RamGuy
Senior Member
My QNap TS-459 Pro have just gone through RMA and as an lucky Norwegian with our outstanding government laws I can freely pick an replacement from the store I bought it from as long as it's the same price or cheaper, or I could go more expensive and simply pay for the difference in the pricing.
The problem is I have no clue for what I should pick this time around. To be completely honest the TS-459 Pro did never meet my expectations, after all it's a rather expensive device and then I'd expect it to work better than it did.
My network exists of a Netgear SRX5308 router, a WNDR3700 running as 2.4GHz wireless access point and a D-Link DAP-2553 running as 5.0GHz access point and I've got two gigabit switches a Cisco SLM2008 and a Cisco SD1008T.
I had the TS-459 Pro hooked up with 2x CAT7 cabling and tried both balance-rr (round robin) and IEEE 802.3ad but still I often struggled with high latency. At times it could take several minutes just for my machines to connect to the TS-459 Pro in the first place (both over wireless and cable) and considering I ran 4x Western Digital RE4 2TB disks in RAID5 I'd expect it to preform better.
It might be that I expected too much, but have these huge lag-spikes and being incapable of running any kind of 1080P streaming even over cable because of the performance being all over the place is not what I expect for this price tag.
Also an important feature, the TimeMachine Backup solution that supposedly would make the NAS work natively with the TimeMachine features on my MacBook Pro simply wouldn't work at all. My MacBook Pro would just refuse to use the TS-459 Pro for backup. Why I don't really know, I guess the features is simply broken? Sadly this didn't change with firmware updates either.
But after a while the whole thing went loopy, resulting in me RMAing the whole ting. All of a sudden it would refuse to save changes I did to the configuration, it would not restore to factory settings anymore and it wouldn't update to newer firmware so my disappointing experience might have been a result of my TS-459 being faulty from day one. It's impossible for me to say really.
But now I'm here to decide where to go from here. Should I pick up another NAS device? If yes, which and why? Or should I perhaps pop my Western Digital RE4 disks into my Windows7 desktop and run the fileserver from there? That's a very basic solution providing no TimeMachine Backup support or anything but then I could pickup an Mac Mini instead of a new NAS device and turn that into a OS X server taking care of my iTunes Server and TimeMachine Backup stuff.
But I'm not that keen on running my desktop as fileserver simply because I find Windows7 not exceptionally fit for that purpose even though I have a LSI MegaRAID 9260-8i dedicated RAID card.
But what do you think would be the best option for me providing stable and good performance, making me able to utilise it as a fileserver, using it for TimeMachine Backups, iTunes server and actually being able to stream 1080P movies without the NAS device being the bottleneck that messes things up.
Is there any NAS device out there sporting HFS+ or ZFS filesystem support? Or do they all use EXT3 and EXT4?
The problem is I have no clue for what I should pick this time around. To be completely honest the TS-459 Pro did never meet my expectations, after all it's a rather expensive device and then I'd expect it to work better than it did.
My network exists of a Netgear SRX5308 router, a WNDR3700 running as 2.4GHz wireless access point and a D-Link DAP-2553 running as 5.0GHz access point and I've got two gigabit switches a Cisco SLM2008 and a Cisco SD1008T.
I had the TS-459 Pro hooked up with 2x CAT7 cabling and tried both balance-rr (round robin) and IEEE 802.3ad but still I often struggled with high latency. At times it could take several minutes just for my machines to connect to the TS-459 Pro in the first place (both over wireless and cable) and considering I ran 4x Western Digital RE4 2TB disks in RAID5 I'd expect it to preform better.
It might be that I expected too much, but have these huge lag-spikes and being incapable of running any kind of 1080P streaming even over cable because of the performance being all over the place is not what I expect for this price tag.
Also an important feature, the TimeMachine Backup solution that supposedly would make the NAS work natively with the TimeMachine features on my MacBook Pro simply wouldn't work at all. My MacBook Pro would just refuse to use the TS-459 Pro for backup. Why I don't really know, I guess the features is simply broken? Sadly this didn't change with firmware updates either.
But after a while the whole thing went loopy, resulting in me RMAing the whole ting. All of a sudden it would refuse to save changes I did to the configuration, it would not restore to factory settings anymore and it wouldn't update to newer firmware so my disappointing experience might have been a result of my TS-459 being faulty from day one. It's impossible for me to say really.
But now I'm here to decide where to go from here. Should I pick up another NAS device? If yes, which and why? Or should I perhaps pop my Western Digital RE4 disks into my Windows7 desktop and run the fileserver from there? That's a very basic solution providing no TimeMachine Backup support or anything but then I could pickup an Mac Mini instead of a new NAS device and turn that into a OS X server taking care of my iTunes Server and TimeMachine Backup stuff.
But I'm not that keen on running my desktop as fileserver simply because I find Windows7 not exceptionally fit for that purpose even though I have a LSI MegaRAID 9260-8i dedicated RAID card.
But what do you think would be the best option for me providing stable and good performance, making me able to utilise it as a fileserver, using it for TimeMachine Backups, iTunes server and actually being able to stream 1080P movies without the NAS device being the bottleneck that messes things up.
Is there any NAS device out there sporting HFS+ or ZFS filesystem support? Or do they all use EXT3 and EXT4?