johnnychicago
Dabbler
- Joined
- Mar 3, 2016
- Messages
- 37
Hello
After having played for a bit, I am currently mapping out a 'proper' setup for a long term use Freenas box. Power consumption and noise are factors for me, so I am leaning towards the minimal number of drives possible to fill my storage needs. Maximum 4, but less is more.
Currently I could just go and have a pair off 8TB drives ,mirror them into a vdev and be happy. It would be more expensive than 3 4TB drives for the same space, but I see following advantages:
* Resilvering a replaced drive should go considerably faster on a mirror than on a raidz
* If I were to grow it, I would 'just' have to buy two new drives and replace one after the other - not three or four drives. Again resilvering goes faster
* I could in a pinch add two more drives, build a second mirror vdev and extend the pool quickly
* obviously, once I am at four drives, it will be hard to reduce to two again. I'll have to wait for 'really big' drives to be available and do trickery with reducing redundancy and building a temporary second pool to move over
I can see this approach not working well if one wants bigger double digit TB's in ones NAS. But for a smaller setup, I currently fail to see the advantage of going with more, but smaller drives (unless you have them, of course).
Am I missing something, or is the above reasonable?
After having played for a bit, I am currently mapping out a 'proper' setup for a long term use Freenas box. Power consumption and noise are factors for me, so I am leaning towards the minimal number of drives possible to fill my storage needs. Maximum 4, but less is more.
Currently I could just go and have a pair off 8TB drives ,mirror them into a vdev and be happy. It would be more expensive than 3 4TB drives for the same space, but I see following advantages:
* Resilvering a replaced drive should go considerably faster on a mirror than on a raidz
* If I were to grow it, I would 'just' have to buy two new drives and replace one after the other - not three or four drives. Again resilvering goes faster
* I could in a pinch add two more drives, build a second mirror vdev and extend the pool quickly
* obviously, once I am at four drives, it will be hard to reduce to two again. I'll have to wait for 'really big' drives to be available and do trickery with reducing redundancy and building a temporary second pool to move over
I can see this approach not working well if one wants bigger double digit TB's in ones NAS. But for a smaller setup, I currently fail to see the advantage of going with more, but smaller drives (unless you have them, of course).
Am I missing something, or is the above reasonable?