After running a DIY NAS for almost a year now with free Ubuntu Server x64 (Linux RAID5 6*1TB) high performance (see image below) and low implementation costs, I am planning to switch to a vendor NAS for one reason only: low power consumption.
Because a NAS usually runs 24/7, for a home user power consumption is perhaps more critical than the sum of implementation costs + performance; as long as a NAS has RAID and can stream FullHD 1080P media it's fine!
Building a NAS yourself is fun in the startup fase (relatively low hardware costs + much higher performance) but in the end it gets expensive due to high energy costs. Maybe idle power consumption is what truly matters since a home NAS is accessed just a couple of hours per day. Can your mediaplayer (or windowsclient trying to map networkdrives) wake-up your idle samba-share DIY NAS if the idle NAS doesn't advertise itself on the network?
Is > 100 MB/sec a performance must have (it's nice to break the barrier for fun) for a NAS home user?
Shouldn't the focus for a DIY home NAS be more on low power consumption and less on performance? At least 50-70 MB/sec read and write is enough anyway and all vendor NAS can do that.
For me this raises the question: how to build a low-cost fairly fast but yet very energy-efficient DIY NAS?
Because a NAS usually runs 24/7, for a home user power consumption is perhaps more critical than the sum of implementation costs + performance; as long as a NAS has RAID and can stream FullHD 1080P media it's fine!
Building a NAS yourself is fun in the startup fase (relatively low hardware costs + much higher performance) but in the end it gets expensive due to high energy costs. Maybe idle power consumption is what truly matters since a home NAS is accessed just a couple of hours per day. Can your mediaplayer (or windowsclient trying to map networkdrives) wake-up your idle samba-share DIY NAS if the idle NAS doesn't advertise itself on the network?
Is > 100 MB/sec a performance must have (it's nice to break the barrier for fun) for a NAS home user?
Shouldn't the focus for a DIY home NAS be more on low power consumption and less on performance? At least 50-70 MB/sec read and write is enough anyway and all vendor NAS can do that.
For me this raises the question: how to build a low-cost fairly fast but yet very energy-efficient DIY NAS?
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