Hi,
while the title is quite general I registered to this forum for a very specific situation. Some time ago I replaced my trusty old NAS with an old server that I got with a price you can't beat. Server had been a VmWare host in its previous life and was filled with disks so I installed Windows for it. It has 12 3.5" slots that had two broken disks, since I didn't find replacement disks of same size I put two smaller ones to them and made a mirror set of those. That left 10 disks for a RAID-6 set that was twice as big as the old NAS.
So I had a big pool that became file share and a small pool that became home of virtual machines. Since this was an old VmWare server it had enough memory and cores for running couple of VMs but the 'old' part leads us towards the reason for me to start this thread. Because processors are old the virtual machines start to be little sluggish. You can compensate that little by adding extra cores but it doesn't make miracles so I'm thinking of renewing the hardware. In the end the final decision will depend on if I can source a new server and what kind it will be but I need little info beforehand so I don't make a bad decision.
The only problematic part on this process is that I would like to get a "final" storage solution now, such that I don't need to change it, just upgrade. And tricky part is that I'm planning on ripping my Blu-Ray collection to NAS. Without it this would be a very short thread, "Buy a two bay NAS of your liking", but since that will eventually take tens of TBs of storage the expandability of the system is crucial. To keep initial cost down I would like to start by purchasing a pair of 18Tb drives and put them on RAID 1, when that fills up buy two more drives and convert the system to RAID 6 and after that buy a new disk and expand the RAID 6 when space gets low.
I think that an 8-bay QNAP could do this but the problem is that it costs about 1000€ (+ disks) which is too big initial investment, especially if my mind changes before disks fill and I don't start the endless process of ripping the Blu-Rays. If I understood right I could achieve this also by Buying a four bay Synology that has an eSata connector and when 4 disk RAID 6 fills up buy a five disk enclosure and expand the raid there. Problem is that the four bay Synology is too close in price to the QNAP. (If someone can point me to a shop in EU where a four bay Synology with eSata connector can be had for under 500€ I would be interested if it's otherwise viable solution.)
That is why I'm thinking of building my own NAS, a case that can hold 8 disks and a disk controller with 8 ports. Other hardware depends heavily on the knowledge if I can source an used server to run the VMs or not (,if I can't find a server I may end up building one box for virtualization and one for NAS or one box that houses the both). But little googling of TrueNAS led me to think that changing raid level and expanding it may not be possible like it's on commercial systems. I don't intend to backup the ripped Blu-Rays, the disks themselves shall act as backup, so the risk of data loss during expansion should be kept on low level. So here is the actual question of this long rant: Is it possible to build a NAS that can be expanded from a two disk mirror solution to four disk parity system and from there add disks one at the time when space gets low? If it can be on both commercial and DIY NAS then which has more reliable expansion process?
One thing I'm wondering, whether I get an old server or build a PC to run the VMs, if there is a method to expand amount of disks in raid, could I use it with QNAPs external enclosure, TL-D800S, connected to the server? It's little more than what I initially intend to spend on NAS part of the project but I could probably stretch it, especially if server part will be cheap. Enclosure is just JBOD but otherwise it would be a better solution that a DIY box.
And I saved the most important question to the last: Is this a doomed plan? Does the big disk size guarantee that something will go wrong on expansion phase and data will disappear?
while the title is quite general I registered to this forum for a very specific situation. Some time ago I replaced my trusty old NAS with an old server that I got with a price you can't beat. Server had been a VmWare host in its previous life and was filled with disks so I installed Windows for it. It has 12 3.5" slots that had two broken disks, since I didn't find replacement disks of same size I put two smaller ones to them and made a mirror set of those. That left 10 disks for a RAID-6 set that was twice as big as the old NAS.
So I had a big pool that became file share and a small pool that became home of virtual machines. Since this was an old VmWare server it had enough memory and cores for running couple of VMs but the 'old' part leads us towards the reason for me to start this thread. Because processors are old the virtual machines start to be little sluggish. You can compensate that little by adding extra cores but it doesn't make miracles so I'm thinking of renewing the hardware. In the end the final decision will depend on if I can source a new server and what kind it will be but I need little info beforehand so I don't make a bad decision.
The only problematic part on this process is that I would like to get a "final" storage solution now, such that I don't need to change it, just upgrade. And tricky part is that I'm planning on ripping my Blu-Ray collection to NAS. Without it this would be a very short thread, "Buy a two bay NAS of your liking", but since that will eventually take tens of TBs of storage the expandability of the system is crucial. To keep initial cost down I would like to start by purchasing a pair of 18Tb drives and put them on RAID 1, when that fills up buy two more drives and convert the system to RAID 6 and after that buy a new disk and expand the RAID 6 when space gets low.
I think that an 8-bay QNAP could do this but the problem is that it costs about 1000€ (+ disks) which is too big initial investment, especially if my mind changes before disks fill and I don't start the endless process of ripping the Blu-Rays. If I understood right I could achieve this also by Buying a four bay Synology that has an eSata connector and when 4 disk RAID 6 fills up buy a five disk enclosure and expand the raid there. Problem is that the four bay Synology is too close in price to the QNAP. (If someone can point me to a shop in EU where a four bay Synology with eSata connector can be had for under 500€ I would be interested if it's otherwise viable solution.)
That is why I'm thinking of building my own NAS, a case that can hold 8 disks and a disk controller with 8 ports. Other hardware depends heavily on the knowledge if I can source an used server to run the VMs or not (,if I can't find a server I may end up building one box for virtualization and one for NAS or one box that houses the both). But little googling of TrueNAS led me to think that changing raid level and expanding it may not be possible like it's on commercial systems. I don't intend to backup the ripped Blu-Rays, the disks themselves shall act as backup, so the risk of data loss during expansion should be kept on low level. So here is the actual question of this long rant: Is it possible to build a NAS that can be expanded from a two disk mirror solution to four disk parity system and from there add disks one at the time when space gets low? If it can be on both commercial and DIY NAS then which has more reliable expansion process?
One thing I'm wondering, whether I get an old server or build a PC to run the VMs, if there is a method to expand amount of disks in raid, could I use it with QNAPs external enclosure, TL-D800S, connected to the server? It's little more than what I initially intend to spend on NAS part of the project but I could probably stretch it, especially if server part will be cheap. Enclosure is just JBOD but otherwise it would be a better solution that a DIY box.
And I saved the most important question to the last: Is this a doomed plan? Does the big disk size guarantee that something will go wrong on expansion phase and data will disappear?