Hi,
Whats the cheapest NAS I could buy with ECC RAM?
Thanks
Mate...
Its not a religious argument, it is a scientific argument. Real file servers use ECC RAM for scientific reasons.
That MS study done, it's out of date in comparison to a large study done by google.
The google study showed that most RAM errors come from faulty modules which is to be expected.
Plus, the rate of bit flips increases when the DRAM density goes up.
Hello gents,
So after doing my research I am now seriously looking at the Synology DS3611xs
Hmmmm just having a look at the diy san for 1000 usd for some ideas on improving option 2
Theres a reason why real file servers use ECC ram
It's data suicide to not run ECC ram for a file server that is never turned off, thats on 24/7. Especially when using software style fake raid like that found in most NAS's as unlike HBA's that have SoC raid H/W acceleration with ECC DRAM within the HBA, in software raid the parity calculations are done in main memory. Worst of all is data itself being corrupted by a bit flip in RAM and it gets written to disk.
The cost of unbufferred ECC ram isnt much more, and in some cases is the same, as unbufferred non-ECC ram. You dont have to use registered ECC with some AMD and Intel chipsets.
Most AMD chips support ECC RAM. With Intel it's only Xeons but there is pretty cheap Xeons around in UP style setups. I dont agree with you that ECC RAM adds heaps of costs to a setup.
The loss of a PSU or NIC isnt a big deal in comparison to bit rot, to silent corruption. Its obvious when a PSU or NIC has failed as opposed to corruption in data which isnt always so obvious until its far too late when its gotten into backups. I can afford an outage to swap a PSU, I can't afford digital content to become corrupted.
I can understand if you guys have bought NAS's without ECC RAM and want to try and defend your purchase decisions by arguing ECC RAM isnt necessary in a 24/7 file server. Bit flips are a real issue and this is why real servers use methods to either correct single bit errors or halt the os or use more advanced methods such as chipkill for multibit flip handling.
Bottom line, I want an ECC RAM NAS, so my question is whats the cheapest one? I see synology and netgear have some ECC ram equipped NAS's in their product lines.
George I respect your right to have an opinion, but it's one that I'll never agree with.
To me, the argument that says cos someone is buying a NAS that costs only a few hundred bucks, that they deserve to buy unreliable equipment is unacceptable.
That argument is especially problematic when the actual cost difference of ECC vs non-ECC unbufferred ram modules is very small indeed. In fact I can buy ECC unbuffered RAM cheaper than what some retailers are selling non ecc ram for just by shopping around and finding a more price competitive retailer.
ECC is important to anyone who wants data to be safe from bit flips, regardless of how much the hardware costs that the data resides on.
Hi,
Whats the cheapest NAS I could buy with ECC RAM?
Thanks
Hi,
Option 2, a rack mount case isnt the footprint size I want and in hot swap they are priecy plus the dual psus are noisy. Maybe I could go external and say use an atx server mobo. I got frustrated that the e3 xeons only support unbuffered and not registered ram so I'm a bit ram limited for zfs if I expand it into the future and keep to the 1tb per 1gb ram rule. BTRFS doesnt need as much ram but then Im dealing with a newer fs. Then I got frustrated over the asus p8b motherboard which I learnt has lots of problems with ecc ram and the supermicro up socket 1155 mobos dont support USB 3 or esata.......Plus the supermicros had stuff all in the way of pcie slots. I'd allready have to use up one to get the needed number of sata iii ports I'd need. Plus it all adds up, a decent psu rated for gold efficiency isnt cheap for example.
Maybe in the morning option 2 will grow on me some more but Im not happy with the options I know of for a UP server setup currently
Then option 2 I have the hassles like installing a dlna server on say bsd and generally getting the software all ok.
I understand your frustration with the E3 Xeons only supporting unbuffered ECC. However the platform can support 8GB modules its just they are not widely available yet. Although I am not sure why you will need 1 GB of memory per 1 TB of storage for ZFS. While it is true ZFS likes lots of memory, my opinion is more than 16 GB is probably only needed if you need a ton of data cached (database) and have tons of clients trying to pull data off the NAS. Also if higher performance is needed an SDD can be added as a cache drive. So how high of performance do you need? Have you looked at Tyan for 1155 motherboards? Watch out on some of those gold efficiency rated power supplies. Especially in the ATX size. Some are priced way too high to make it worth it.
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