Greetings,
I finally created an account on this system after snooping around passively for years.
I am getting very close to buying a new NAS/iSCSI system and wanted a reality check to where I am now in the thought process.
After an exhaustive search for a 1GB 24 port fanless (noise concern) managed switch, I settled on and purchased an HP ProCurve 1810-24G v2 for ~$200. I could have probably gone for a more hard core switch but this one met all of my requirements and I think will give me just enough web based management to get the job done.
Next up is the NAS/iSCSI system. I want to get an 8 drive system because I want to future proof it somewhat and not have to turn around and buy an add-on storage enclosure. I looked around and the two vendors that keep coming to the top of my list over and over again are QNAP and Synology.
For Synology the 8 bay model question is easy as that is the DS1813+. For QNAP I have a number of 8 bay options, but the one I think aligns closely with the DS1813+ for comparison purposes is the TS-870 non-Pro. They both have 4 NIC ports that I want (although 2 of the are upgradeable to 10Gb on the QNAP which the Synology can't do) and the QNAP non-Pro unit looks to have a better processor than the Synology unit. The QNAP is a little more expensive, but I am seeing online that they keep coming out with a 30% off coupon which would make them a little cheaper, but otherwise they are close enough in price.
I emailed Synology and asked them a bunch of questions. I liked most of their responses but the two things that I didn't like is they couldn't explain to me why the eSATA connections on the DS1813+ are 3.0Gbs (when the main unit will run the internal drives at 6.0Gbs) and that their software cannot dynamically expand RAID 1+0 on the fly (which kind of dumbfounded me since I have been doing this on server grade RAID controllers for like 15 years).
The QNAP on the other hand doesn't have any eSATA external storage unit expansion capability today which I shouldn't need any time soon and hopefully by the time I do they will have a solution. The OS doesn't look as "polished" as the Synology, but it does appear to have everything I would want. The QNAP does do everything RAID that I would expect a SAN to do, and I can even upgrade the process (voiding the warranty) in the future if I want to, so I have no real complains about the QNAP.
So assuming I can get that 30% off coupon, I will be getting the TS-870 non-Pro as I think it has everything I want and gives me the maximum flexibility in the future (2 x NIC port upgrades and processor upgrade) and it would be cheaper than the Synology unit. Sure the Synology SHR is a nice feature, but according to Synology it performs a little worse than RAID 5 so I don't think I will miss it as I don't plan on putting in random sized drives.
Either way though I intend on teaming 2 x NIC ports on the NAS and making them the "production network" NAS interface. This is the way my desktops, mobile devices, consoles, and whatever else will traditionally access the server. I like 2 x NIC ports in a link aggregation team so that no one single NIC'ed device can overload the interface to the NAS. I.E. Doing a massive file copy from one single NIC'ed machine to the NAS shouldn't really cause media streaming network congestion (disk I/O contention aside) to another device.
The other 2 ports I plan on teaming (or whatever the recommended practice is) for iSCSI as I need to run a number of VMs in my home lab. I work for a MAJOR software manufacturer and I need to be able to test various scenarios with multiple VMS, so iSCSI I/O is important to me since really sluggish VMs annoy the heck out of me (and slow me down). I plan on using two Hyper-V hosts in a cluster, each with 2 iSCSI NICs in an MPIO configuration. I understand that one 2 iSCSI NIC server could technically overwhelm the NAS box's 2 x NIC port configuration, but the chances of that are slim considering I am talking about a limited number of iSCSI hosts.
The iSCSI NIC team and the production network NIC team will be on different VLAN/Subnets to try and mirror a typical production environment.
So reality check #1 time - anyone see any flaws with my NAS enclosure leanings or my NIC configuration choice/ideas? I welcome all constructive feedback even if I don't end up agreeing with it.
Next up is the disk configuration in the NAS. When I started going down this 8 drive bay system route, I was leaning heavily to RAID 1+0. I hate the idea of "wasting" the space of 1/2 of my drives, but iSCSI read and write I/O is important to me. However I recently read about SSD caching and saw a few posts on here (a special shout out to Dennis Wood for his great posts) and was thinking it *may* make sense for me to switch to using a 7 disk RAID 5 with 1 SSD cache drive. I have read that the QNAP systems only do read cache, but even still reach cache can help indirectly improve write performance.
Reality check #2 - is the write performance enhancement I will get on a SSD cached 7 disk RAID 5 volume going to equal our exceed the write performance I would get with an 8 disk RAID 1+0 volume? If so I would rather go the RAID 5 + SSD route as it would give me the useable space equivalent of 6 disks (7-1) versus 4 disks (8-4). I can't really find a detailed performance comparison of these two approaches and I don't want to go the SSD cache route hoping it will work for me and end up hating my decision.
Finally we come to the hard drives. I had originally intended to get the WD RED drives as
I had known about them for a while, but then I saw some comparisons between them and the Seagate NAS drives like this one:
http://www.anandtech.com/show/7258/battle-of-the-4-tb-nas-drives-wd-red-and-seagate-nas-hdd-faceoff/4
Since the drives were roughly the same price, but the Seagate NAS drives (mostly) outperformed the WD Red drives, I started leaning towards the Seagate NAS drives. I decided to do some more research and found that Hitachi had also entered the NAS drive arena. In comparing the performance and power draw of all three NAS drive types, it seemed to be relative to their RPM speeds.
WD Red = 5400 RPM.
Seagate NAS = 5900 RPM.
Hitachi NAS = 7200 RPM.
I was torn between the fastest disks (Hitachi), the most energy efficient (WD Red), or the middle of the pack (Seagate), so I decided to do some research on failure rates. That led me to his article:
http://blog.backblaze.com/2014/01/21/what-hard-drive-should-i-buy/
This makes me want to shy away from Seagate even though I realize the NAS firmware should make the drives more stable than the consumer drives used in that study. I think I am leaning towards the Hitachi drives because of my IOPS concerns, and I think I will just have to eat the bigger electric bill and pray the faster and more energy consuming drives don't make my office hotter.
Reality check #3 - Does anyone see a problem with my logic on which drives to purchase?
Lastly I was leaning towards the 3TB drives because the price per GB between that in the 4TB drives was cheaper on the 3TB drives. The price point delta gets bigger and smaller depending on which manufacturer you look at. And while I hate wasting 1/2 of my drive space with RAID 1+0, *if* I go the RAID 5 w/ SSD cache, the 3TB drives become much easier to swallow in regards to total useable space. For example the Hitachi drives work out like this:
Hitachi NAS 3TB drive = $140. $140 / 3000 = $0.466 per GB
Hitachi NAS 4TB drive = $190. $140 / 4000 = $0.475 per GB
3TB RAID = $140 * 8 = $1120.
4TB RAID = $190 * 8 = $1520
8 drive difference = $400.
The $400 difference might not seem like much, but when I am adding everything up I look at it as $400 I don't need to spend right now if the total useable space with 3TB drives will tide me over for a few years.
Final reality check - any thoughts on everything as a whole that I am thinking of doing?
Thank you for taking the time to read this, and thank you again if you have a constructive comment you can provide.
I finally created an account on this system after snooping around passively for years.

After an exhaustive search for a 1GB 24 port fanless (noise concern) managed switch, I settled on and purchased an HP ProCurve 1810-24G v2 for ~$200. I could have probably gone for a more hard core switch but this one met all of my requirements and I think will give me just enough web based management to get the job done.
Next up is the NAS/iSCSI system. I want to get an 8 drive system because I want to future proof it somewhat and not have to turn around and buy an add-on storage enclosure. I looked around and the two vendors that keep coming to the top of my list over and over again are QNAP and Synology.
For Synology the 8 bay model question is easy as that is the DS1813+. For QNAP I have a number of 8 bay options, but the one I think aligns closely with the DS1813+ for comparison purposes is the TS-870 non-Pro. They both have 4 NIC ports that I want (although 2 of the are upgradeable to 10Gb on the QNAP which the Synology can't do) and the QNAP non-Pro unit looks to have a better processor than the Synology unit. The QNAP is a little more expensive, but I am seeing online that they keep coming out with a 30% off coupon which would make them a little cheaper, but otherwise they are close enough in price.
I emailed Synology and asked them a bunch of questions. I liked most of their responses but the two things that I didn't like is they couldn't explain to me why the eSATA connections on the DS1813+ are 3.0Gbs (when the main unit will run the internal drives at 6.0Gbs) and that their software cannot dynamically expand RAID 1+0 on the fly (which kind of dumbfounded me since I have been doing this on server grade RAID controllers for like 15 years).
The QNAP on the other hand doesn't have any eSATA external storage unit expansion capability today which I shouldn't need any time soon and hopefully by the time I do they will have a solution. The OS doesn't look as "polished" as the Synology, but it does appear to have everything I would want. The QNAP does do everything RAID that I would expect a SAN to do, and I can even upgrade the process (voiding the warranty) in the future if I want to, so I have no real complains about the QNAP.
So assuming I can get that 30% off coupon, I will be getting the TS-870 non-Pro as I think it has everything I want and gives me the maximum flexibility in the future (2 x NIC port upgrades and processor upgrade) and it would be cheaper than the Synology unit. Sure the Synology SHR is a nice feature, but according to Synology it performs a little worse than RAID 5 so I don't think I will miss it as I don't plan on putting in random sized drives.
Either way though I intend on teaming 2 x NIC ports on the NAS and making them the "production network" NAS interface. This is the way my desktops, mobile devices, consoles, and whatever else will traditionally access the server. I like 2 x NIC ports in a link aggregation team so that no one single NIC'ed device can overload the interface to the NAS. I.E. Doing a massive file copy from one single NIC'ed machine to the NAS shouldn't really cause media streaming network congestion (disk I/O contention aside) to another device.
The other 2 ports I plan on teaming (or whatever the recommended practice is) for iSCSI as I need to run a number of VMs in my home lab. I work for a MAJOR software manufacturer and I need to be able to test various scenarios with multiple VMS, so iSCSI I/O is important to me since really sluggish VMs annoy the heck out of me (and slow me down). I plan on using two Hyper-V hosts in a cluster, each with 2 iSCSI NICs in an MPIO configuration. I understand that one 2 iSCSI NIC server could technically overwhelm the NAS box's 2 x NIC port configuration, but the chances of that are slim considering I am talking about a limited number of iSCSI hosts.
The iSCSI NIC team and the production network NIC team will be on different VLAN/Subnets to try and mirror a typical production environment.
So reality check #1 time - anyone see any flaws with my NAS enclosure leanings or my NIC configuration choice/ideas? I welcome all constructive feedback even if I don't end up agreeing with it.

Next up is the disk configuration in the NAS. When I started going down this 8 drive bay system route, I was leaning heavily to RAID 1+0. I hate the idea of "wasting" the space of 1/2 of my drives, but iSCSI read and write I/O is important to me. However I recently read about SSD caching and saw a few posts on here (a special shout out to Dennis Wood for his great posts) and was thinking it *may* make sense for me to switch to using a 7 disk RAID 5 with 1 SSD cache drive. I have read that the QNAP systems only do read cache, but even still reach cache can help indirectly improve write performance.
Reality check #2 - is the write performance enhancement I will get on a SSD cached 7 disk RAID 5 volume going to equal our exceed the write performance I would get with an 8 disk RAID 1+0 volume? If so I would rather go the RAID 5 + SSD route as it would give me the useable space equivalent of 6 disks (7-1) versus 4 disks (8-4). I can't really find a detailed performance comparison of these two approaches and I don't want to go the SSD cache route hoping it will work for me and end up hating my decision.
Finally we come to the hard drives. I had originally intended to get the WD RED drives as
I had known about them for a while, but then I saw some comparisons between them and the Seagate NAS drives like this one:
http://www.anandtech.com/show/7258/battle-of-the-4-tb-nas-drives-wd-red-and-seagate-nas-hdd-faceoff/4
Since the drives were roughly the same price, but the Seagate NAS drives (mostly) outperformed the WD Red drives, I started leaning towards the Seagate NAS drives. I decided to do some more research and found that Hitachi had also entered the NAS drive arena. In comparing the performance and power draw of all three NAS drive types, it seemed to be relative to their RPM speeds.
WD Red = 5400 RPM.
Seagate NAS = 5900 RPM.
Hitachi NAS = 7200 RPM.
I was torn between the fastest disks (Hitachi), the most energy efficient (WD Red), or the middle of the pack (Seagate), so I decided to do some research on failure rates. That led me to his article:
http://blog.backblaze.com/2014/01/21/what-hard-drive-should-i-buy/
This makes me want to shy away from Seagate even though I realize the NAS firmware should make the drives more stable than the consumer drives used in that study. I think I am leaning towards the Hitachi drives because of my IOPS concerns, and I think I will just have to eat the bigger electric bill and pray the faster and more energy consuming drives don't make my office hotter.
Reality check #3 - Does anyone see a problem with my logic on which drives to purchase?
Lastly I was leaning towards the 3TB drives because the price per GB between that in the 4TB drives was cheaper on the 3TB drives. The price point delta gets bigger and smaller depending on which manufacturer you look at. And while I hate wasting 1/2 of my drive space with RAID 1+0, *if* I go the RAID 5 w/ SSD cache, the 3TB drives become much easier to swallow in regards to total useable space. For example the Hitachi drives work out like this:
Hitachi NAS 3TB drive = $140. $140 / 3000 = $0.466 per GB
Hitachi NAS 4TB drive = $190. $140 / 4000 = $0.475 per GB
3TB RAID = $140 * 8 = $1120.
4TB RAID = $190 * 8 = $1520
8 drive difference = $400.
The $400 difference might not seem like much, but when I am adding everything up I look at it as $400 I don't need to spend right now if the total useable space with 3TB drives will tide me over for a few years.
Final reality check - any thoughts on everything as a whole that I am thinking of doing?
Thank you for taking the time to read this, and thank you again if you have a constructive comment you can provide.
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