tarnar
Cadet
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2018
- Messages
- 7
Hi all, wanted to share my build log of a new experimental zfs storage server. I'm replacing an older system that I totally overbuilt (more on that later) and had the following objectives:
Part List
Rosewill RSV-Z2600 Short Throw 2U Case w/ 80mm Fans, (supposedly) room for 4x3.5" Drives
SuperMicro X11SSM-F
Xeon E3-1230 V6
Noctua NH-L9I CPU Cooler
Kingston KVR24E17D8/16 ECC RAM
Corsair SF450 Small Form Factor Power Supply
I chose to replace the case fans with 80mm Noctua PWM fans (quiet!)
The HBA is an eBay'd LSI 2308 (specifically a Dell 9217-8i). SATA breakout cables to 8 drives.
The drives are where this gets a little interesting. I went hunting for cheap m.2 SATA solid state drives, and found four Crucials and four Sandisks, all at the 500GB-ish size.
Those drives sit on a converter card that seats four m.2 SATA drives in a 3.5" form factor. The specific card I went for is from an outfit called MicroSataCables.com
Then there are two boot drives (2.5" SATA SSDs I bought from a friend) in a 2x2.5" to 3.5" StarTech bracket.
The Gotchas
Where to begin!
The power supply didn't come with a bracket to fit standard ATX. I specifically chose an SFF power supply to have more room, and I'm glad I did.
SuperMicro has their backwards case/motherboard/power supply design, so the power connector is against the side of the case, and I needed an extension to attach it.
The HBA ports are right in the way of the middle 3.5" drive mount, so that one has been removed.
The initial plan was to have the two 3.5" converter cards on the side of the case where you can put two 3.5" drives on top of each other. That didn't pan out, so the cards are where they fit - on each side of the case.
The power supply has connectors for old-style hard drive power (4 pin molex) but the converter card layout demands right-angle molex connectors in this form factor.
The HBA gets very toasty under load and the case is lacking in great airflow so I elected to tape a 40mm Noctua fan to it the heatsink on it. In theory I have a side-mounting bracket to hang the fan from instead of tape, but it's not here yet.
The Old Build
The old system was a 2U SuperMicro chassis with dual power supplies, 8x3.5" drives and an X9 board. It was loud and I never had anywhere to run it that I felt good about in my home.
I also had imagined that I needed many, many TBs of storage, but that wasn't my actual use-case. I don't keep a home media library, and in the end all I really wanted was somewhere to keep my backups and mirror my friend's backups. The old build was virtualized (ESXi) but that virtualization didn't do much for me much in the end.
So this time around the goals were focused on what I saw as the old weaknesses - size, form factor and noise.
The Final Build (hardware)
First, the m.2 to 3.5" card empty
Then the cards populated with SATA SSDs
Then the cards mounted in the 3.5" bays
A shot of the rig during testing (before my HBA arrived)
And finally, the finished product.
Maybe more to come. I'm still experimenting with the OS loads (have played with Linux and FreeNAS so far) and not sure if I'll virtualize this time around.
Let me know if you have questions. This has been a very fun project, and I'm planning to build another one of these. This version was a test-run that I'll also be able to use for my backups, and I hope to apply the lessons learned to another build soon.
Edit: this time with working images..
- Reliable storage for high priority backups
- Small size
- Low power draw
- Low noise
Part List
Rosewill RSV-Z2600 Short Throw 2U Case w/ 80mm Fans, (supposedly) room for 4x3.5" Drives
SuperMicro X11SSM-F
Xeon E3-1230 V6
Noctua NH-L9I CPU Cooler
Kingston KVR24E17D8/16 ECC RAM
Corsair SF450 Small Form Factor Power Supply
I chose to replace the case fans with 80mm Noctua PWM fans (quiet!)
The HBA is an eBay'd LSI 2308 (specifically a Dell 9217-8i). SATA breakout cables to 8 drives.
The drives are where this gets a little interesting. I went hunting for cheap m.2 SATA solid state drives, and found four Crucials and four Sandisks, all at the 500GB-ish size.
Those drives sit on a converter card that seats four m.2 SATA drives in a 3.5" form factor. The specific card I went for is from an outfit called MicroSataCables.com
Then there are two boot drives (2.5" SATA SSDs I bought from a friend) in a 2x2.5" to 3.5" StarTech bracket.
The Gotchas
Where to begin!
The power supply didn't come with a bracket to fit standard ATX. I specifically chose an SFF power supply to have more room, and I'm glad I did.
SuperMicro has their backwards case/motherboard/power supply design, so the power connector is against the side of the case, and I needed an extension to attach it.
The HBA ports are right in the way of the middle 3.5" drive mount, so that one has been removed.
The initial plan was to have the two 3.5" converter cards on the side of the case where you can put two 3.5" drives on top of each other. That didn't pan out, so the cards are where they fit - on each side of the case.
The power supply has connectors for old-style hard drive power (4 pin molex) but the converter card layout demands right-angle molex connectors in this form factor.
The HBA gets very toasty under load and the case is lacking in great airflow so I elected to tape a 40mm Noctua fan to it the heatsink on it. In theory I have a side-mounting bracket to hang the fan from instead of tape, but it's not here yet.
The Old Build
The old system was a 2U SuperMicro chassis with dual power supplies, 8x3.5" drives and an X9 board. It was loud and I never had anywhere to run it that I felt good about in my home.
I also had imagined that I needed many, many TBs of storage, but that wasn't my actual use-case. I don't keep a home media library, and in the end all I really wanted was somewhere to keep my backups and mirror my friend's backups. The old build was virtualized (ESXi) but that virtualization didn't do much for me much in the end.
So this time around the goals were focused on what I saw as the old weaknesses - size, form factor and noise.
The Final Build (hardware)
First, the m.2 to 3.5" card empty

Then the cards populated with SATA SSDs

Then the cards mounted in the 3.5" bays

A shot of the rig during testing (before my HBA arrived)

And finally, the finished product.


Maybe more to come. I'm still experimenting with the OS loads (have played with Linux and FreeNAS so far) and not sure if I'll virtualize this time around.
Let me know if you have questions. This has been a very fun project, and I'm planning to build another one of these. This version was a test-run that I'll also be able to use for my backups, and I hope to apply the lessons learned to another build soon.
Edit: this time with working images..
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