thank you.