beyondevil
Cadet
- Joined
- Dec 31, 2018
- Messages
- 2
I've been tasked to help a non-profit set up a backup system.
After some discussions, the decision was made that we would build our own system and use FreeNAS (instead of buying something ready-made like Qnap).
Being a non-profit, money is a concern. With that said, they understand that spending some money up front can save the some headaches down the road.
The data that will be stored is mostly going to be content for their website (pictures and texts, video will be hosted on Vimeo). Initially the size needed is roughly 1TB and the 10 year estimate is around 8TB. So we're not talking large quantities of data here. The pictures and texts will mostly be user added (scanned copies of real photographs etc.). So somewhat sensitive, but not impossible to restore in case of corruption.
So the backup solution we've discussed is basically two NAS:es (master and slave, more on that later) with an additional cold storage (probably Backblaze B2). The two NAS:es will not be co-located.
None of the NAS:es will serve the content to the website, that's handled by a separate file server. So what I'm building is a pure backup system. The only time we'll ready from any backup is if the data on the file server would be corrupted in some way.
So my question is, given the details above, is ECC memory even required at all?
If yes, would it suffice to have ECC memory on the master NAS? Since syncing won't be two way. The master NAS will sync one-way to the slave and to the cold storage.
After some discussions, the decision was made that we would build our own system and use FreeNAS (instead of buying something ready-made like Qnap).
Being a non-profit, money is a concern. With that said, they understand that spending some money up front can save the some headaches down the road.
The data that will be stored is mostly going to be content for their website (pictures and texts, video will be hosted on Vimeo). Initially the size needed is roughly 1TB and the 10 year estimate is around 8TB. So we're not talking large quantities of data here. The pictures and texts will mostly be user added (scanned copies of real photographs etc.). So somewhat sensitive, but not impossible to restore in case of corruption.
So the backup solution we've discussed is basically two NAS:es (master and slave, more on that later) with an additional cold storage (probably Backblaze B2). The two NAS:es will not be co-located.
None of the NAS:es will serve the content to the website, that's handled by a separate file server. So what I'm building is a pure backup system. The only time we'll ready from any backup is if the data on the file server would be corrupted in some way.
So my question is, given the details above, is ECC memory even required at all?
If yes, would it suffice to have ECC memory on the master NAS? Since syncing won't be two way. The master NAS will sync one-way to the slave and to the cold storage.