41 comments

  • Aurornis5 hours ago
    &gt; My only complaint about the motherboards has been that buying them from one of the Chinese e-tail sites like AliExpress is considered problematic by some.<p>I love some AliExpress deals for some of my hobby purchases, but a NAS motherboard is not one of them.<p>The contrast between the fashionable case, boutique Noctua fans, and then an AliExpress motherboard doesn’t inspire confidence in the priorities for this build. When it comes to a NAS I prioritize the core components from well known manufacturers and vendors. With everything from hobby gear to test equipment AliExpress has been a gamble on wherever you’re getting the real deal or a ghost shift knockoff or QA reject for me. It’s the last place I’d be shopping for core NAS components.
    • StopDisinfo9104 hours ago
      That&#x27;s a Topton board from the official Topton store on AliExpress. It&#x27;s strictly equivalent to buying straight from the manufacturer and will be shipped by Topton not AliExpress.<p>The Jonsbo case is probably both cheaper and easier to buy from AliExpress than Amazon too to be fair. It&#x27;s also a Chinese brand.
      • briancmoses45 minutes ago
        I wrote this blog and I completely agree with you both!<p>This listing <i>should</i> be as close to a sure thing as you can get on AliExpress. But even then, dealing with AliExpress when things go sideways isn&#x27;t always all that great.<p>I have purchased this motherboard from this link, I&#x27;d do it again in a heartbeat if I needed to, and I wouldn&#x27;t fault anyone for avoiding AliExpress either.<p>If somebody wants to buy from a different vendor, it&#x27;s sometimes possible to find resellers on Amazon or eBay (myself included). The prices might be a bit more expensive, but some folks might think it&#x27;s worth it.<p>I talk about it in the blog, it&#x27;s my understanding that there&#x27;s shortages of the Intel CPUs which I would expect to drive up the pricing.
  • Gud2 hours ago
    My advice, skip the TrueNAS and go straight to FreeBSD. It&#x27;s a simple operating system to maintain and it requires minimal setup to use as a NAS.
    • JimmaDaRustla7 minutes ago
      Is this rage bait?<p>&quot;Just skip owning a car, just buy a nice pair of Adidas, they&#x27;re easy to clean and don&#x27;t cost much.&quot;<p>???
    • AlanYx35 minutes ago
      This is what I recommend too, but for those who want something prepackaged, there&#x27;s also XigmaNAS, basically a lightweight UI layer and basic configuration on top of FreeBSD. Some of the original FreeNAS developers have been working on the project for almost 20 years.<p>It&#x27;s great for people who just want storage and don&#x27;t want the heavy features that came with TrueNAS&#x27; move to Linux (Kubernetes, etc.) or who want full control over vfs_fruit options for serving Macs.
    • embedding-shape1 hour ago
      As someone who tried TrueNAS at first, but prefers declarative reproducible configuration, do give NixOS a try. Best NAS base-OS I&#x27;ve tried so far, and when it was time to migrate to new hardware, I just switched the disks, re-ran the config and was up and running in no-time.
      • Gud1 hour ago
        Ok, sounds complicated compared to a basic FreeBSD install.
        • quasigod1 hour ago
          I dont think its much more or less complicated, just depends on which one you&#x27;re more familiar with.
    • briancmoses25 minutes ago
      I think this is a valid approach, especially for the audience of Hackernews.<p>But I&#x27;d be a bit worried about the availability of drivers for much of the hardware found on this particular motherboard.
    • layer842 minutes ago
      TrueNAS has migrated away from FreeBSD, current versions are now exclusively Linux-based.
    • chrismanning2 hours ago
      TrueNAS isn&#x27;t even FreeBSD any more, it&#x27;s Linux based now sadly
    • archagon1 hour ago
      I really didn&#x27;t want to setup and admin my own Unix system when I was building my NAS, and TrueNAS made the software side trivial. It&#x27;s basically plug-and-play and almost entirely configurable from the web interface. Why complicate your life needlessly?
  • mvkel14 hours ago
    Wait. You build a new one every -year-?! How does one establish the reliability of the hardware (particularly the aliexpress motherboard), not to mention data retention, if its maximum life expectancy is 365 days?
    • briancmoses5 hours ago
      Somebody else shared this, but I&#x27;m the blog&#x27;s author. I think you&#x27;re asking good questions, but they&#x27;re not from the point-of-view of the people who actually benefit from these blogs.<p>I&#x27;ve answered the &quot;You build one every year?&quot; question quite a few times over the years.<p>These blogs have a shelf life. After about a year, newer hardware is available that&#x27;s a better a better value. And after 2-3 years, it starts to get difficult to even find the many of the parts.<p>I don&#x27;t replace my NAS every year, but every now and then I do keep my yearly NAS for my own purposes, but 2026 won&#x27;t be one of those years.<p>&gt; How does one establish the reliability of the hardware...?<p>One guy on the Internet is--and always will be--an anecdote, I could use this NAS until its hardware was obsolete and I&#x27;d still be unable to establish any kind of actual reliability for the hardware. Unfortunately, I don&#x27;t have the time or money required to elevate beyond being a piece of anecdotal data.<p>However, there&#x27;s a sizable audience out there who have realized that they need some kind of storage beyond what they already have, but haven&#x27;t implemented a solution yet. I think if you put yourself in their shoes, you&#x27;ll realize that <i>anything</i> is better than nothing in regards to their important data. My hope is that these blogs move that audience along towards finding that solution.
      • eddythompson802 hours ago
        &gt; One guy on the Internet is--and always will be--an anecdote<p>That&#x27;s true of course. The problem, in my view, is that this is how everyone on the internet acts especially the &quot;reviewers&quot; or &quot;builders&quot; or &quot;DIYers&quot;. It&#x27;s not just you, so don&#x27;t take this as a personal attack.<p>Almost all articles and videos about tech (and other things now too) do the equivalent of &quot;unboxing review&quot;. When it&#x27;s not strictly an unboxing, it&#x27;s usually like &quot;I&#x27;ve had this phone&#x2F;laptop&#x2F;GPU&#x2F;backpack&#x2F;sprinkling system&#x2F;etc for a month, and here is my review&quot;<p>I stopped putting much weight on online reviews and guides because of that. Almost everyone who does them uses whatever they are advertising for _maybe_ a month and moves on to the next thing. Even if I&#x27;m looking for an older thing all reviews are from the month (or even day) it was released and there is very little to non a year or 2 after because understandably they don&#x27;t get views&#x2F;clicks. Even when there are later reviews, they are in the bucket of &quot;This thing is 3 years old now. Is it still worth it in 2025? I bought a new one to review and used it for a month&quot;<p>Not to mention that when reviewers DO face a problem, they contact the company, get a replacement and just carry on. Assuming everyone will be in the same position. From their prospective, it&#x27;s understandable. They can&#x27;t make a review saying &quot;Welp, we got a defective one. nothing to see here&quot;. On the other hand, if half the reviewer faced problems, and documented it, then maybe the pattern will be clearer.<p>Yes, every reviewer is a &quot;one guy on the internet&quot; and &quot;is--and always will be-- an anecdote&quot;. No one is asking every reviewer to be come Consumer Reports and test hundreds of models and collect user feedback to establish reliability scores. But at the same time if each did something similar it would be a lot more useful than what they do.<p>I&#x27;ll give you a concrete example off the top of my mind --a Thermapen from ThermoWorks.<p>When I was looking for &quot;the best kitchen thermometer&quot; the Thermapen was the top result&#x2F;review everywhere. Its accuracy, speed and build quality were all things every review outlined. It was a couple of years old by then and all the reviews were from 2 years ago. I got one and 6-8 months later, it started developing cracks all over the body. A search online then showed that this is actually a very common issue with Thermapens. You can contact them and they might send you another one of the older models if they still have them (they didn&#x27;t in my case) but it&#x27;ll also crack again. Maybe you can buy the new one?<p>May sound petty to put that one example on the spotlight, but very similar thing happened to me with a Pixel 4, a Thinkpad P2, a Sony wireless headphones, a Bose speaker, and many more that I&#x27;m forgetting. All had stellar &quot;3 week use reviews&quot;. After 6 months to a year and they all broke down in various ways. Then it becomes very easy to know what to search for and the problems are &quot;yeah, that just always happens with this thing&quot;
        • briancmoses1 hour ago
          You&#x27;re entirely right about this kind of content and the people who create it festers cynicism. But in the end, I am powerless to do anything to counter said cynics. Unfortunately anything that I write otherwise will just invoke more cynicism and I&#x27;m sure in the eyes of the cynics, it&#x27;s justified.<p>These DIY NAS build blogs have a bit of formula: Here&#x27;s my criteria, here are the parts that I chose to meet that criteria, and here&#x27;s what I think after I&#x27;ve built and tested it to the best of my ability.<p>If I had my choice, my blog would inspire people to understand their own criteria and give them the confidence to go build something unique that meets that same criteria. This absolutely happens, but it&#x27;s the exception rather than the rule. The rule is that people choose to replicate these DIY NAS builds part-for-part.<p>I&#x27;m as confident in this DIY NAS as I&#x27;ve been for the ones I created in the past. The times there were issues with these builds (eg: the defective C255X&#x2F;C275X CPUs from Intel), I&#x27;ve updated those blogs with all the details I can muster about those issues.
      • mvkel3 hours ago
        &gt; One guy on the Internet is--and always will be--an anecdote<p>It seems like you have a specific person in mind as the audience member (yourself?), but the piece could benefit from a wider view. Given your hardware choices, reliability seems to not be a factor at all, but near-term cost (at the expense of long-term cost).<p>I&#x27;m not expecting you to personally test your hardware choices, but make choices based on the aggregate accounts of others, like the rest of us.<p>I would imagine the mean audience member would want to buy something they can set and forget, which would necessitate the reliable choice. That is wholly different than a person who is excited about tinkering with a brand new NAS each year
        • briancmoses2 hours ago
          You should give me the benefit of the doubt when it comes to understanding the audience! I&#x27;ve got at least fourteen years of writing these blogs and then interacting with the people who engage with them. I think I have a decent understanding with what resonates with the audience. I&#x27;ve found that audience to be large enough that I&#x27;d rather focus my efforts on creating content this audience continues to find useful. An engaged audience is far more interesting to create content for than a wider audience.<p>The audience does want something that they can set and forget, which they&#x27;ve been doing for about as long as I&#x27;ve been writing these blogs. The few recipients of these actual DIY NAS builds (via raffles, giveaways, auctions, etc) have used them for years. For years, people have been telling me about how they used one of my previous DIY NAS buids as inspiration years ago and have told me how they have worked for them over the years. I expect in the not-to-distant future, someone will be telling me the same about this particular NAS. Despite disbelief and insistence otherwise, I&#x27;m insanely confident that this DIY NAS will be reliable for years to come.
    • dspillett2 hours ago
      <i>&gt; Wait. You build a new one every -year-?!</i><p>For some people, building a NAS, or a fuller home-lab, is a hobby in itself. Posts like this are generally written by one of those people for an audience of those sorts of people. Nothing wrong with that. I was someone like that myself, some time ago.<p>On a more cynical note: if the blog is popular enough, those affiliate links might be worth more than a few pennies and a post about previous years builds with links to those years choice of tech, will not see anything like the same traction. It wouldn&#x27;t get attention on HN for a start (at least not until a few more years time, when it might be part of an interesting then-and-now comparison).
    • SirFatty10 hours ago
      How else is one to get the clicks?
      • cube009 hours ago
        Plus the commission from the undisclosed Amazon affiliate links in the post.<p>They&#x27;re tagged for the post and year so must be worth it to go to that trouble rather then using generic tag for the whole blog.<p>tag=diyans2024-20, tag=diynas2025-20,tag=diynas2026-20
        • hamdingers2 hours ago
          I don&#x27;t understand why this is a problem for some people.<p>It doesn&#x27;t increase the price or impact your buyer experience in any way, so why do you care? If this blog post introduced you to a product you wanted to buy, why should you have a problem with the author getting a finders fee <i>from the seller</i>? Just seems mean-spirited.
          • Strom1 hour ago
            It impacts the buyer experience.<p>These two statements have a very different impact:<p>1. I love product X and I won&#x27;t get paid if you buy it too.<p>2. I love product X and I will get paid if you buy it too.<p>Money motivates people to claim they love a product or that a product is good, even if not true. It&#x27;s a problem that has plagued the internet for decades.
        • whynotmaybe4 hours ago
          On a more rhetorical side, should they be disclosed?<p>Isn&#x27;t that assumed nowadays that every link to a marketplace is an affiliate link?
          • dspillett2 hours ago
            <i>&gt; should they be disclosed?</i><p>Yes.<p><i>&gt; Isn&#x27;t that assumed nowadays that every link to a marketplace is an affiliate link?</i><p>Other people doing something wrong is seldom a good reason to do it wrong yourself.<p>My own personal pettiness: If an article declares the existence of affiliate links, I&#x27;ll use those links more often than not. If they don&#x27;t, I&#x27;ll make an effort to revisit the links without the affiliate IDs. If an article presents both affiliate and non-affiliated links, I will generally use the former, and I&#x27;ll trust the writers opinions a little more than otherwise. I actually keep a separate browser for buying things once they have been researched, to slightly inconvenience the tracking of me generally, so I won&#x27;t be linked by “last affiliate” tracking unless fairly decent profiling is in action (which it won&#x27;t be: sellers won&#x27;t make that much effort just to pay money out to affiliates), only if I copy over the affiliate-id decorated link (or the original source article and click the link in that environment).
          • toast04 hours ago
            Social enforcement is probably all we can get, but yes, they should be disclosed. I&#x27;ma a fan of using &#x27;affiliate link&#x27; as the anchor text, but it might offend one&#x27;s html sensibilities. A brief one sentance blurb about commisions before the affiliate links start is sufficient.
    • p1necone13 hours ago
      Looks like they built a new NAS, but kept using the same drives. Which given the number of drive bays in the NAS probably make up a large majority of the overall cost in something like this.<p>Edit: reading comprehension fail - they bought drives earlier, at an unspecified price, but they weren&#x27;t from the old NAS - I agree, when lifetimes of drives are measures in decades and huge amounts of tbw it seems pretty silly to buy new ones every time.
      • adastra2212 hours ago
        MB and other elements are more concerning than the drives.
        • zdragnar8 hours ago
          For system failure, yes, but not if data retention and recovery is your primary concern.<p>When building a device primarily used for storing personal things, I&#x27;d much prefer to save money on the motherboard and risk that failing than skimping on the drives themselves
          • bostik6 hours ago
            Don&#x27;t skimp on the power supply either. A dodgy PSU can torch all devices attached to it.<p>How do I know? I&#x27;ve had two drives and one MB fail in quick succession thanks to a silently failing power supply.
          • aynyc7 hours ago
            You actually want reliable MB &amp; RAM to ensure data doesn&#x27;t get corrupted in memory first. Since you have various ways of writing data to disks that offer you resiliency.
          • embedding-shape8 hours ago
            Eh, cheap motherboards aren&#x27;t a panacea that can&#x27;t hurt the rest of the hardware, I personally don&#x27;t skimp on motherboards, and would much rather skimp on the drives themselves as I have redundancy and 1-2 drives failing wouldn&#x27;t hurt too much. And data retention is my top priority.<p>Motherboards have fried connected hardware before, poor grounding&#x2F;ESD protections, firmware bugs together with aggressive power management, wiring weirdness and power related faults have broken people&#x27;s drives before.<p>What I&#x27;ve never heard about is a drive breaking something else in a system, but broken motherboards have taken friends with them more than once.
            • adastra2251 minutes ago
              Not sure why you are being downvoted. The MB is a single point of failure in this system, the drives are not.<p>I’ve experienced many drive failures over the years, but never lost data due to RAID. Failing MB or PSU on the other hand has wiped out my entire system.
      • throwaway20378 hours ago
        This is the funniest edit have read in while.
        • mvkel5 hours ago
          Waiting for the edit to the edit
          • p1necone1 hour ago
            In my defense - the paragraph under the &#x27;Storage&#x27; header reads like what I said to me, whereas the &#x27;Bulk Storage Hard Disk Drives&#x27; header says something kind of contradictory to that. (&#x27;Collection of brand new parts&#x27; vs &#x27;my own decommissioned hard drives&#x27;)
  • VTimofeenko16 hours ago
    Built a NAS last winter using the same case. Temps for HDDs used to be in mid-50s C with no fan and about 40 with the stock fan. The case-native backplane thingamajig does not provide any sort of pwm control if the fan is plugged in, so it&#x27;s either full blast or nothing. I swapped the fan for a Thermalright TL-B12 and the HDDs are now happily chugging along at about 37 with the fan barely perceptible. Hddfancontrol ramps it up based on the output of smartctl.<p>Case can actually fit a low-profile discrete GPU, there&#x27;s about half height worth of space.
    • embedding-shape8 hours ago
      &gt; any sort of pwm control if the fan is plugged in, so it&#x27;s either full blast or nothing<p>Got a new network switch that runs somewhat hot (TP-Link) and it&#x27;s behaving the same way, built-in fan runs either not at all, or at 100% (and noisy at that). Installed OpenWRT on it briefly, before discovering 10Gbe NIC didn&#x27;t work with OpenWRT, and it had much better fan control. Why is it so hard to just place a basic curve on the fan control based on the hardware temperature? All the sensors and controllers are there apparently, just a software thing...
      • citrin_ru7 hours ago
        I have an impression that both noise level and power consumption are not a priority for home network equipment manufactures. After moving to a new house and connecting to another ISP I&#x27;ve got an ISP modem-router which: 1. has a fan and while it&#x27;s quiet it&#x27;s not silent 2. consumes around 20 Wt, not much but working 24x7 it would cost around £45&#x2F;year at current electricity rates.<p>I think it&#x27;s technically possible to make a modem which will consume less power and use passive coiling but I don&#x27;t think they (ISP and device manufacturer) care.
  • Havoc2 hours ago
    I was looking at N class CPU builds and very quickly realized they&#x27;re not for me. For storage only over LAN, low power prioritized use they&#x27;re a valid play, but there are some tradeoffs that are not obvious at first glance.<p>See those NVMEs he stuck in there? They&#x27;re running at 1&#x2F;8th their rated link speed. Yeah...12.5%. (PCIe 4.0 x4 vs PCIe 3.0 x1). This board is one of the better ones on pcie layouts [0], but 9 gen3 lanes is thin no matter how you look at it so all those boards have to cut corners somewhere on that<p>I decided I&#x27;m better off with a ebay AM4 build - way better pcie situation, ECC, way more powerful cpu, more sata, cheaper, 6x nvme all with X4 lanes, standard fan compatibility. Main downsides being no quicksync, power consumption and fast ECC UDIMMS are scarce. That was for a proxmox&#x2F;nas hybrid build though so more emphasis on performance<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;1YJ0s_LxXgU?t=690" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;1YJ0s_LxXgU?t=690</a>
    • femiagbabiaka1 hour ago
      Hmm good point. But to make sure I understand you completely, this only really matters for compute-heavy workloads, right?
      • greycol46 minutes ago
        Yes, mostly. PCIE 3.0 x1 lane gets you 500mb&#x2F;s [1] not much point to it compared to a regular ssd on sata3 which could do 600mb&#x2F;s. So if you want very fast storage you would also think about it.<p>Realistically for your DIY stuff you&#x27;re talking a different beast to these NASs. Bang for your buck you&#x27;d be attaching the mass 3.5&quot; storage in an external second hand JBOD enclosure and the main device would be dealing with the faster storage and have an HBA to connect to it.<p>[1] edit: as Havoc pointed out I need my coffee should be 2gb&#x2F;s which does change the point.
        • Havoc39 minutes ago
          Not quite. A gen 3 lane is 1 GB&#x2F;s link speed<p>Better question is how the article is getting 1.2 on fio tests. That must be a testing artifact
      • Havoc36 minutes ago
        With NAS builds you&#x27;re usually network constrained. Most of the numbers you see on storage side are gigabytes while network is gigabits. i.e. 1&#x2F;8th<p>So if you crunch the numbers you&#x27;ll see storage (esp flash) is much faster than network, meaning NAS can cut corners on storage. If you&#x27;re running something like a VM that accesses the storage directly then suddenly storage speed matters
  • mzhaase13 hours ago
    I would like to point people to the Odroid H4 series of boards. N97 or N355, 2*2.5GbE, 4*SATA, 2 W in idle. Also has extension boards to turn it into a router for example.<p>The developer hardkernel also publishes all relevant info such as board schematics.
    • ilkhan43 hours ago
      Yep, I&#x27;ve had mine running for over a year now without issue. It idles at 34w with all 4 drives running. I ended up making a custom &quot;case&quot; for it: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;cbsmith402&#x2F;storage-loaf" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;cbsmith402&#x2F;storage-loaf</a>
    • antonkochubey10 hours ago
      And the best feature is they have in-band ECC, which can correct one-bit and detect two-bit errors. No other Alder Lake-N or Twin Lake SBC exposes this feature in UEFI.
      • adrian_b5 hours ago
        There is the ASUS NUC 13 Rugged, which also exposes the in-band ECC, but it is both much more expensive and much slower (it uses either a 2-core or a 4-core Atom CPU, while ODROID uses either a 4-core or an 8-core CPU of the same Gracemont-based series).
      • ceving5 hours ago
        Can you give a reference for ECC? I can not find anything about ECC support on the Odroid site.
        • adrian_b5 hours ago
          The version using the 4-core CPU Intel N97, which is specified by Intel as an embedded CPU, certainly has in-band ECC, which was tested by some reviewers of this SBC.<p>I do not know whether the 8-core version (H4 Ultra) also enables in-band ECC, as for that CPU Intel does not specify embedded uses, so they may disable the ECC support in the factory.<p>See e.g.:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cnx-software.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;05&#x2F;26&#x2F;odroid-h4-plus-review-intel-n97-nas-kit-fanless-sbc-ubuntu-24-04&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cnx-software.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;05&#x2F;26&#x2F;odroid-h4-plus-revie...</a><p>However, looking right now at:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;forum.odroid.com&#x2F;viewtopic.php?f=171&amp;t=48377" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;forum.odroid.com&#x2F;viewtopic.php?f=171&amp;t=48377</a><p>I see that someone has enabled successfully in-band ECC on the 8-core ODROID H4 Ultra and has run benchmarks with ECC disabled&#x2F;enabled. Therefore it appears that in-band ECC support exists on all models.<p>The results of benchmarks with in-band ECC disabled&#x2F;enabled may be not representative for real workloads. In-band ECC relies on caching the ECC bits in a dedicated ECC cache, in order to avoid excessive memory accesses. The effectiveness of the ECC cache can be very different for the benchmark and for the real workload, leading to misleading results. Usually for the real workload it is likely that the cache hit-rate will be higher, so the performance drop with in-band ECC enabled will be less conspicuous.
          • samhclark4 hours ago
            I can confirm that the Odroid H4 Plus also supports in-band ECC. If I remember right, Memtest86 showed different stats when I ran it with in-band ECC enabled&#x2F;disabled though I didn&#x27;t have a good way to test that an error was actually corrected.
            • toast04 hours ago
              Some systems allow forcing an ECC error, but assuming that&#x27;s not available, if you can adjust memory voltages or timings, you can usually encourage errors that way and confirm memtest detects ECC corrections.
              • adrian_b2 hours ago
                All CPUs with ECC support allow the forcing of ECC errors, but unfortunately in recent years the CPU vendors usually do not document how.<p>Only when they expose this feature in Linux EDAC drivers it becomes possible to do this. In the past Intel had maintained well its Linux EDAC drivers, but AMD had frequently great delays between the launch of a CPU and the update of the drivers. After the many lay-offs at Intel, it is unknown whether in the future their Linux support will remain as good as in the past.
    • squishykid10 hours ago
      I am building a NAS using the Odroid H4+ and a 3d printable case design. I selected the Odroid board for the in-band ECC and low power consumption: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.printables.com&#x2F;model&#x2F;1257966-odroid-h4-nas" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.printables.com&#x2F;model&#x2F;1257966-odroid-h4-nas</a>
    • kajika9112 hours ago
      I also have an older Odroid HC4, it&#x27;s been years it is running smoothly and not only I cannot use 1000$ for a NAS as the current post implied but the power consumption seems crazy to me for a mere disk-over-network usage (using a 500W power supply).<p>I like the extensive benchmark from hardkernel, the only issue is that any ARM-based product is very tricky to boot and the only savior is armbian.
      • Aurornis5 hours ago
        &gt; the power consumption seems crazy to me for a mere disk-over-network usage (using a 500W power supply).<p>The rated power supply spec is the maximum it can provide, not the actual consumption of the device.
    • andruby6 hours ago
      I&#x27;ve had an H3 for a few years and it runs amazing. Very low power usage, small footprint and great stability. I run it with an M.2 ssd for power considerations.<p>Before that I had a full size NAS with an efficient Fujitsi motherboard, pico-psu, 12V adaptor and spinning HDD&#x27;s. That required so much extra work for so little power efficiency gains vs the Odroid.
  • drjasonharrison2 hours ago
    One problem I&#x27;ve had running a NAS at home is dust. My usual installation location is my pantry, which is where the network enters my apartment. Unfortunately, it is also the same room as my heat pump, so dust can accumulate.<p>Integrating a dust filter (not necessarily HEPA, but MERV 11) and the required fan upgrades would be wonderful.
  • dllu16 hours ago
    Very sad that HDDs, SSDs, and RAM are all increasing in price now, but I just made a 4 x 24 TB ZFS pool with Seagate Barracudas on sale at $10 &#x2F; TB [1]. This seems like a pretty decent price even though the Barracudas are rated for 2400 hours per year [2] but this is the same spec that the refurbished Exos drives are rated for.<p>By the way, interesting to see that OP has no qualms about buying cheap Chinese motherboards, but splurged for an expensive Noctua fan when the cheaper Thermalright TL-B12 perform just as well for a lot cheaper (although the Thermalright could be slightly louder and perhaps be a slightly more annoying spectrum).<p>Also, it is mildly sad that there aren&#x27;t many cheap low power (&lt; 500 W) power supplies for SFX form factor. The SilverStone Technology SX500-G 500W SFX that was mentioned retails for the same price as 750 W and 850 W SFX PSUs on Amazon! I heard good things about getting Delta flex 400 W PSUs from Chinese websites --- some companies (e.g. YTC) mod them to be fully modular, and they are supposedly quite efficient (80 Plus Gold&#x2F;Platinum) and quiet, but I haven&#x27;t tested them out yet. On Taobao, those are like $30.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.newegg.com&#x2F;seagate-barracuda-st24000dm001-24tb-for-daily-computing-7200-rpm&#x2F;p&#x2F;N82E16822185109" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.newegg.com&#x2F;seagate-barracuda-st24000dm001-24tb-f...</a><p>[2] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.seagate.com&#x2F;content&#x2F;dam&#x2F;seagate&#x2F;en&#x2F;content-fragments&#x2F;products&#x2F;datasheets&#x2F;barracuda-3-5-hdd&#x2F;barracuda-3-5-hddDS2131-3-US2411-en_US.pdf" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.seagate.com&#x2F;content&#x2F;dam&#x2F;seagate&#x2F;en&#x2F;content-fragm...</a>
    • joshvm2 hours ago
      This is Black Friday pricing at least, if you&#x27;re willing to shuck. Seagate drives are still sub-$10&#x2F;TB which... a single 24-26TB is enough for all my photos (ever), media <i>and</i> some dataset backup for work. I&#x27;m planning to backup photos and other &quot;glacier&quot;-tier media like YouTube channels to BluRay (a disk or two per year). It&#x27;s at the point where I&#x27;d rather just pay the money and forget about it for 5-10 years.<p>I built the case from Makerbeam and printed panels, an old Corsair SF600 and a 4 year old ITX system with one of Silverstone&#x27;s backplanes. They make up to 5 drives in a 3x5-1&#x2F;4 bay form factor. It&#x27;s a little overpowered (a 5950X), but I also use it as a generic server at home and run a shared ZFS pool with 2x mirrored vdevs. Even with inefficient space it&#x27;s more than I need. I put in a 1080ti for transcoding or odd jobs that need a little CUDA (like photo tagging). Runs ResNet50-class models easily enough. I also wondered about treating it as a single-node SLURM server.
    • meindnoch9 hours ago
      &gt;I just made a 4 x 24 TB ZFS pool<p>How much RAM did you install? Did you follow the 1GB per 1TB recommendation for ZFS? (i.e. 96GB of RAM)
      • dwood_dev6 hours ago
        That&#x27;s only for ZFS deduplication which you should never enable unless you have very, very specific use cases.<p>For normal use, 2GB of RAM for that setup would be fine. But more RAM is more readily available cache, so more is better. It is certainly not even close to a requirement.<p>There is a lot of old, often repeated ZFS lore which has a kernel of truth but misleads people into thinking it&#x27;s a requirement.<p>ECC is better, but not required. More RAM is better, not a requirement. L2ARC is better, not required.
        • AlanYx5 hours ago
          There are a couple recent developments in ZFS dedup that help to partially mitigate the memory issue: fast dedup and the ability to use a special vdev to hold the dedup table if it spills out of RAM.<p>But yes, there&#x27;s almost no instance where home users should enable it. Even the traditional 5gb&#x2F;1tb rule can fall over completely on systems with a lot of small files.
          • dwood_dev4 hours ago
            Nice. I was hoping a vdev for the dedup table would come along. I&#x27;ve wanted to use optane for the dedup table and see how it performs.
      • execution8 hours ago
        I think you should be fine with 64GB (4x16GB ECC), I have 8x10TB RAID-Z2 and it uses around 34GB.
        • cm21875 hours ago
          I believe the default is that ZFS uses 50% of your RAM for caching
      • zfs-myths7 hours ago
        Some myths never die, I guess..
        • wtallis3 hours ago
          That was <i>never</i> a myth, was it? It was just sound advice that was repeated without the information about which specific use cases it applied to.
    • Glemkloksdjf9 hours ago
      Are you running this in Raid-Z2?<p>I&#x27;m way to bothered by how long it would take to resilver the disks that size.
    • WarOnPrivacy16 hours ago
      &gt; $10 &#x2F; TB<p>That&#x27;s a remarkably good price. If I had $1.5k handy I&#x27;d be sorely tempted (even tho it&#x27;s Seagate).
      • dddgghhbbfblk10 hours ago
        It&#x27;s a good price but the Barracuda line isn&#x27;t intended for NAS use so it&#x27;s unclear how reliable they are. But it&#x27;s still tempting to roll the dice given how expensive drive prices are right now.
      • execution8 hours ago
        I was tempted by 4 x 28TB (Recertified Seagate ST28000NM000C) but could not work out what I would use it for.
      • rubatuga16 hours ago
        I&#x27;ve recently shucked some Seagate HAMR 26Tb drives hopefully they last
        • mindslight4 hours ago
          I won that lottery with 3x 26TB Exos shipped. I decided to try and get two more but they ended up being HAMR (returned). Then I managed to find two more earlier manufacturing dates in store stock at a somewhat-far Best Buy that I was driving past anyway.<p>It felt like an unnecessary purchase at the time (I&#x27;m still waiting to CAD a CPU cooler mounting solution for the build in a new case that has room for the drives). But it seems like that deal is going to be the high water mark for a few years, at least.
    • ghthor16 hours ago
      Not surprised by the fan, once I went noctua I didn’t go back.
  • zdw15 hours ago
    The Jonsbo N3 case which is 8x 3.5&quot; drives has a smaller footprint than this, which might be better for most folks. Needs a SFX PSU though, which is kind of annoying.<p>If you get an enterprise grade ITX board that has a 16x PCIe slot which can be bifurcated into 4 M.2 form factor PCIx4 connections, it really opens up options for storage:<p>* A 6x SATA card in M.2 form factor from Asmedia or others will let you fill all the drive slots even if the logic board only has 2&#x2F;4&#x2F;6 ports on it.<p>* The other ports can be used for conventional M.2 nVME drives.
    • ehnto15 hours ago
      That&#x27;s what I built! It&#x27;s a great case, the only components I didn&#x27;t already have lying around were the motherboard and PSU.<p>It&#x27;s very well made, not as tight on space as I expected either.<p>The only issue is as you noted, you have to be really careful with your motherboard choice if you want to use all 8 bays for a storage array.<p>Another gotchas was making sure to get a CPU with integrated graphics, otherwise you will have to waste your pcie slot on a graphics card and have no space for the extra SATA ports.
  • cm218710 hours ago
    HDD have to be bought new, as well as anything mechanical (eg fans). But for motherboards, CPU, RAM and SSD, there is great value in buying used enterprise hardware on ebay. It is generally durable hardware that spent a quiet life in a temperature controlled datacentre, server motherboards from 5 years ago are absolute aircraft carriers in term of PCIe lanes and functionalities. Used enterprise SSDs are probably more durable than a new retail SSD, plus power loss protection and better performance.<p>The only downside is slightly higher power consumption. But just bought a 32 core 3rd gen Xeon CPU + motherboard, 128GB RAM, it idles at 75w without disks which isn&#x27;t terrible. And you can build a more powerful NAS for a third of the price of a high end Synology. Unlikely that the additional 20-30w idle power consumption will cost you more than that.
    • Helmut1000110 hours ago
      I wouldn&#x27;t say that being new is an absolute requirement. I recently upgraded my ZFS pool from SATA to SAS HDDs. Since SAS HDDs have much better firmware for early error detection and monitoring, I decided to buy 50% refurbished. Even if I lost half of them, I would still be safe. I also have offsite backups. This setup worked really well for me, and I feel completely confident that my data is safe while not wasting unnecessary resources. Whether to use new or used equipment therefore depends on the setup.
      • cm21879 hours ago
        Agree, but that&#x27;s taking a risk with your data (whereas if a MB fails, you likely just need to replace it but your data is fine), and HDD kind of have a finite number of hours in them. Where buying them used I think makes sense is for a backup server, that you leave off except the few hours in a week where you do an incremental backup. Then it doesn&#x27;t really matter that the drives have already been running for 3 or 4 years.
        • Helmut100012 hours ago
          With the redundancy in a raidz2 or mirror, the driver can and will fail. I count on this. But it can happen in a controlled manner.
      • Glemkloksdjf9 hours ago
        So you buy used enterprise disks because their error detection is &#x27;better&#x27;?<p>Do you have any source for this claim? Why would be the firmware so different? Software is cheap i don&#x27;t think they would be that different.<p>I mean a used enterprise disk gets sold after it was running on heavy load for a long time. Any consumer hdd will have a lot less runtime than enterprise disks.
        • Helmut100012 hours ago
          The protocol is better (SAS). Once I put them in, I immediately noticed transmission issues in a counter going up for several of my HDDs where the SATA showed no errors at all. It was a faulty backplane that introduced these transmission issues that went unnoticed by my SATA drives for several years.
    • pmontra9 hours ago
      Maybe 75 W without disk is not terrible but it&#x27;s not good. My unoptimized ARM servers idle at about 3 or 4 W and add another 1 or 10 W when their SSDs or HDDs are switched on.<p>75 W probably need active cooling. 4 W do not.<p>Anyway you can probably do many more things with that 75 W server.
      • cm21871 hour ago
        A raspberry pi will go even lower. But as you say, not really comparable in term of functionality. I am comparing this to high end consumer NAS, which will idle at 30-40w minimum.
    • nicolaslem9 hours ago
      75W idle is 650kWh a year, that&#x27;s quite significant in the context of a home.
      • cm21876 hours ago
        Well, a Synology NAS would probably consume like 30-40w, so we are talking about an excess of $70-100 a year where I live. Depends on one&#x27;s budget of course, but not really a big deal for me. And certainly less than what I am saving on the upfront cost.
      • Glemkloksdjf9 hours ago
        260 Euros in Germany. And this heat also has to be moved out
        • ls6124 hours ago
          Well that’s on you for living in the failed state of Germany, where power is 3-4x as expensive as it is in sensible countries like the US.
          • Rebelgecko1 hour ago
            It&#x27;s frustrating when a comment is both needlessly belligerent flamebait AND wrong about electricity prices in the US. I guess that&#x27;s what makes effective flamebait
            • ls6121 hour ago
              German electricity prices are around €0.38&#x2F;kwh based on my quick googling which is roughly $0.44&#x2F;kwh. I pay $0.12-0.13&#x2F;kwh in the US so I’m at least right factually up to rounding.
    • Glemkloksdjf9 hours ago
      Enterprise hardware is very seldom a good idea.<p>The hardware has different form factors (19&quot;), two power supplies, very loud, very power hungry.<p>There are so many good combinations of old and still functional hardware for consumers.<p>My main pc 6 years ago had a powerful cpu and idle load of 15 watts due to the combination of mainboard and amount of components i had in it (one ram block instead of 2 or so).<p>And often enough, if you can buy enterpsire hardware, the hardware is so outdated that a current consumer system would beat it without looking at it.<p>If you then need to replace something, its hard to find or its differennt like the power supply.
    • gorbachev9 hours ago
      The datahoarder community frequently utilizes used hard drives.<p>That&#x27;s perfectly fine, if your NAS has redundancy and you can recover from 1 - 2 disk failures, and you&#x27;re buying the drives from a reputable reseller.
      • t-39 hours ago
        I usually buy used hard drives, but prices are strange for all electronics right now. It&#x27;s a bad time to buy anything computer-related, but especially used goods which aren&#x27;t discounted as much as normal are priced higher due to massive inflation (to the point that refurbished drives I bought 5 years ago have a better dollar&#x2F;GB ratio than refurbs I can buy today).
  • speff17 hours ago
    Q - assuming the NAS was strictly used as NAS and not as a server with VMs, is there a point in having a large amount of RAM? (large as in &gt;8GB)<p>I&#x27;m not sure what the benefit would be since all it&#x27;s doing is moving information from the drives over to the network.
    • firecall14 hours ago
      I am not at all an expert, I can only share my anecdotal unscientific observations!<p>I&#x27;m running a TrueNAS box with 3x cheap shucked Seagate drives.*<p>The TrueNAS box has 48GB RAM, is using ZFS and is sharing the drives as a Time Machine destination to a couple of Macs in my office.<p>I can un-confidently say that it feels like the fastest TM device I&#x27;ve ever used!<p>TrueNAS with ZFS feels faster than Open Media Vault(OMV) did on the same hardware.<p>I originally setup OMV on this old gaming PC, as OMV is easy. OMV was reliable, but felt slow compared to how I remembered TrueNAS and ZFS feeling the last time I setup a NAS.<p>So I scrubbed OMV and installed TrueNAS, and purely based on seat-of-pants metrics, ZFS felt faster.<p>And I can confirm that it soaks up most of the 48GB of RAM!<p>TrueNAS reports ZFS Cache currently at 36.4 GiB.<p>I dont know why or how it works, and it&#x27;s only a Time Machine destination, but there we are those are my metrics and that&#x27;s what I know LOL<p>* I don&#x27;t recommend this. They seem unreliable and report errors all the time. But it&#x27;s just what I had sitting around :-) I&#x27;d hoped by now to be able to afford to stick 3x 4TB&#x2F;8TB SSDs of some sort in the case, but prices are tracking up on SSDs...
    • Aurornis5 hours ago
      It depends on your file workload. The RAM can be used as a read cache.<p>I have some workloads where I have to go through a lot of files multiple times and the extra RAM cache makes a huge difference. You can tell when the NAS is pulling from cache or when it has a cache miss.
    • mewse-hn16 hours ago
      ZFS uses a large amount of ram, i think the old rule of thumb was 1GB ram per 1TB of storage
      • yjftsjthsd-h16 hours ago
        That&#x27;s only for deduplication.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;superuser.com&#x2F;a&#x2F;993019" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;superuser.com&#x2F;a&#x2F;993019</a>
        • Lammy16 hours ago
          I do like to deduplicate my BitTorrent downloads&#x2F;seeding directory with my media directories so I can edit metadata to my heart&#x27;s content while still seeding forever without having to incur 2x storage usage. I tune the `recordsize` to 1MiB so it has vastly fewer blocks to keep track of compared to the default 128K, at the cost of any modification wasting very slightly more space. Really not a big deal though when talking about multi-gibibyte media containers, multi-megapixel art embeds, etc.
          • zenoprax12 hours ago
            Have you considered &quot;reflinks&quot;? Supported as of [OpenZFS 2.2](<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;openzfs&#x2F;zfs&#x2F;pull&#x2F;13392" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;openzfs&#x2F;zfs&#x2F;pull&#x2F;13392</a>).<p>Haven&#x27;t used them yet myself but seems like a nice use case for things like minor metadata changes to media files. The bulk of the file is shared and only the delta between the two are saved.
          • yegle14 hours ago
            cross-seed | cross-seed <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cross-seed.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cross-seed.org&#x2F;</a>
            • bscphil14 hours ago
              I believe they are saying they literally edit the media files to add &#x2F; change metadata. Cross-seeding is only possible if the files are kept the same.
        • ekropotin13 hours ago
          ZFS also uses RAM for read through cache aka ARC. However, I’m not sure how noticeable the effect from increased RAM would be - I assume it mostly benefit for read patterns with high data reuse, which is not that common.
      • 01HNNWZ0MV43FF16 hours ago
        Huh. More than just the normal page cache on other filesystems?
        • WarOnPrivacy16 hours ago
          Yes. Parent&#x27;s comment matches everything I&#x27;ve heard. 32GB is a common recommendation for home lab setups. I run 32 in my TrueNAS builds (36TB and 60TB).
          • magicalhippo13 hours ago
            You can run it with much less. I don&#x27;t recall the bare minimum but with a bit of tweaking 2GB should be plenty[1].<p>I recall reading some running it on a 512MB system, but that was a while ago so not sure if you can still go that low.<p>Performance can suffer though, for example low memory will limit the size of the transaction groups. So for decent performance you will want 8GB or more depending on workloads.<p>[1]: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;openzfs.github.io&#x2F;openzfs-docs&#x2F;Project%20and%20Community&#x2F;FAQ.html#hardware-requirements" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;openzfs.github.io&#x2F;openzfs-docs&#x2F;Project%20and%20Commu...</a>
        • tekla16 hours ago
          ZFS will eat up as much RAM as you give it as it caches files in memory as accessed.
          • ac2916 hours ago
            All filesystems do this (at least all modern ones, on linux)
    • aunty_helen6 hours ago
      People get carried away with their home lab setups. There&#x27;s a distinct type of person that thinks they need 100tb of storage in their own house.<p>If you&#x27;re running a NAS for a company that has many users and multi disc access at the same time, sure. But then you&#x27;re probably then not buying hdds to shuck and cheap components off ebay.
    • PikachuEXE16 hours ago
      If you use ZFS you might need more RAM for performance?
    • loloquwowndueo16 hours ago
      Caching files in ram means they can be moved to the network faster - right?
      • ac2916 hours ago
        Depends on the network speed. At 1Gbps a single HDD can easily saturate the network with sequential reads. A pair of HDD could do the same at 2.5Gbps. At 10Gbps or more, you would definitely see the benefits of caching in memory.
        • butvacuum15 hours ago
          Not as much as expected. I have several toy ZFS pools out of ancient 3tb wd reds, and anything remotely home-grade (stripped mirrors, 4,6,8 wide raidz1&#x2F;2) saturates the disks before 10gig networking. As long as it&#x27;s sequential, 8gb or 128gb doesn&#x27;t matter.
      • speff16 hours ago
        Makes sense. I didn&#x27;t know if the FS used RAM for this purpose without some specialized software. PikachuEXE and Mewse mentioned ZFS. Looks like it has native support for caching frequent reads [0]. Good to know<p>[0]: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.truenas.com&#x2F;docs&#x2F;references&#x2F;l2arc&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.truenas.com&#x2F;docs&#x2F;references&#x2F;l2arc&#x2F;</a>
    • thefz10 hours ago
      ZFS cache.
    • justsomehnguy16 hours ago
      As the other said already if you have more RAM you can have more cache.<p>Honestly it&#x27;s not <i>that</i> needed but if you would really use the 10Gbit+ networking then 1 second is ~125M<i>bytes</i>. So depending on your usage you can never even more than 15% utilization or have it almost all if you constantly running something on it ie torrents or using it a SAN&#x2F;NAS for VM on some other machine.<p>But for a rare occasional home usage nor 32Gb nor this monstrosity and complexity doesn&#x27;t make sense - just buy some 1-2 bay Synology and forget about it.
      • ekropotin13 hours ago
        I won’t be able to sleep having my data just on 1 disk
        • kalleboo6 hours ago
          No matter what you should have an off-site backup as well in case of lightning, flood, fire, virus, etc.
  • vbezhenar6 hours ago
    No ECC, no remote KVM. HP Microserver remains the only viable option.
    • pi-rat6 hours ago
      Built in KVM is not that important any longer, with all the new options for adding an external one. gl-inet comet kvm, nanokvm pro, jetkvm, etc.
    • avhception6 hours ago
      Came here to remark about ECC as well.<p>The remote KVM options from HP and Dell and whatnot are usually so useless they might as well not exist except from remote power up &#x2F; down, so I don&#x27;t really care about that.
      • ciupicri5 hours ago
        I wanted to say the same thing. Having to walk to the closet to turn it on&#x2F;off or having to move it to the living room in order to debug it is an inconvenience, but data corruption caused by lack of ECC is a catastrophe.
    • conorcleary6 hours ago
      for thousands of dollars, plus what if you don&#x27;t want remote-in?
    • ls6124 hours ago
      I just bought a consumer AMD B850 board that supports ECC when I built my NAS in early October. I also got 32GB of ECC memory for $180 which is a distant memory today lol.
  • evanjrowley13 hours ago
    I would have chosen the i3-n305 version of that motherboard because it has In-Band ECC (IBECC) support - great for ZFS. IBECC is very underrated feature that doesn&#x27;t get talked about enough. It may be available for the N150&#x2F;N355, but I have never seen a confirmation.
    • zenoprax12 hours ago
      Can you explain why ECC is great for ZFS in particular as opposed to any other filesystem? And if the data leaves the NAS to be modified by a regular desktop computer then you lose the ECC assurance anyway, don&#x27;t you?
      • supermatt12 hours ago
        ZFS is about end-to-end integrity, not just redundancy. It stores checksums of data when writing, checks them when reading, and can perform automatic restores from mirror members if mismatches occur. During writes, ZFS generates checksums from blocks in RAM. If a bit flips in memory before the block is written, ZFS will store a checksum matching the corrupted data, breaking the integrity guarantee. That’s why ECC RAM is particularly important for ZFS - without it you risk undermining the filesystem’s end-to-end integrity. Other filesystems usually lack such guarantees.
      • adastra2212 hours ago
        The oversimplified answer is that ZFS’ in-memory structures are not designed to minimize bitflip risk, as some file systems are. Content is hashed when written to memory cache, but it can be a long time before it then gets to disk. Very little validation is done at that point to protect against writing bad data.
    • Alive-in-202512 hours ago
      what is the impact on performance, does it require special ram? just heard about this here
      • gforce_de12 hours ago
        sorry for the german comment - ECC is mandatory!<p>Obligatorische Pastete: &quot;16GB Ram sind Flischt, ohne wenn und aber. ECC ist nicht Flischt aber ZFS ist dafür ausgelegt. Wenn in Strandnähe Daten gelesen werden und es kommt irgendwie was in den Arbeitsspeicher, könnte eine eigentlich intakte Datei auf der Festplatte mit einem Fehler &quot;korrigiert&quot; werden. Also ECC ja. Das Problem bei ECC ist nicht der ECC-Speicher an sich, der nur wenig mehr als konventioneller Speicher kostet, es sind die Mutterbretter, die ECC unterstützen. Aufpassen bei AMD: Oft steht dabei, dass ECC unterstützt wird. Gemeint ist aber, dass ECC-Speicher läuft, aber die ECC-Funktion nicht genutzt wird. LOL. Die meisten MBs mit ECC sind Serverboards. Wer nichts gegen gebrauchte Hardware hat, kann z.B. mit einem alten Sockel 1155-Xeon mit Asus-Brett ein Schnäppchen machen. Ansonsten ist die Asrock Rack-Reihe zu empfehlen. Teuer, aber stromsparend. Generell Nachteil bei Serverboards: Die Bootzeit dauert eine Ewigkeit. Von Consumerboards wird man mit kurzen Bootzeiten verwöhnt, Server brauchen da oft mal 2 Minuten, bis der eigentliche Bootvorgang beginnt. Bernds Server besteht also aus einem alten Xeon, einem Asus Brett, 16GB 1333Mhz ECC-Ram und 6x 2TB-Platten in einem RaidZ2 (Raid6).6TB sind Netto nutzbar. Ich mag alte Hardware irgendwie. Ich reize Hardware gerne bis zum Gehtnichtmehr aus. Die Platten sind auch schon 5 Jahre alt, machen aber keine Mucken. Geschwindigkeit ist super, 80-100MB&#x2F;s über Samba und FTP. Ich lasse den Server übrigens nicht laufen, sondern schalte ihn aus, wenn ich ihn nicht brauche. Was noch? Komression ist super. Obwohl ich haupsächlich nicht weiter komprimierbare Daten speichere (Musik, Videos), hat mir die interne Kompression 1% Speicherplatz beschert. Bei 4TB sind das ca. 40GB Platz gespart. Der Xeon langweilt sich trotzdem ein bisschen. Testweise habe ich gzip-9-Komprimierung getestet, da kam er dann schon ins Schwitzen.&quot;
        • kurlberg11 hours ago
          This has been discussed on HN some times before. User xornot looked at the zfs source code and debunked &quot;faulty ram corrupts more and more on scrub&quot;, for more details see <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=14207520">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=14207520</a>
  • michaelhoney44 minutes ago
    I appreciate the use of liters as the unit of bulk
  • QuiEgo2 hours ago
    I’ve been pretty happy with taking a Terramsater F4-425 Plus and putting Linux on it.<p>I feel like the mini ITX market for motherboards is just too niche. If you want something small, buy an off the shelf NAS. If size is not an issue, buy a case that can hold a full sized motherboard and lots of disks.
    • mkinsella21 minutes ago
      I just purchased one of these on BF sale. How hard is it to install Truenas?
  • starky12 hours ago
    I think the worry about power consumption is a bit overblown in the article. My NAS has an i5-12600 + Quadro P4000 and uses maybe 50% more power than the one in this article under normal conditions. That works out to maybe $4&#x2F;month more cost. Given the relatively small delta, I&#x27;d encourage picking hardware based on what services you want to run.
    • silversmith12 hours ago
      Less power, less heat. Less heat, less cooling required. At some point that allows you to go fanless, and that&#x27;s very beneficial if you have to share a room with the device.
      • embedding-shape8 hours ago
        Since this is about NAS, you very likely have a bunch of HDDs connected to it. And if you do, I feel like they&#x27;ll &quot;out-noise&quot; a lot of cooling solutions as long as the fans are not spinning at max by default.
    • execution8 hours ago
      Indeed, I always compare it with what I get if I ran it via cloud services and the electricity cost pales in comparison.<p>My NAS is around 100W (6-year old parts: i3 9100 and C246M) which comes to $25&#x2F;£18 per month (electricity is expensive), but I can justify it as I use many services on the machine and it has been super reliable (running 24&#x2F;7 for nearly 6 years).<p>I will try to see if I can build a more performant&#x2F;efficient NAS from a mix of spare parts and new parts this coming month (still only Zen 3: 5950X and X570), but it is more of a fun project than a replacement.
    • dontlaugh12 hours ago
      It depends how much electricity costs where you live. I’m quite pleased mine idles at ~15W.
    • rr8087 hours ago
      $4&#x2F;mo is more than I expected. I always compare to cloud storage and $50&#x2F;yr is significant.
      • starky4 hours ago
        This is why I stated that the important part is sizing the machine for your use case. I use my NAS as far more than just a storage server, it also runs a couple VMs and about 20 docker containers all the time. Plus I&#x27;ve also got my Windows VM that I boot up for the few programs I use that don&#x27;t have a Linux equivalent (which is also the only time the P4000 is working). That is much more different than comparing to just cloud storage.
    • queenkjuul10 hours ago
      I&#x27;m with you, but my &quot;NAS&quot; is also really just a server, running tons of other services, so that justifies the power consumption (it&#x27;s my old 2700X gaming rig, sans GPU).<p>But i do have to acknowledge that the US has relatively low power costs, and my state in particular has lower costs than that even, so the equation is necessarily different for other people.
  • anentropic6 hours ago
    I used to have big HDDs attached to my Thunderbolt dock.<p>But it was always annoying having to &#x27;eject&#x27; them before unplugging the laptop from the dock. Or sometimes overnight they would disconnect themselves and fill up my screen with dozens of &quot;you forgot to eject&quot; notifications. Yes I&#x27;m on macOS.<p>Do NAS avoid this issue? Or you still have to mount&#x2F;unmount?<p>Why does there seem to be much more market for NAS than for direct attached external HDD?<p>Eventually I got a new laptop with bigger SSD, started using BackBlaze for backups, and mostly stopped using the external HDDs.<p>I always assumed NAS would be slower and even more cumbersome to use. Is that not the case?
    • yabones6 hours ago
      A NAS will use a network file protocol (SMB&#x2F;NFS&#x2F;AFP&#x2F;SFTP etc) to access data rather than direct disk access, so the types of failures are different. Generally you don&#x27;t really have to &quot;eject&quot; but disconnecting during a large transfer can cause incomplete writes.<p>The main risk with directly attached storage is that most kernels will do &quot;buffered writes&quot; where the data is written to memory before it&#x27;s committed to disk. Yanking the drive before writes are synced properly will obviously cause data loss, so ejecting is always a good idea.<p>Generally, NAS is a bit safer for this type of storage because the protocols are built with the assumption that the network can and will be interrupted. As a result, things are a bit slower since you&#x27;re dealing with network overhead. So, like everything, there are some trade-offs to be made.
    • tom_alexander5 hours ago
      &gt; Why does there seem to be much more market for NAS than for direct attached external HDD?<p>I can access my NAS from anywhere in the world, but you can only access your direct-attached drives when sitting at your desk.<p>I can hide my NAS in a closet, but your direct attach drives are wasting valuable desk space and causing noise in your workspace.<p>My NAS has a software raid (raidz2) so any two of my drives could die without losing a single bit of data. Technically this is possible with direct attached drives too, but usually people aren&#x27;t attaching multiple external drives to their computer at the same time.<p>Multiple people&#x2F;computers&#x2F;phones can access my NAS simultaneously, but your direct attach drives are only usable by a single computer at a time.<p>I can use my NAS from any device&#x2F;operating system without worrying about filesystem compatibility. With direct attach drives, you need to pick a filesystem that will be supported by the devices you want to plug in to it.<p>The downside is a NAS is running 24&#x2F;7 which will consume more electricity than drives you only plug in on-demand, and file transfers will be slower over a network than directly plugged in to your computer, but 99% of the time the speed difference does not matter to me. (It really only impacts me when doing full-disk backup&#x2F;restore since I&#x27;d be transferring hundreds of gigabytes.)
      • adrian_b4 hours ago
        You can configure a NAS to use Wake-on-LAN, so that it will not run 24&#x2F;7, but only when you wake it up remotely. After you finish using it, you power it down remotely, until the next use.
    • zuhsetaqi5 hours ago
      You can disable this notification with<p>defaults write &#x2F;Library&#x2F;Preferences&#x2F;SystemConfiguration&#x2F;com.apple.DiskArbitration.diskarbitrationd.plist DADisableEjectNotification -bool YES
  • p1mrx14 hours ago
    I recently got a used QNAP TS-131P for cheap, that holds one 3.5&quot; drive for offsite backup at a friend&#x27;s house. It&#x27;s compact and runs off a common 12V 3A power supply.<p>There is no third-party firmware available, but at least it runs Linux, so I wrote an autorun.sh script that kills 99% of the processes and phones home using ssh+rsync instead of depending on QNAP&#x27;s cloud: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;pmarks-net&#x2F;qnap-minlin" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;pmarks-net&#x2F;qnap-minlin</a>
  • fmajid11 hours ago
    I upgraded my home backup server a couple of months ago to a Minisforum N5 Pro, and am very happy with it. It only has 4 3.5” drive slots, but I only use two with 2x20TB drives mirrored, and two 14TB external drives for offsite backups. The AMD AI 370 CPU is plenty fast so I also run Immich on it, and it has ECC RAM and 10G Ethernet.
    • archagon2 hours ago
      The N5 Pro is a good machine, but I have to recommend the Aoostar WTR Max over it, having used both. It&#x27;s a few hundred bucks cheaper ($680 post-tax for a quality SFF case + mobo + CPU + power + fans!!) and has an extra drive bay and a couple of additional NVMe slots (three Gen4 2x and two 1x), despite being only ~13% larger. Also, the drive caddies on the N5 Pro were driving me crazy: the plastic clips holding the disk in place require quite a bit of force to dislodge and feel like they could snap at any moment. (And once they inevitably do, there&#x27;s no screwholes to use as a backup.)<p>Either way, it&#x27;s a great time for home NAS.
  • bhattisatish8 hours ago
    Are there any tape based solution which can be used at home? I don&#x27;t care about time retrieval. It&#x27;s more for home archival purpose.<p>I have two NAS servers (both based on Synalogy). But I need something where I can back it up and forgot about it till I want to restore the stuff. I am looking at a workflow of say, weekly backup to tape. Update the index. Whenever I want to restore a directory or file, I search the index, find the tape and load the same for retrieval.<p>NAS can be used for continuous backup (aka timemachine and timeshift). And archival at a weekly level.
    • progbits8 hours ago
      If you &quot;back up and forget&quot; there is a good chance you will not be able to restore the tapes when the time comes.<p>At least with drives you can run regular health checks a corruption scans. Tape is good for large scale but you must have automation that keeps checking the tapes.
      • adrian_b3 hours ago
        A tape can be checked much faster than a HDD, because its sequential read&#x2F;write speed is several times higher than that of a HDD.<p>However, there is little need to check the tapes, because the likelihood of them developing defects during storage is far less than for HDDs.<p>Much more important than checking the tapes from time to time is to make multiple copies, i.e. to use at least duplicate tapes that are stored in different places.<p>Periodic reading is strictly necessary only for SSDs, and it is useful for HDDs, because in both cases their controllers will relocate any corrupted blocks. For tapes it is much less useful. There is more risk to damage the tape during an unnecessary reading, e.g. if the mechanism of the tape drive happens to become defective at exactly that moment, than for the tape to become defective during storage.<p>The LTO cartridges are quite robust and they are guaranteed for 30 years of storage after you write some data on them.<p>In the past there have existed badly designed tape cartridges, e.g. the quarter-inch cartridges, where the tape itself did not become defective during storage, but certain parts of the cartridge, i.e. a rubber belt, which was necessary to move the tape, disintegrated after several years of storage. Those have disappeared many years ago.
    • mm0lqf8 hours ago
      Tape drives are generally SAS so you will need a controller card<p>I&#x27;ve got a HP StorageWorks Ultrium 3000 drive (It&#x27;s LTO-5 format) connected to one (LSI SAS SAS9300-4i), in my NAS&#x2F;file server (HP Z420 workstation chassis). Don&#x27;t go lower than LTO-5 as you will want LTFS support.<p>About £150 all in for the card and drive (including SFF-8643 to SFF-8482 cables etc..) on EBay<p>Tapes are 1.5TB uncompressed, and about £10&#x2F;each on Ebay, you&#x27;ll also want to pick up a cleaning cartridge.<p>I use this and RDX (1TB cartridges are 2-4 times the price, but drives are a lot cheaper, and SATA&#x2F;USB3, and you can use them like a disk) for offline backup of stuff at home.
      • embedding-shape8 hours ago
        Not OP, but similar situation, trying to figure out tape archiving, already using SAS.<p>However, is there no open formats? The whole LTO ecosystem of course reeks of enterprise, and I&#x27;d expect by now at least one hardware hacker had picked together some off-the-shelf components to build something that is magnitude cheaper to acquire, maintain and upgrade.
        • adrian_b3 hours ago
          The LTO cartridges are cheap and the programs that you need for using LTO tape drives are open source.<p>The only problem is that the LTO tape drives are very expensive. If you want to use 18 TB LTO-9 tapes, the cost per TB is much lower than for HDDs, but you need to store at least a few hundred TB in order to recover the cost of the tape drive.<p>There is no chance to see less expensive tape drives because there is no competition and it would be extremely difficult for anyone to become a competitor as it is difficult to become able to design and manufacture the mechanical parts of the drive and the reading and writing magnetic heads.
        • uniqueuid8 hours ago
          Short answer: no<p>Tape is really complicated and physically challenging, and there are no incentives for people investing insane amounts of time for something that has almost no fan base. See the blog post about why you don’t want tape from some time ago.<p>Edit: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;blog.benjojo.co.uk&#x2F;post&#x2F;lto-tape-backups-for-linux-nerds" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;blog.benjojo.co.uk&#x2F;post&#x2F;lto-tape-backups-for-linux-n...</a>
          • embedding-shape7 hours ago
            &gt; there are no incentives for people investing insane amounts of time for something that has almost no fan base<p>Like that has stopped anyone before? :p Probably explain why we haven&#x27;t seen anything FOSS in that ecosystem <i>yet</i> though.
    • adrian_b4 hours ago
      You can buy a tabletop LTO tape drive, a SAS HBA card and an appropriate cable and you can use them with any desktop computer with a free big enough PCIe slot.<p>The problem is that while the tapes are at least 3 times cheaper than HDDs, and you have other additional advantages, e.g. much higher sequential reading&#x2F;writing speed and much longer storage lifetime of the tape, the tape drives are extremely expensive, at a few thousand $, usually above $3k.<p>You can find tape drives for obsolete standards at a lower price, but that is not recommended, because in the future you may have a big tape collection and after your drive dies you will no longer find any other compatible drive.<p>Because the tapes are cheap, there will be a threshold in the amount of data that you store where the huge initial cost of the tape drive will be covered by the savings from buying cheap tapes.<p>That threshold is currently at a few hundred TB of stored data.<p>I use an LTO tape drive and I have recovered its cost a long time ago, but I have more than 500 TB of data.<p>However, only a third of that is actual useful data, because I make 2 copies of each tape, which are stored in different locations. I am so paranoid because it is data that I intend to keep forever and I have destroyed all the other supports on which it was stored, e.g. the books that I have scanned, for lack of storage space. An important purpose of the digitization has been to reduce the need for storage space, besides reducing the access time.<p>I keep on my PC a database with the content of all tapes, i.e. with all the relevant metadata of all the files that are contained inside the archive files stored on the tapes.<p>When I need something, I search the database which will give me the location of the desired files as something like &quot;tape 47 file 89&quot; (where &quot;file 89&quot; is a big archive file, typically with a size of many tens of GB). I insert the appropriate tape in the drive and I have a script that will retrieve and expand the corresponding archive file. The access time to a file averages around 1 minute, but then the sequential copying speed is many times higher than with a HDD. Therefore, for something like retrieving a big movie, the tape may be faster overall than a HDD, despite its slow access time.<p>There are programs that simulate a file system over the tape, allowing you to use your standard file manager to copy or move files between a tape and your SSD. However I do not use such applications, because they reduce a lot the performance that can be achieved by the tape drive. I handle frequently large amounts of data, i.e. the archive files in which I store data on the tapes are typically around 50 GB, so the reduced performance would not be acceptable.
      • doe883 hours ago
        It is a shame drives are so pricy. Just out of curiosity (knowing nothing to this area), what would you consider the minimum &#x27;viable&#x27; LTO tape drive?
        • adrian_b3 hours ago
          I have a Quantum LTO-7 drive (6-TB tapes) bought many years ago for $3000.<p>Today I would strongly recommend against buying a LTO-7 drive, as it is obsolete and you risk to have a tape collection that will become unreadable in the future for the lack of compatible drives. A LTO drive can read 2 previous generations of tapes, e.g. a LTO-9 drive can read LTO-7 and LTO-8 tapes. LTO-10 drives, when they will appear in a few years, will no longer be able to read LTO-7 tapes.<p>The current standard is LTO-9 (18-TB tapes). If you write today LTO-9 tapes, they will remain readable by LTO-11 drives, whenever those will appear.<p>Unfortunately, LTO-9 is a rather new standard and the tape drives, at least for now, are even more expensive.<p>For instance, looking right now on Newegg, I see a HPE LTO-9 tape drive for $4750.<p>Perhaps it could be found somewhat cheaper elsewhere, but I doubt that it is possible to find a LTO-9 tape drive anywhere for less than $4500.<p>If you need to store at least 200 TB of data, you may recover the cost of the tape drive from the difference in price between LTO-9 cartridges and HDDs.<p>Otherwise, you may choose to use a tape drive for improved peace of mind, because the chances for your data that is in cold storage on tapes to become corrupt are far less than if it were stored on HDDs.<p>I have stored data for many years on HDDs, but the only thing that has kept me from losing that data was that I have always duplicated the HDDs (and I had content hashes for all files, for corruption detection, as the HDD controller not always reported errors for the corrupted blocks). After many years, almost all HDDs had some corrupted blocks, but the corrupted blocks were not in the same positions on the duplicated HDDs, allowing the recovery of the data.
  • jrrv6 hours ago
    What makes a motherboard a NAS motherboard, precisely? I&#x27;ve got a decent Mini-ITX sitting around and I&#x27;ve been contemplating setting up&#x2F;getting a NAS. Would be nice if I could re-use what I already have and save some money.
    • cm21875 hours ago
      Technically any motherboard can become a NAS, but there are desirable features.<p>- low idle power consumption since your NAS will be sitting doing nothing most of the time - pretty much any desktop MB will do<p>- fast networking, 1gbe means ~100MB&#x2F;s transfers, nicer to have 10gbe. Limited benefits beyond 10gbe in practice.<p>- enough PCIe lanes to connect enough drives. HDD of course but nice to have a separate fast SSD array plus SSD caching. You might also want a SAS HBA if you are looking enterprise drives or SSDs (and even for SATA SSD you will get a better performance via a HBA than through the motherboard). Some people also want a graphic card for video transcoding<p>- ECC memory<p>- IPMI - once you start using it it becomes hard to give up. Allows you to manage the server remotely even when switched off, and access the BIOS via a web interface. Allows you to keep the server headless (i.e. not have to go plug a screen to understand why the server is taking so long to reboot).<p>I&#x27;d say a good candidate for a NAS motherboard would be something like a supermicro X11SSH-LN4F, you can find used ones pretty cheap on ebay.
    • nickdothutton6 hours ago
      For me, ECC RAM, large enough number of SATA ports, ability to run rest of my software stack well enough (in my case FBSD and ZFS).
  • dewey6 hours ago
    Maybe I&#x27;m out of the loop but I&#x27;ve never heard of &quot;Topton&quot;. As this brand is being mentioned 16 times in this one blog post I&#x27;m just assuming that&#x27;s a sponsored blog post and not an objective overview.
    • jffry6 hours ago
      Every time I&#x27;ve looked into doing a DIY NAS in the last few years Topton seems to come up - as far as I can tell it&#x27;s because they make MiniITX boards with a boatload of SATA ports.
    • trevithick5 hours ago
      Topton makes a lot of those router mini PCs. I have an N100 with 4 2.5Gbe ports. It has a serial port too, which is nice. It&#x27;s been running great for about a year now. Then again, it&#x27;s from Aliexpress, so who knows if it&#x27;s even really a Topton.
  • dbalatero16 hours ago
    I researched a bunch of cases recently and the Jonsbo, while it looked good, came up as having a ton of issues with airflow to cool the drives. Because of this, I ended up buying the Fractal Node 804 case, which seemed to have a better overall quality level and didn&#x27;t require digging around AliExpress for a vendor.
    • no_time14 hours ago
      lol same. All my parts arrived except the 804. The supply chain for these cases appears to be imploding where I live (Hungary). The day after I ordered it either went out of stock or went up by +50% in all webshops that are reputable here.<p>I’m still a bit torn on whether I made the good call of getting 804 or the 304 wouldve been a enough for a significantly smaller footprint and -2 bays. Hard to tell without seeing them in person lol.<p>Are you satisfied with it? Any issues that came up since building?
      • nicolaslem10 hours ago
        I have been running my NAS on the 304 for 5 years. It fits natively 6 HDDs but I think it is possible to cram two more with a bit of ingenuity. It is tucked away in an Ikea cabinet that I have drilled the back of for airflow.
  • exmadscientist15 hours ago
    Are there any NAS solutions for 3.5&quot; drives, homebrew or purchased, that are slim enough to stash away in a wall enclosure? (This sort of thing: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.legrand.us&#x2F;audio-visual&#x2F;racks-and-enclosures&#x2F;in-wall-storage&#x2F;17-inch-dual-purpose-in-wall-enclosure&#x2F;p&#x2F;enp1700na" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.legrand.us&#x2F;audio-visual&#x2F;racks-and-enclosures&#x2F;in-...</a> , though not that particular model or height.) I&#x27;d like to <i>really</i> stash something away and forget about it. Height is the major constraint, you can only be ~3.5&quot; tall. And before anyone says anything about 19&quot; rack stuff, don&#x27;t bother. It&#x27;s close but just doesn&#x27;t go, especially if it&#x27;s not the only thing in the enclosure.
    • jmb9915 hours ago
      &gt; And before anyone says anything about 19&quot; rack stuff, don&#x27;t bother. It&#x27;s close but just doesn&#x27;t go, especially if it&#x27;s not the only thing in the enclosure.<p>Do you have to use that particular wall enclosure thing? A 1U chassis at 1.7” of height fits 4 drives (and a 2U at ~3.45” fits 12), and something like a QNAP is low-enough power to not need to worry about cooling too much. If you’re willing to DIY it would not be hard at all to rig up a mounting mechanism to a stud, and then it’s just a matter of designing some kind of nice-looking cover panel (wood? glass in a laser-cut metal door? lots of possibilities).<p>I guess my main question is, what&#x2F;who is this for? I can’t picture any environment that you have literally 0 available space to put a NAS other than inside a wall. A 2-bay synology&#x2F;qnap&#x2F;etc is small enough to sit underneath a router&#x2F;AP combo for instance.
      • exmadscientist14 hours ago
        &gt; Do you have to use that particular wall enclosure thing?<p>It&#x27;s already there in the wall. All the Cat5e cabling in the house terminates there, so all the network equipment lives in there, which makes me kind of want to also put the NAS in there.
    • butvacuum15 hours ago
      1 liter PC&#x27;s (tiny&#x2F;mini&#x2F;micro), or some N100 type build + external bay is likely your best bet. If it&#x27;s really that small, you might have heat issues.
    • cyberax1 hour ago
      Check if your enclosure has an extension bracket, like this one: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.legrand.us&#x2F;audio-visual&#x2F;structured-wiring-enclosures&#x2F;enclosure-accessories-and-cable-management&#x2F;28-inch-enclosure-extender&#x2F;p&#x2F;36445003" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.legrand.us&#x2F;audio-visual&#x2F;structured-wiring-enclos...</a><p>It adds enough depth to fit plenty of regular-sized components.
  • Keyframe8 hours ago
    This is all fine, but price came around same-ish as UGREEN DXP8800, if we&#x27;re considering price alone.
  • StrLght9 hours ago
    I did something similar last year. Market for mITX NAS boards is pretty bad. I went for ASRock N100DC-ITX – it has 2x SATA ports, but there&#x27;s also PCIe 3 x4.<p>The main benefits of this board were:<p>* it&#x27;s not from an obscure Chinese company<p>* integrated power supply – just plug in DC jack, and you&#x27;re good to go<p>* passive cooling<p>Really hope they make an Intel N150 version.
    • enchanted-gian9 hours ago
      Question,whats the problem with a motherboard being from an obscure Chinese company?Is it because its harder to find replacements or some other reason. i ask because i recently built my own homelab like 4 months ago and source all my parts from Aliexpress which as way cheaper than any name brand on amazon an they&#x27;re all relatively obscure. My homelab is running perfectly though so why the apprehension?
      • StrLght8 hours ago
        I am more worried about them in the long-term. Reviews are usually not as detailed as I&#x27;d like them to be (shout out to ServeTheHome – they&#x27;re doing a great job in terms of that), or they&#x27;re nearly impossible to find.<p>For me personally, there are two things I am concerned about:<p>1. Issues that can only be resolved via BIOS update. Almost all obscure Chinese SBCs won&#x27;t get any updates, so you&#x27;re stuck with whatever issues you encounter.<p>2. In case of hardware failures, there&#x27;s a 0% chance for RMA. You are not getting a replacement or your money back.
  • m0004 hours ago
    I&#x27;ve recently gone through building a NAS for home. I read several guides like this, but a lot of them didn&#x27;t quite match what I had in mind. Following some takeaways from my personal experience:<p>- Finding a low-wattage&#x2F;high-efficiency ATX&#x2F;SFX PSU is the hardest part. To achieve the advertised efficiency, your Gold-rated PSU needs at least 20% load. I.e. 100W for a 500W PSU. If you are building for low-power, you will need much lower wattage for the PSU to operate at optimal conditions&#x2F;efficiency. Good luck finding anything under 450W these days.<p>- Do your math before choosing RAIDX, where X != 1. E.g. the disk cost for 2*16TB RAID1 array is pretty close to the cost of 3*8TB RAID5 array of the same capacity. But future upgrades with RAID1 are much easier and less costly, given that your NAS box will probably have only 4-5 slots. RAIDX make sense if you want to go wild (target NAS capacity &gt;&gt; maximum available single disk capacity).<p>- If you have not jumped into the &quot;homelab&quot; rabbithole and you only want a NAS and some services, NAS operating systems like TrueNAS are a PITA. Your hardware will be &quot;owned&quot; by the NAS OS, and you will need to jump through hoops to get any other software running. Most of them encourage you to not run anything else on them, except from prepackaged apps from their &quot;store&quot;. So, you may want to stick with something more prosaic. E.g. vanilla debian.<p>- If you are thinking of ZFS&#x2F;TrueNAS because of the scrubbing functionality, RAID1 + BTRFS also have scrubbing.<p>- Motherboards from AliExpress save you time. If I could procure a motherboard with 6 SATA ports, at least 2 2.5GbE ports, and an N series CPU from a mainstream vendor, I probably would. But there aren&#x27;t any such models. If you try to add these features on top of a standard motherboard, you need another round of researching components. Plus, if it is a mini-ITX mobo, you may run out of PCIe slots.<p>- Motherboards from AliExpress are just fine. I&#x27;m not sure why people nag about &quot;reliability&quot; without even anecdotal evidence. If your mobo dies, too bad. But mobos are pretty low in the list of components affecting the safety of your data, with PSU, disks and software being more important.
    • Mister_Snuggles3 hours ago
      &gt; - If you are thinking of ZFS&#x2F;TrueNAS because of the scrubbing functionality, RAID1 + BTRFS also have scrubbing.<p>In my experience, BTRFS is to be avoided. It&#x27;s the only FS that I&#x27;ve lost data to.
      • m0003 hours ago
        Same here, so I had to overcome this fear. But to be fair, my incident was &gt;10 years back, and I was trying to be fancy (resizing a live FS - IIRC). Btrfs has gone a long way since then, and is even the standard filesystem for Synology NAS boxes.
    • accidc3 hours ago
      Do you have a preferred&#x2F;recommendation for a NAS OS?
      • m0002 hours ago
        Not really.<p>I was not interested in maintaining an extensive homelab (so that I have separate storage and computing nodes), or buying into a new &quot;software ecosystem&quot; (I would consider buying e.g. a Synology&#x2F;QNAP box if I did), so I ended up with vanilla Debian. Debian 13 (trixie) got released right on time, so I will be on the latest for a couple of years.<p>From what I tried (TrueNAS, OpenMV, Unraid), Unraid seemed to be the most appealing. TrueNAS was very unfriendly towards even the idea of opening a shell [1] and IIRC you couldn&#x27;t even install debian packages out of the box. OpenMV had problems booting on my hardware, plus it is lagging behind mainline debian (the Debian 12 version of OpenMV got released around 2 months before Debian 13).<p>Unraid also had limitations regarding what you could run, but the community seemed to be the most robust. Also, it is the only one that stores its parity data externally. This gives you the most flexibility with disk configurations. Also, IIRC you can pull out a disk and the data on it would be readable, so migrating your data to something else would be relatively painless.<p>So, if I had to choose a NAS OS, it would probably be Unraid. The downside is that you need to buy a license. But hey! Black Friday to the rescue!<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.truenas.com&#x2F;docs&#x2F;scale&#x2F;scaletutorials&#x2F;systemsettings&#x2F;usescaleshell&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.truenas.com&#x2F;docs&#x2F;scale&#x2F;scaletutorials&#x2F;systemsett...</a>
  • disambiguation15 hours ago
    I too was in the market recently for a NAS, downgrading from a 12 bay server because of yagni - it&#x27;s far too big, too loud, runs hot, and uses way too much energy. I was also tempted by the jonsbo (it&#x27;s a very nice case) but prices being what they are it was actually better to get a premade 4 bay model for under $500 (batteries included, hdds are not). It&#x27;s small, quiet, power efficient, and didnt break the bank in the process. Historically DIY has always been cheaper, but that&#x27;s no longer the case (no pun intended)
  • esskay9 hours ago
    &gt; HDD have to be bought new<p>In A DC environment sure. In a home NAS not so much. I&#x27;m on Unraid and just throw WD recertified drives of varying sizes at it (plus some shucked external drives when I find them on offer), that&#x27;s one of its strengths and makes it much cheaper to run.
  • aynyc7 hours ago
    I did some shopping recently, the market is very weird right now. Given the pricing of hardware recently, pre-built NAS now is actually on par pricing wise for DIY.
  • andruby7 hours ago
    Looking at the Power Consumption section:<p>How can the total average Wattage be lower than any of the lines it consists of?<p>Total average power is 66.49W, yet average _Idle_ power is noted as 66.67W.
    • Mashimo6 hours ago
      I think the Total is not the combination of the above listed items. The listed items are just sub categories. See the &quot;Duration&quot; column.<p>Out of 108h he did a 18h burn in.
  • WarOnPrivacy16 hours ago
    I have built 2 NAS that borrow ideas from his blogs. One uses the Silverstone CS382 case (6x 6TB SAS) and the other uses a Topton N5105 Mini-ITX board (6x 10TB SATA). I&#x27;m quite happy with both.<p>ref: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;blog.briancmoses.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;07&#x2F;migrating-my-diy-nas-into-the-silverstone-cs382-with-help-from-the-icy-dock-expresscage-mb038sp.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;blog.briancmoses.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;07&#x2F;migrating-my-diy-nas-in...</a>
  • mtlynch9 hours ago
    I appreciate Brian&#x27;s posts and they&#x27;ve helped me learn to build my own NAS systems, but there&#x27;s a scammy angle to his articles.<p>All of the merchant links are affiliate links, which he (illegally) does not disclose.[0] He&#x27;s effectively acting as a sales rep for these brands, but he&#x27;s presenting himself as an unbiased consumer.<p>The affiliate relationship incentivizes Brian to recommend more expensive equipment and push readers to the vendors that pay Brian the most rather than the vendors that are the best for consumers.<p>I recognize that it&#x27;s an unfortunate truth that affiliate links are one of the few ways to make money writing non-AI content about computer hardware. I&#x27;m fine with affiliate links, but the author should disclose the conflict of interest at the top of the post before getting into the recommendations.<p>In the interest of full disclosure, I also write about NAS builds on my blog, so I somewhat compete with Brian&#x27;s posts, but I stopped using affiliate links five years ago because of the conflict of interest.<p>If you&#x27;re not familiar with how affiliate relationships create dangerous incentives, I recommend reading the article, &quot;The War To Sell You A Mattress Is An Internet Nightmare.&quot;[1] tl;dr - All the top mattress-in-a-box reviewers were just giving favorable reviews to the company that paid the best affiliate rates, even going so far as to retroactively update old reviews if the payout rates changed.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ftc.gov&#x2F;business-guidance&#x2F;resources&#x2F;ftcs-endorsement-guides-what-people-are-asking#affiliateornetwork" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ftc.gov&#x2F;business-guidance&#x2F;resources&#x2F;ftcs-endorse...</a><p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.fastcompany.com&#x2F;3065928&#x2F;sleepopolis-casper-bloggers-lawsuits-underside-of-the-mattress-wars" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.fastcompany.com&#x2F;3065928&#x2F;sleepopolis-casper-blogg...</a>
    • alias_neo8 hours ago
      Just skimming over the article, I feel like the blue link coloured word &quot;Topton&quot; has been seared into my retinas.<p>That aside, as someone who has been building computers for nearly 3 decades, and NAS&#x27;s for a decade plus, I dislike almost everything about this build.<p>Spending a lot on the PSU is a good move, but the motherboard is a bad choice for the price when a much more capable socketed board + CPU could be had for around the same price, and the use of no-name SSD and NVMe is an absolute no-no for me.<p>The impression I got from so many linked mentions of Topton this and Topton that, is that this was mostly done to push that particular brand for a sponsorship or affiliate program.<p>Youtube has already long gone the way of being untrustworthy for advice on this sort of thing due to sponsorships and affiliates etc, perhaps I should blog my advice and experience that no body pays to influence, in a more generic sense for those who actually need guidance on where to focus when building hardware like PCs and NASs.<p>I&#x27;m not going to suggest that hardware I chose for my &quot;NAS&quot; as it would be universlly bad advice for most people, but there is some generic knowledge to be shared here.<p>Sometimes it feels just like telling my kids to &quot;learn from my mistakes&quot;, does anyone actually want to hear it?
  • Hamuko2 hours ago
    &gt;<i>32GB of DDR5 RAM</i><p>In <i>this</i> economy?
  • aetherspawn13 hours ago
    Obligatory comment every time one of these threads comes up that Synology, sure, the hardware is a bit dated but… as far as set and forget goes:<p>I’ve run multiple Synology NAS at home, business, etc. and you can literally forget that it’s not someone else’s cloud. It auto updates on Sundays, always comes online again, and you can go for years (in one case, nearly a decade) without even logging into the admin and it just hums along and works.
    • _rwo2 hours ago
      I love synology; bought one around 2018, runs nicely until this day; received last DSM 7.3 update so will be supported until 2028 but I will probably keep it running until it dies as I don&#x27;t expose it to The Evil Internet anyway<p>does everything and more I need it to (backups, photos, storage, jellyfin, various media servers, torrents etc.)
    • PeterStuer13 hours ago
      Until you get the blue flashing light of dead. Luckily I was able to source an identical old model of eBay to transfer the disks to.
    • imiric11 hours ago
      What makes you think that Synology hardware is special in that sense?<p>Most quality hardware will easily last decades. I have servers in my homelab from 2012 that are still humming along just fine. Some might need a change of fans, but every other component is built to last.
      • aetherspawn9 hours ago
        It’s the software and stability of the software (between updates for example) that’s impressive.
  • gorbachev9 hours ago
    The motherboard seems quite expensive.
  • kotaKat9 hours ago
    While not DIY, I would like to also call out an interesting discovery lately.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ugreen.com&#x2F;blogs&#x2F;news&#x2F;ugreen-makes-strategic-entry-into-us-market-with-nasync-products-set-for-walmart" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ugreen.com&#x2F;blogs&#x2F;news&#x2F;ugreen-makes-strategic-ent...</a><p>UGREEN has apparently inked deals to drop their DXP2800s into (some) Walmarts, which also included bringing in some 10&#x2F;12TB Toshiba N300 Pro drives as well to go with them on the shelves. Being a super-rural American, I was a bit surprised to see this on my local shelf as a nearly turnkey solution in an area where there&#x27;s nothing remotely close to a Best Buy, even.<p>Even more surprisingly: they&#x27;ve been sold by Walmart below minimum advertised prices at UGREEN a few times normally...
    • Xiol328 hours ago
      I had one of the DXP4800 Plus NASes for about a month before RMAing it.<p>The CPU would immediately hit 100C with even the slightest whiff of load.<p>The entire thing was also unstable and would regularly just lock up without any kernel panic or other error message available, could even get kdump to gather anything (I&#x27;d binned their dodgy NAS OS and installed Debian).<p>It also seemed to amplify the noise of the hard drives within. Every thunk of a drive head moving around would be audible from a different room. Not sure how they managed to do that, but it&#x27;s an acoustic nightmare.
      • kotaKat4 hours ago
        Not gonna lie I dumped their packed-in OS like shipping foam. Turned the watchdog off, installed TrueNAS, not looking back.<p>I haven&#x27;t paid attention to temps or noise - it&#x27;s been suitable in my bedroom corner and it&#x27;s been running for a month+ now like a trouper.
    • AlanYx9 hours ago
      One thing to be aware of is that many (all?) current UGREEN boxes can&#x27;t support ECC RAM. For anyone looking to use ZFS like the article linked here, that may be an issue, depending on one&#x27;s view of the debate about whether ECC is necessary with ZFS.
  • DeathArrow14 hours ago
    I wonder how many consumer level HDDs in RAID5 will take to saturate a 10Gbps connection. My napkin math says that from 1,250 MB&#x2F;s we can achieve around 1,150 MB&#x2F;s due to network overhead so it means about 5 Red Pro&#x2F; Ironwolf Pro (reading at about 250–260 MB&#x2F;s each) in RAID5 to saturate the connection.
    • ekropotin12 hours ago
      I though raid5 is highly discouraged
      • Mashimo12 hours ago
        I can&#x27;t remember the details, but was that not specifically for hardware raid controllers? 2000s style.<p>I think for home use with MDADM or raid z2 on zfs it&#x27;s just gucci. It&#x27;s cost effective.
        • Maakuth8 hours ago
          Z2 means you&#x27;ll have two parity disks, like in RAID-6. That should be okay. The trouble with RAID-5 are the rebuild times that rise to multiple days with modern disk sizes. The duration of time you run effectively without redundancy grows uncomfortably large. Especially if you don&#x27;t have a hot or even cold spare around.
          • Mashimo6 hours ago
            Ah yes, I mixed up raid5 and 6.<p>I think it&#x27;s still fine for casual home setups. Depending on data and backup strategy.
  • jaimex214 hours ago
    What&#x27;s the plan if your house burns down?
    • aurea10 hours ago
      Ideally: off-site backup and archive-tier object storage in the cloud.
    • ekropotin12 hours ago
      The loss of your vacation photos will be less of your worries
      • scblock2 hours ago
        Honestly for many people that is probably not true as long as everyone is safe. Most things are replaceable, but those photographs probably are not.
  • alan-jordan136 hours ago
    [dead]
  • pSYoniK11 hours ago
    TL;DR - please stop wasting tons of resources putting together new servers every year and turning this into yet another outlet for &quot;I have more money than sense and hopefully I can buy myself into happiness&quot;. Just get old random hardware and play around with it and you&#x27;ll learn so much that you will be able to truly appreciate the difference between consumer and enterprise hardware.<p>This seems awfully wasteful. One of the main reasons for which I&#x27;ve built my own homeserver was to reduce resource usage - one could probably argue that the carbon footprint of keeping your photos in the cloud and running services is lower than building your own little datacentre copy locally and where would we be if everyone builds their own server, then what? Well, I think that paying Google&#x2F;Apple&#x2F;Oracle&#x2F;etc whoever money so that they continue their activities has a bigger carbon footprint than me picking up old used parts and running them on a solar&#x2F;wind only electricity plan. I also think I&#x27;m going a bit overboard with this and I&#x27;m not suggesting to vote with your wallet because that doesn&#x27;t work. If you want real change this needs to come from the government. You not buying a motherboard won&#x27;t stop a corporation from making another 10 million.<p>Anyway, except for the hard drives, all components were picked up used. I like to joke it&#x27;s my little Frankenstein&#x27;s monster, pieced together from discarded parts no one wanted or had any use for. I&#x27;ve also gone down the rabbit hole to build the &quot;perfect&quot; machine, but I guess I was thinking too highly of myself and the actual use case. The reason I&#x27;m posting this is to help someone who might not build a new machine because they don&#x27;t have ECC and without ECC ZFS is useless and you need Enterprise drives and you want 128 GB of RAM in the machine and you could also pick up used enterprise hardware and you could etc...<p>If you wish to play around with this, the best way is to just get into it. The same way Google started with consumer level hardware so can you. Pick up a used motherboard, pick up some used ram, a used CPU, throw them into a case and let it rip. Initially you&#x27;ll learn so much and that alone is worth every penny. When I built my first machine, I wasn&#x27;t finding any decently used former desktop form hp&#x2F;lenovo&#x2F;dell so I found a used i5 8500t for about 20$, 8 gb of ram for about 5$, a used motherboard for 40$, case was 20$ and PSU was $30. All in all the system was 115$ and for storage I used an old 2.5inch ssd for boot drive and 2 new NAS hard drives (which I still have btw!). This was amazing. Not having ECC, not having a server motherboard&#x2F;system, not worrying about all that stuff allowed me to get started. The entry bar is even lower now, so just get started, don&#x27;t worry. People talk about flipped bits as if it happens all day every day. If you are THAT worried, then yeah, look for a used server barebone or even a used server with support for ecc and do use ZFS, but I want to ask, how comfortable are you making the switch 100% now over night without having ever spent any time configuring even the most basic server that NEEDS to run for days&#x2F;weeks&#x2F;months? Old&#x2F;used hardware can bridge this gap and when you&#x27;re ready it&#x27;s not like you have to throw out the baby with the bathwater. You now have another node in a proxmox cluster. Congrats! The old machine can run LXCs, VMs, it could be a firewall it could do anything and when it fails, no biggie.<p>Current setup for those interested:<p>i7 9700t<p>64 GB DDR4 (2x32)<p>8, 10, 12, 12, 14 TB HDDs (snapraid setup and 14 TB HDD is holding parity info)<p>X550 T2 10Gbps network card<p>Fractal Design Node 804<p>Seasonic Gold 550watts<p>LSI 9305 16i
    • nicolaslem10 hours ago
      The author is not suggesting anyone should rebuild their NAS every year. Instead he is investigating which options make sense in year X. I remember reading his recommendations back when I built my NAS in 2021 but that doesn&#x27;t mean I bought new hardware since then.
    • imiric11 hours ago
      It&#x27;s a bit patronizing to tell people what to do with their money. If you care more about the environment than enjoying technology, then go ahead and do what you suggest. If you want to be <i>really</i> green, how about giving up technology altogether? Go full vegan, abandon all possessions, and all that? Or if you really want to help the planet, have you considered suicide?<p>There&#x27;s always more you can do. I&#x27;d rather enjoy my life, and not tell others how to enjoy theirs, unless it&#x27;s impacting mine. Especially considering that the impact of a single middle-class individual pales in comparison to the impact of corporations and absurdly wealthy individuals. Your rant would be better served to representatives in government than tech nerds.
      • hexbin0107 hours ago
        &gt; have you considered suicide<p>How uncouth, even just as rhetoric.
      • pSYoniK8 hours ago
        It is however very patronising to tell people to &quot;Go full vegan, abandon all possessions, and all that&quot;.<p>It also isn&#x27;t useful to reduce the conversation and assume that critique directed at the idea of necesarily going out and buying new hardware is a critique against technology or ownership, but, myself included, we do seem to read what we want. You also missed the point I made when I did clearly say voting with your wallet doesn&#x27;t work. You didnt address the other, more salient point I was getting across, but obviously failed to do so - when starting out, don&#x27;t worry too much, just get whatever and start learning. Questions will be easier answered when you already have some hardware.<p>Anyway, enjoy your day
      • gjvc10 hours ago
        <i>It&#x27;s a bit patronizing to tell people what to do</i><p>on this website?!<p><i>with their money</i><p>in this economy?!