After I lost my FreeNAS Mini and Dell C2100 servers from water damage after a fire (HDD's saved) I built two such systems as you described above to replace them. They have been entirely satisfactory and I highly recommend their consideration.Further further edit: Maybe the 32GiB max idea?
Windows, no. Linux, yes, just be sure that zfsutils-linux is installed. There's a caveat here about feature flags, that'll largely be resolved assuming TrueNAS Core and Ubuntu 20.04.
There is a ZFS port for Windows but I'm not sure how stable it is. You're better off with a boot into Linux.
I am not sure if giving a Widows machine native access to a file share, qualifies as streaming. My Windows HTPC with J-River also has access to all my media files trough a Samba share but I never looked at it as streaming. J-River provides streaming though. Anyway as long as another machine is doing the heavy lifting you are good.
I have never done it but I suspect that at least in theory that should be possible on any OS supporting ZFS. That being said, ZFS has so called feature flags. I am not an expert, to say the least, on this subject but I suspect that if the ZFS version you are running has feature flags that are not supported on the receiving system you are out of luck.
For x9 there's a suggestion over yonder that runs you about 380: https://www.ixsystems.com/community...anges-to-upgrade-as-high-as-512gb-of-ram.110/
Note that you can absolutely drop those costs further by going with 32GiB of RAM and choosing a 4-core CPU, which would be entirely adequate for your use case.
For example https://www.ebay.com/itm/Intel-Xeon...626484?hash=item23d7d09534:g:ss4AAOSwd59eyX65 and https://www.ebay.com/itm/SAMSUNG-32...304181&hash=item3da89715cb:g:bL0AAOSwCQJfJCY5
Further edit: Those x9srl-f are getting expensive. Some more digging to see what's affordable right now :). Could be an x9sri-f, e.g. https://www.ebay.com/itm/Supermicro...tel-C602-ECC-DDR3/264821242181?epid=127348132 for $150. Add CPU and memory and cooler and you are right around that 250 mark.
Further further edit: Maybe the 32GiB max idea?
$75 for board, e.g. https://www.ebay.com/p/127396627?iid=352558745024
$55 for Xeon quad, e.g. https://www.ebay.com/p/10011083316?iid=382486487188
$80 for 16 GiB of UDIMM RAM, e.g. https://www.ebay.com/itm/Crucial-8G...VER-Memory-RAM-8G/383582216503?epid=691116539
$40 for some form of CPU cooler for it, look around. Maybe this. https://www.ebay.com/itm/401123086618 . I assume you have thermal paste, otherwise that's an additional expense.
$250 total, add a boot drive (could be a $25 SSD like Intel 320 40GB), and you are set. An extra 80 gets you more memory, which gives you a bit of headroom. Nice but not necessary.
You know, in case of e real disaster, temporary installing FreeNAS on another system is not very time consuming. Especially if you have taken care that you saved your configuration file on a save place. It should not take more then 25 minutes.
@MalVeauX
If you are interested I have a spare x8sie-f I would be willing to send you for the cost of shipping.
After I lost my FreeNAS Mini and Dell C2100 servers from water damage after a fire (HDD's saved) I built two such systems as you described above to replace them. They have been entirely satisfactory and I highly recommend their consideration.
I put them in Fractal Define R5 cases, added an additional front case fan and used Coolermaster Hyper 212 Evo CPU coolers, 32GiB ECC Ram, EVGA 850W PS's (overkill but have same PS in all workstations too so easy to carry spare(s) and swap in/out in case of trouble or testing).
The drives were "above the waterline" in the system cases (the mainboards were not). I pulled the drive caddies the night of the fire and put them in a very dry environment. Fired them up a few weeks later and all of them came back, same with my workstation drives, too. I've since lost a couple of the server drives out of a total of 18 recovered. Three Lenovo Thinkpad HDD's also survived - laptops were open, running, on desks, keyboards soaking wet and covered with debris, put drives in borrowed laptops the next day and they fired up just fine, too. Had no need to resort to backups on any system. though we had them...Do you mind sharing a little about how you recovered the drives?
The drives were "above the waterline" in the system cases (the mainboards were not). I pulled the drive caddies the night of the fire and put them in a very dry environment. Fired them up a few weeks later and all of them came back, same with my workstation drives, too. I've since lost a couple of the server drives out of a total of 18 recovered. Three Lenovo Thinkpad HDD's also survived - laptops were open, running, on desks, keyboards soaking wet and covered with debris, put drives in borrowed laptops the next day and they fired up just fine, too. Had no need to resort to backups on any system. though we had them...
No hiccups, lots of tension.And what was your backup solution if that didn't work?
No hiccups, lots of tension.
All workstations and laptops backed up by Veeam nightly to the FreeNAS Mini, FreeNAS Mini backed up to the Dell C2100 (which on day of fire unfortunately was in the same building "temporarily" while finding it a new home). "Irreplaceable" data files Veeam backed up from the FreeNAS Mini to a portable USB drive daily. Working on cloud choice now.
6. 2 SATA3 (6Gb/s), 4 SATA2 (3Gb/s), & 4 SATA (3Gb/s) ports via SCU
The X9sri-f is a great board however if you plan on doing a mostly flash nas the sata ports are mostly 3Gb/s which won't be able to keep up with a modern ssd. You could also consider the x9-srh7f which has the integrated sas2308 which provides 8 SAS ports which are 6 Gb/s. Just be sure to flash it with IT mode firmware. If you are going for spinning rust then either board is a good choice in my opinion.
You probably don't need the extra cpu power but it never hurts, plus you can get cheap Ram for the e5 CPU's
By Flash, I do mean all SSD's.
While the x8SIL-F is a bit on the older side it works great for Freenas. The Freenas system I just replaced was a X8SIL-F with Xeon X3430 and 16GB ECC Ram. The only real reason I moved up to the X9srh was I decided to host storage for my Proxmox environment with ISCSI and needed more ram than what the X8SIL-F would accept.
For your use case, I think x8SIL-F with XEON x3440 and 16Gb ECC RAM you mentioned would be a great fit and for just $90 including shipping, you don't have a ton invested should you choose to upgrade at a later date.
The Seasonic Focus GX-550 Fully Modular 80+ Gold PSU also looks like a good power supply with plenty of SATA connectors.
I have used several generations of Xeons on home servers and homelab servers and always just used the stock cooler. Unless you have problems with the sound (noise) and/or temperature I would not bother. Most of the time your CPU will not work all that hard. It's not a gaming rig. Though I must admit that the stock coolers are uglyI'm currently using the stock CPU cooler
Looks like you are nicely on your way.
I have used several generations of Xeons on home servers and homelab servers and always just used the stock cooler. Unless you have problems with the sound (noise) and/or temperature I would not bother. Most of the time your CPU will not work all that hard. It's not a gaming rig. Though I must admit that the stock coolers are ugly![]()
Just some fun. They tried to fail a FreeNAS RAIDZ1 setup as well.Soon, I will try to simulate some drive failure scenarios