i currently have what would be considered a barebones NAS (WD EX2 Ultra) .... and I want to migrate to a Synology in order to benefit from advanced RAID features and other features offered by DSM.
have some general questions about DSM, and how it treats disks .... that would help me decide what I can do with the drives I have to use.
regarding SHR (Synology Hybrid Raid), SHR2, what does the portion of the volume that is allocated to protection actually represent ? does it mean that the array is allocating enough space to rebuild ANY data that is lost from a single drive failure ? i am pretty confident in my drives and doubt i will have any of them fail, but in case one (or 2) do fail, would the protection offered by SHR/SHR2 be enough to restore the data lost by the [up to] 2 disks lost ?
my drives don't all have matched capacity, which i think is fine for most modern software-RAID setups. in particular I have the following drives:
Toshiba N300 6TB
Toshiba N300 6TB
Toshiba N300 8TB
Toshiba N300 8TB
Toshiba MG08 16TB
Toshiba MG08 16TB
My current content/storage usage on my nas is a little more than 8TB, and the rate data is added is not drastic enough to say that i could consume another 8TB in the next few years. Would I be better off with SHR2, or RAID10 if I threw all these drives in a Synology 6-bay NAS ?
Other thing that's interesting i'd like to know more about is how the unused space (SHR2) would allow me to swap out for larger disks in the future .... would like to know how DSM works in that regard when the time comes to upgrade the disks.
thanks in advance.
have some general questions about DSM, and how it treats disks .... that would help me decide what I can do with the drives I have to use.
regarding SHR (Synology Hybrid Raid), SHR2, what does the portion of the volume that is allocated to protection actually represent ? does it mean that the array is allocating enough space to rebuild ANY data that is lost from a single drive failure ? i am pretty confident in my drives and doubt i will have any of them fail, but in case one (or 2) do fail, would the protection offered by SHR/SHR2 be enough to restore the data lost by the [up to] 2 disks lost ?
my drives don't all have matched capacity, which i think is fine for most modern software-RAID setups. in particular I have the following drives:
Toshiba N300 6TB
Toshiba N300 6TB
Toshiba N300 8TB
Toshiba N300 8TB
Toshiba MG08 16TB
Toshiba MG08 16TB
My current content/storage usage on my nas is a little more than 8TB, and the rate data is added is not drastic enough to say that i could consume another 8TB in the next few years. Would I be better off with SHR2, or RAID10 if I threw all these drives in a Synology 6-bay NAS ?
Other thing that's interesting i'd like to know more about is how the unused space (SHR2) would allow me to swap out for larger disks in the future .... would like to know how DSM works in that regard when the time comes to upgrade the disks.
thanks in advance.