First Time building my own NAS

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  • čas přidán 5. 05. 2024
  • Support me on Patreon:
    / der8auer
    ---------------------------------------------------------
    Music / Credits:
    Outro:
    Dylan Sitts feat. HDBeenDope - For The Record (Dylan Sitts Remix)
    ---------------------------------------------------------
    Paid content in this video:
    - /
    Samples used in this video:
    - Silverstone Parts
    Timestamps:
    0:00 Intro
    1:51 The NAS topic
    2:49 ASRock RACK server/workstation motherboard
    4:13 RAM, power supply & CPU cooler
    5:15 Energy costs & purpose
    6:49 SSD, HDDs & cooler mounting
    7:57 The case
    9:30 Hardware installation
    10:57 BIOS & software installation
    13:46 Summary/Conclusion
    14:29 Outro
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 409

  • @VTOLfreak
    @VTOLfreak Před 8 měsíci +458

    Those cheap SATA controllers can get really hot. I have a few lying around that produce read errors when overheated and ZFS wrongly assumes the problem is with the disks and kicks them out of the array. An easy solution is to use thermal adhesive to glue a heatsink on them. With disks this big, I would have gone with RAIDZ2 instead of RAIDZ. Rebuilds can take a long time and put allot of stress on disks, there's a good chance another disk fails during the rebuild. And on a last note: Label your drive trays with the serial numbers. You'll thank yourself later...

    • @der8auer-en
      @der8auer-en  Před 8 měsíci +133

      thanks for this info :) I will make sure to check the temp of mine

    • @RanjakarPatel
      @RanjakarPatel Před 8 měsíci +14

      @@der8auer-enyes my dear. I proud for you try you’re best you’re branes but please make more educashin four the computer. Germany xcelent four make the car but no strongly four understanding the pc. I proud you make you’re first nas but if I am honestly you need four more study the book. So no feel so much shame four no comprehenshin my sweet. Many my country ready four teach you how become excellent computer. Never give up and never remember my beauty.

    • @bigpoppa1234
      @bigpoppa1234 Před 8 měsíci +28

      Would be a good idea to swap out that Sata controller for a H310 HBA card flashed into IT mode (or the newer versions) with SAS to Sata cables.

    • @RashakantBhattachana
      @RashakantBhattachana Před 8 měsíci +9

      @@RanjakarPatel उस पर ज़्यादा कठोर मत बनो. वह अपना सर्वश्रेष्ठ प्रयास कर रहा है और अन्यथा वह काफी बुद्धिमान है। उन्होंने फायर बियर कंपनी को अपना ज्वालामुखी पेस्ट बेचने में मदद की, भले ही यह विचार पहली बार भारत में विकसित किया गया था।

    • @Ravichandran_Gupta
      @Ravichandran_Gupta Před 8 měsíci +6

      @@RashakantBhattachana ईमानदारी से कहूं तो इसे देखना काफी कठिन है। लेकिन वह अंदर से एक अच्छा इंसान है। और वह अपनी बुद्धि और शिक्षा के स्तर के लिए गंभीर प्रयास कर रहा है। इसलिए मैं आम तौर पर इसका आनंद लेता हूं और इसके लिए उसकी सराहना करता हूं।

  • @NathOnGames
    @NathOnGames Před 8 měsíci +285

    I am a simple man. I enjoy tech content, I enjoy cats.

    • @glmchn
      @glmchn Před 8 měsíci +2

      Same but with dogs. 👍

    • @DadlyShadow
      @DadlyShadow Před 8 měsíci +10

      my cat watches me use the toilet

    • @smarthome2660
      @smarthome2660 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@DadlyShadow Mine too, I had to install a kitty door in the bathroom because my cats wanted in so bad they would pester me till I opened the door.

    • @dwahnaslowdown8887
      @dwahnaslowdown8887 Před 8 měsíci +3

      I'm allergic to cats. ☹😿

    • @sprocket5526
      @sprocket5526 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@DadlyShadow mine drinks water out of the toilet.. so yea.. cats are weird

  • @Lishtenbird
    @Lishtenbird Před 8 měsíci +91

    For the PCIe SATA card, if you won't be switching to an HBA as others have suggested, look up which controller it's running, and make sure it's all native ports and not SATA multipliers. Those (and overheating) are the main sources of issues on them.

    • @gabest4
      @gabest4 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Sata controller is probably a ASM1166. It's PCIe x2. A port multiplier would have been x1 only.

    • @PeterFriedrich19
      @PeterFriedrich19 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Yes, it's using the ASM1166

    • @dazealex
      @dazealex Před 8 měsíci

      I've been using HBAs on my unRAID NAS, zero issues with it. Rock solid.@@PeterFriedrich19

  • @paulbirch7635
    @paulbirch7635 Před 8 měsíci +30

    As others have noted: you should switch out the sata controller to a proper LSI HBA in IT mode. However, if you plan on using all eight bays in the future, you will have to mind the limited space between the pcie slot and drive bay nr 3 from the top. Also, this case run very hot when fully populated with drives. There are 3D print stl files available to direct the side fan airflow over the discs helps a ton! If it isn't allready obvious, I am running the same case in my NAS (24/7) for the last 6 years with 11 drives. The hardest part is cable management. Hit me up if you need pointers, or recommendations on parts

  • @BulllRush
    @BulllRush Před 8 měsíci +22

    Fun video, man. It's cool to see a total pro like yourself trying something new and making a "beginner builds NAS" video.

  • @diazrocks
    @diazrocks Před 8 měsíci +29

    Be careful of those consumer grade sata cards. which i understand that you got the sata card for free, Truenas doesnt like them too much.
    Youre milage may vary, but i lost a pool by using these type of sata cards.
    Might be wiser to look at enterprise grade HBA. A Used HBA LSI-9300 doesnt cost too much and if youre using Harddrive, LSI-9200-8i.

    • @twiikker
      @twiikker Před 8 měsíci +6

      100% this or just use oculink which is already on board.

    • @diazrocks
      @diazrocks Před 8 měsíci

      @@twiikker yup!

    • @Makaveli6103
      @Makaveli6103 Před 8 měsíci

      Agree. HBA card is a better choice

  • @JohnWilliams-gy5yc
    @JohnWilliams-gy5yc Před 8 měsíci +54

    Can't never over appreciate such Thermal Kitty episodes.

  • @karehaqt
    @karehaqt Před 8 měsíci +4

    Thanks for highlighting that Silverstone case, I'm planning my own NAS build and was struggling to find a decent case but this checks all the boxes.

    • @zxcvb_bvcxz
      @zxcvb_bvcxz Před 8 měsíci +1

      Wouldn't recommend.
      The drive bays are extremely cheap and plastic.
      Drive cage is a pain to remove
      Everything feels like a cheap case from 20 years ago (slighly less injuries though)

    • @someawesome7984
      @someawesome7984 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Jonsbo N3?

    • @Marco911
      @Marco911 Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@zxcvb_bvcxzI had the Same experience. It's a pain in the ass to wire that thing.

    • @sprocket5526
      @sprocket5526 Před 8 měsíci +1

      do you REALLY need hotswap bays? is it mission critical that you can swap drives while you server is turned on? if you do, then the silverstone case is not really "quality" server case for mission critical applications. if you dont, then a fractal node 304/804 or even the older define R7 is more then fine. I use my my NAS as media server and my own cloud services.

    • @karehaqt
      @karehaqt Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@sprocket5526 It's nothing mission critical, I just want to backup my music directory as I don't want to re-rip nearly 5000 CDs again, took me long enough to do it already. I just like the design of the case and having the drive access at the front is handy to have.
      As for the comment above yours about wiring being a pain, I've wired up worse looking cases than this so it's not a concern.

  • @JeffGeerling
    @JeffGeerling Před 8 měsíci +3

    "25 TB of data, that's not too much"
    Spoken like a true datahoarder :)

  • @PhilJohn1980
    @PhilJohn1980 Před 8 měsíci +5

    Those Asrock Rack boards are fantastic for home servers - I ended up getting the C246 WSI which has an i3 9100T 25W part, which supports EEC (although UDIMM, which are more of a pain to get hold of) and luckily had 8 SATA sports (4 physical, 4 via OcuLink).
    I went with a 2U short depth rack mount case to go into my network cabinet, and so I removed the required 12V pins from the 24 PIN ATX, reterminated them into a 4pin molex connector and only ran those, which saved a heap of space for the 24 pin cable and the included adapter.

  • @veigacamargo
    @veigacamargo Před 8 měsíci +10

    The hard drives are the components under most heat pressure there, so I'd change the airflow inside the case to have intake through the drives and out take in the back.

    • @arch1107
      @arch1107 Před 8 měsíci +4

      knowing that he will use it as a backup not very often and knowing he will not use them hard, it is inncecesary to do that

    • @noxious89123
      @noxious89123 Před 8 měsíci

      That's literally how it's set up.

  • @almostmatt1tas
    @almostmatt1tas Před 8 měsíci

    I built myself a NAS a few weeks ago after thinking about it and putting it off for a couple of years and it is wonderful, I really wish I had done it sooner!

  • @huzudra
    @huzudra Před 8 měsíci +3

    Synology stuff is nice, I've been using one of their routers I picked up cheap and it's been the most stable trouble free thing I've ever owned. For DIY NAS there's some older LSI cards that are getting CHEAP these days that do 6GB SAS and 12GB SAS and can do SATA as well if you want to roll with new cheap drives. I picked one up that'll do 4 drives on it's single port and has 2x100GB of eMLC flash onboard for cache. It's almost 10 years old, costs 1/100th of it's original price, and Windows picked it up immediately and the BIOS setup shows 100% health on the flash cache. Too cool! I might pickup a card with more ports that's lacking the eMLC cache since I don't really need that it just looked fun to play with.

  • @seethruhead7119
    @seethruhead7119 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I have two of these cases with 8 drives in each.
    One is a simple JBOD connected to the other.
    I created cardboard inserts to make sure that the 2 side fans are forced to cool the HDD, as they can get quite hot in this case without an air guide.

  • @mckidney1
    @mckidney1 Před 8 měsíci +32

    Just a note, you want to wire a 5 bay to use 5 even if the goal is to have 4 - replacing drive is correctly done without removing the old one first. That said soemtimes you do not have the option.

    • @zamadatix
      @zamadatix Před 8 měsíci

      That's really just a matter of cosmetics. You can keep the old drive connected, if you desire, without having it in a bay for the short period you're replacing it.

    • @mckidney1
      @mckidney1 Před 8 měsíci +4

      ​​@@zamadatixIt is not (edit cosmetical). Drives die around the rebuild, handling drives with no parity is prone to failure and finally the human errora related to interaction. It is objectively better to have an empty bay rather than shutting down the system amd handling rebuild that way. Of course there is no shame in doing things good enough and I am throwing no shade.

    • @zamadatix
      @zamadatix Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@mckidney1 What about having an extra bay or not changes whether you have to shut the system down? Hot swapping is a function of the SATA controller, not the bay. The bay is just a nicer looking way of holding the drives long term. Whether or not you have the extra open bay or not you don't touch any of the previous drives already in bays (even the failing/failed one) until after the parity rebuild is complete.
      If "well, opening the case is just too risky" then the problem isn't the lack of additional open drive bays it's the lack of enough parity drives (like here using 2 drives for redundancy instead of just 1 so you keep redundancy during a failure and don't have to worry about a butterfly flapping its wings during a rebuild). Alternatively just keep a USB UASP SATA adapter around, a lot more handy than a permanently empty bay.

    • @mckidney1
      @mckidney1 Před 8 měsíci

      @@zamadatix I think context of the video lost, option was there to wire it to an already empty bay. Self-proclaimed new NAS builder did not take it. I find this argument to be made for argument sake - yes it can be done even now, but at additional effort that is applied at the time of failure. Chosing between "wire the extra bays at a cost of a SATA cable and ports you already have empty on the main board" and "You can use open the case and wire it when the drive fails" - do you honestly thing the decision comes to cosmetics? Edit: My answer is no, the difference is that one is an advice and second is an excuse. Why would you send an excuse to a new builder?

    • @zamadatix
      @zamadatix Před 8 měsíci

      It's fine to wire it up, it's also perfectly fine to not wire it up. If you had said "You may want to wire bay 5 to save yourself time in a future drive replacement" I'd have agreed but you insisted one always wants to and gave the reason it's how you can correctly replace a drive as if it you couldn't just as correctly replace a drive without the 5th bay wired. Also note I didn't even say anything about wiring the 5th bay at all, again that's just one option of many in how to correctly replace a drive.
      There is so much misinformation in the NAS space because people like to describe their preferred way of doing something well as if it's the only correct way of doing something well. It's not that it's bad information, many will indeed want to wire a 5th bay (or even just all of them if they have the ports), it's just presented in the wrong light as if not doing it this way can't a valid option as well.

  • @scsirob
    @scsirob Před 8 měsíci +4

    Nice video. I'd have made a few different choices but that's the beauty of home building. Everyone can build to their own specs.
    Note on your performance test: When you wrote 16GB and were surprised about the speed of the HDDs, your HDDs were actually idle. All 16GB went strait to memory cache. TrueNAS will use all remaining memory to cache data before writing to disk. So the true performance of your HDDs will not be apparent until you exceed the memory of your NAS.

  • @scabbynack
    @scabbynack Před 8 měsíci +4

    Only having it on occasionally, you'll want to make sure it's able to complete data scrubbing cycles ~once a month, especially with drives that size.
    Great vidya!

  • @TheSolidSnakeOil
    @TheSolidSnakeOil Před 8 měsíci +4

    I've mostly moved to mini itx over the years and 12vo boards would be a godsend for working in those smaller cases. But you have to put a lot of faith in board manufacturers not to cheap out.

  • @TheNikwad
    @TheNikwad Před 8 měsíci +9

    Happy to see some server-content, always fun for some reason.
    DS380 has a problem with high temp on the hdd. So i would recommend that you create/add/print a fan shroud that will force the intake fans to blow through the hdd cage, otherwise the air will just blow past them without providing any cooling.
    There are plenty of designs and guides if you google.

    • @derekdal5185
      @derekdal5185 Před 8 měsíci

      I put a foam baffle to block off the path to MB and force air through the HDDs, worked great

    • @TheNikwad
      @TheNikwad Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@derekdal5185
      i did something similair for my build. Used a piece of cardboard that i cut from the box it came in and some duct tape. Worked a treat for me too.

  • @petrsehnal7990
    @petrsehnal7990 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Very cool case!

  • @Cr4zyB4st4rd
    @Cr4zyB4st4rd Před 8 měsíci +1

    I have this case for my nas. I found that under a lot of load the fan setup isnt great and drives got quite warm. My solution was to take two old fan frames and use them as ducts on both intakes and with some foam on the back of the fans they seal up against the drive bays much better.
    If i was going to do it now I'm sure a 3d printer and some planning could get a nicer solution, but mine has been running for 10 years or so now without any problems.

  • @BikingChap
    @BikingChap Před 25 dny

    Great video and love your cat being in the frame. Every PC channel should have a resident / co-presenting cat!

  • @nadtz
    @nadtz Před 8 měsíci +1

    I rebuilt my little 2 system homelab with a completely overkill Epyc system for the PCIE slots and BMC as well (full ATX board in a Fractal Define R5 though). So nice having a relatively modern board with recent IPMI that I don't need an old version of Java to access. As others have mentioned the SATA card might be a problem, but iirc occulink > sata cables are pretty inexpensive if you do run into problems or of course you could just grab an LSI HBA flashed to IT mode off ebay. Even with cables they can be had pretty cheap.
    That transfer speed was actually pretty slow, if you were going from > to 10G even without tweaking anything you should be seeing higher speeds unless the system you were transferring from was reading from a couple spinning disks.

  • @kevinh5024
    @kevinh5024 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Thanks for putting your videos out there for us. Some say its not “perfect”, I dont care. Still enjoyable to watch. Like explainations you give.

  • @Skungalunga
    @Skungalunga Před 8 měsíci +4

    That was me a few years back. A few learning, I'd like to share:
    HBAs work better.
    TureNAS does not allow for adding more disks to a pool (at least I have not figured it out), so max-out your pool size when creating it.

    • @taselwyn
      @taselwyn Před 8 měsíci +2

      You have to add more VDevs to increase the pool size. The truenas pool is all VDevs added together, with redundancy being in the VDevs themselves. So raidz2 vdev, out of those drives in the vdev 2 can fail.

  • @directhex
    @directhex Před 8 měsíci +2

    A friend and I have recently been working on VERY similar NAS projects, using Asrock Rack's X570D4I-2T, an AM4 equivalent to what you bought, paired with the Ryzen 5 Pro 5650GE 6-core 35W part. It also has two OCuLink 4i ports, so can run 8 drives without add-in cards

  • @Labombab
    @Labombab Před 8 měsíci +4

    Nice video, a nice addition would be to add a used parts list and price inidications.

  • @FARBerserker
    @FARBerserker Před 8 měsíci +6

    The hot Swap part depends on how you configure the BIOS/UEFI.
    I had to get a cracked one for my N54L to get HotSwap because
    the standard one was locked down and hid that option from me.

  • @peterbratu
    @peterbratu Před 8 měsíci +1

    The IPMI port is usually bridged to the 10G ports, so you can still access the remote management portal.

  • @KirbyTheKirby
    @KirbyTheKirby Před 8 měsíci +13

    the rackmount cases from Sliger have been making a home NAS very tempting for a while

    • @justinyoung5348
      @justinyoung5348 Před 8 měsíci

      Just bought a CX4728 (not listed on their website, but it's just a deeper CX47xx), and it should be here tomorrow pretty excited to get it set up and figure out how best to cool it and exhaust heat.

    • @jeremytine
      @jeremytine Před 8 měsíci +1

      Sliger cases are nothing special... Poor actually for a nas, no drive backplane. For the price of their case you can buy a used enterprise server. I bought a pair of Dell t320s years ago with 8 bay sas backplane and 96gb ram each for like $800(for both). They are still going strong. Replacement parts are cheap.
      Nothing against Sliger I own 2 of their desktop cases

    • @justinyoung5348
      @justinyoung5348 Před 8 měsíci

      @@jeremytine Their NAS specific case(s) have a 10 drive SATA backplane. I would have gone with one of the newer 5 or 6U cases Silverstone is coming out with, but they haven't released a timeline.

    • @jeremytine
      @jeremytine Před 8 měsíci

      @@justinyoung5348 correct me if I'm wrong, but I looked at the CX4712 and it says direct wired, or aka no PCB backplane. Nor do I see any PCB in photos of case insides. Wired cable hot swap isn't the same. And you can still get a mostly complete used dell server with sas backplane, CPU, mb, ram, hba for the same price. For a nas, an older Dell that is way more tested seems like a much better value.

    • @jeremytine
      @jeremytine Před 8 měsíci

      @@justinyoung5348 so when you get your cx4278 please report back how they manage to stabilize the loose sata/power cables to simulate a hot swap backplane, because without seeing it, it just sounds janky. Not trolling, seriously curious.

  • @mr.bigmangames
    @mr.bigmangames Před 8 měsíci +5

    For 4-5 HDD You could use a Jonsbo NAS cases that are much more compact and nicer

    • @someawesome7984
      @someawesome7984 Před 8 měsíci

      Yeap, and for 8 HDD they have N3 already.

    • @der8auer-en
      @der8auer-en  Před 8 měsíci +2

      I didn't even know about them. Just checked and they indeed look really cool. Will remember that- thanks!

    • @dobermanownerforlife3902
      @dobermanownerforlife3902 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I'm still rocking a Node 304. A bit bulky.
      If I had a 3d printer, the mods they are making are legit.

  • @Yuriel1981
    @Yuriel1981 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Roman! Scale is so much more than a NAS. It is really a basic hypervisor with built in apps and docker capabilities run by kubernetes. Increase your RAM to that 64 gigs and run a Jellyfin sever or PI hole or even a VPN sever/client. I've been learning it for the past year or so and I'm just a normal Gamer. It has been really awesome learning it and the Debian Linux behind it. Plus there is an amazingly supportive community behind it as well as IX systems having a basic open source policy for development of the apps and containers on it.

    • @MrHakisak
      @MrHakisak Před 8 měsíci

      I have to say that I've been fiddling with Truenas for the past 2 weeks and outside of super simple NAS use; Truenas is THE WORST. Everything is incomplete and unfinished. The docs are utterly useless as a guide because they try to explain things but never provide examples or recommendations. The community sucks a lot, most threads never get resolved or they just link another thread to TNcore.
      CZcams tutorials never go in depth to teach you ways to do things (you'll never find a tutorial over 30mins)
      The experience has been a nightmare.

    • @mycosys
      @mycosys Před 8 měsíci

      tried proxmox yet? Also debian but a full virtualisation platform as well as the container support and some standard deploys

    • @Yuriel1981
      @Yuriel1981 Před 8 měsíci

      @mycosys as I am only running a small home lab with a few containers. It seemed unnecessary when scale could handle it. I did look at Proxmox though. Amazing system.

  • @nofreenamestoreg
    @nofreenamestoreg Před 8 měsíci +3

    For those simple requirements (e.g. no VMs, Dockers, iScsi, etc. ), I would take out-of-the-box solution any day of the week.
    It is cheaper, easier to support down the line, way more power efficient, same reliability and more compact....

  • @joemarais7683
    @joemarais7683 Před 8 měsíci

    I have that case. It’s an actual nightmare to deal with. I hope you are able to keep the general heat under control and you never have to do maintenance on the thing.

  • @TurboJailer
    @TurboJailer Před 8 měsíci +1

    You'll want to replace that SATA card with a proper HBA in IT mode for long term reliability as others have stated. You also might want to address the cooling issues this case has as others have suggested so you're not cooking your hard drives causing premature failure. Also with the wonky memory management in TrueNAS scale you'll only have 16GB of the 32GB available for ARC which may end up causing some performance issues if you are editing directly off the NAS so you may want to up that to 64GB. Memory is cheap so best to do it now while it's cost effective. There's a lot of good information and helpful/knowledgeable people available on the TrueNAS forums to point you in the right direction if you need help with anything. Nice job on the video, thanks for sharing your build.

  • @RoopeBb
    @RoopeBb Před 8 měsíci

    Interesting video. 👍 Not saure if you mention this is in the video but I’d like to know how much power the system consumes on idle and under working load. Thanks!

  • @methlonstorm2027
    @methlonstorm2027 Před 8 měsíci

    great case been using one for along time now only downside is if u have an m.2 on the back of the motherboard there is no air flow ( i made a vent for mine and that solved that problem)

  • @fteoOpty64
    @fteoOpty64 Před 8 měsíci

    Welcome to the NAS world, Roman!. The 10G ethernet ports are the best selling point of this board. However, Some would just be happy with 2.5G ethernet. In my case, I have a X4 Card housing 4 port 2.5G . I am running Xpengnology DSM 7.1 on a 12core/24thread Xeon with 64GB RAM under ProxMos. If you use DSM 7, you can automatically backup main NAS to second NAS without hassle. That is the benefit plus all the other apps you can house on it including Surveillance Station!.

  • @N0N0111
    @N0N0111 Před 8 měsíci +2

    3:29 Hope to see more SilverStone brand placement, they were a bit shy on advertisements but they make good products!

  • @stamy
    @stamy Před 8 měsíci

    I have the same exact board, and I struggled to attach a fan for the cpu :) I also added a big fan with straps :) I am using Truenas with ZFS and disk encryption.
    Nice mb choice !
    I am using only 3 disks in raid1 configuration. Yes 3 disks for raid one, no typo here !

  • @marksulloway5669
    @marksulloway5669 Před 7 měsíci

    Danke!

  • @denvera1g1
    @denvera1g1 Před 8 měsíci +2

    One thing i've liked to do recently is, instead of SSD servers, is get HDDs and optane(which works with AMD when used by NAS OSes)
    I have a 160TB RAW 112TB usable HDD NAS, i have 4 of the 118GB Optane drives that i use as read and write cache, but i also have 2 of the 960GB 905P drives for special metadata(i plan to reverse this in the future, 4x960GB for read/write with 3x118GB for special metadata)
    The specialmetadata drives REALLY speed up the sense of snappiness.

    • @zazelskycrest2525
      @zazelskycrest2525 Před 8 měsíci

      Hi, may I know which Nas OS that work with optane? Also, do you have some guide or on using Optane for NAS and the special metadata?

    • @denvera1g1
      @denvera1g1 Před 8 měsíci

      @@zazelskycrest2525 I am using TrueNAS Scale, however most OSes can use optane, even windows as long as you use a 3rd party software like primo cache.
      The Level 1 Forums are a good place to go for Optane info, and i think they may even have a few videos on the subject.

  • @bzmgames1308
    @bzmgames1308 Před 8 měsíci

    Nice 🎉

  • @s0mveraa
    @s0mveraa Před 8 měsíci +1

    I bet your sand/snow castles/forts as a kid were gigantic with a few extra moats and stuff like that ..... "gonna turn it on for only a few days a year and leave it alone" he says, puts a 512 gb ssd in as the boot drive... brother !

  • @erhanozaydin853
    @erhanozaydin853 Před 8 měsíci

    For anyone raid 5ing, I got some advice from bad experience. When the HD Drives get towards end of life, they tend to give SMART errors all at similar times. When you get the first SMART error, replace the faulty drive immediately with a new one. Reconstruction of data takes a looooong time, more than a day (possibly a few). The anxiety of waiting to reconstruct your data makes it feel like it takes much longer. Then you should assume that all drives are lost and change the rest of the drives one by one. Doing that work can take more than a week (please use a UPS) and you should pray no catastrophic failures happen in that duration. The problem with modern HDD's is that the read/write speeds are too low for their capacity. The real demo might be a dry run of how much a reconstruction scenario would take before any real data is placed in this system when/if the push comes to the shove.
    Raid 10 reconstructs faster, because there are less XOR operations. You could withstand to more drive losses, losing just 14 TB.
    The real shocker for me in this video is that , I knew Germans hybridized wolfs with dogs but hybridizing a cat with a tiger was a blasphemy man!

  • @Nobe_Oddy
    @Nobe_Oddy Před 8 měsíci +5

    WOW that looked really simple to setup... GOOD JOB!!! And the fact that you get about 250-300MB/s (you said GB/s btw lol) that's faster than what I get copying files from my HDD to my Gen4x4 nvme SSD lol - AWESOME WORK!

    • @pondracek
      @pondracek Před 8 měsíci +1

      Your hard drive is only one drive.
      Roman has, depending on parity strategy, 2-4x your hard drives. And data having pointers to blocks scattered at on the drives to write as they come is the most natural of fits, so the sequential speed scales linearly.

  • @LucaFiltroMan
    @LucaFiltroMan Před 7 měsíci +2

    Came for the build, stayed for the cat ❤

  • @MichaelPickles
    @MichaelPickles Před 8 měsíci

    Just what I'm looking for😊

  • @TenFoot
    @TenFoot Před 8 měsíci +1

    7:06 cat tax ❤

  • @robertopontone
    @robertopontone Před 8 měsíci

    can you list the component parts in the description? it makes easier to find it and taking advantage from your experience. Thanks.

  • @timgreen591
    @timgreen591 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Nice, i had the same issue needed a backup of my backup i.e if you don’t have a backup of your backup, you don’t have a backup. Used the same case, i5 intel cpu a sata port extension to give 5 mor ports installed/migrated true nas nvme from old hardware and walla. Extra storage for backup nas…

  • @sayeedalsifat1308
    @sayeedalsifat1308 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I was also looking into building my own NAS myself but my old motherboard and cpu is dead so gotta look it some time later

  • @XDSDDLord
    @XDSDDLord Před 8 měsíci +1

    You should always have your operating system on a ZFS mirror. The best way to do this is with two good USB 3 drives. FreeNAS does very little; it doesn't need an SSD, let alone a fast one, to work; all the work is done on the storage drives. If you don't feel comfortable using USB drives, at least put in a second cheap SSD. A common way commercial solutions do it when they don't want the OS outside is to use internal USB ports or SATA DOM sticks (which are basically USB drives over SATA).

  • @VerdASMR
    @VerdASMR Před 8 měsíci +1

    My nas setup is a raspberry pi 400 running OMV with two 500GB SSDs, one being a backup of the other. Has been running with no hiccups for like 500 days. Consumes a miniscule amount of power, i measured it but cant recall exactly.

  • @Chris-on3vc
    @Chris-on3vc Před 8 měsíci

    I have a lot of data also. My objective is to economically back up my NAS. I backup my data directly to sata drives in a usb removable drive device where i can just plug in the drives easily. Each project can then be saved to disk, the disks stored off site. There in no additional hardware required complicated duplication of nas hardware waste of energy or having to fix more hardware. The external disks are the equivalent of tapes only more practical and longer lasting.
    That being said I didn't learn any new technology or get any new cool hardware to play with but what was the objective of the exercise backup data in a simple way because when the shit hits the fan I don't want to think just act.
    Cheers and thanks .

  • @Mo_Klonus
    @Mo_Klonus Před 8 měsíci

    Are you going to move this to one of your factories after sync'ing all the data? If you could setup to sync nightly you'd have great backup. Worst case if you could bring it back once a week or two and perform a sync for changes and take it back you'd still be in good position if anything happened to your primary data.

  • @Fractal_32
    @Fractal_32 Před 8 měsíci

    My only recommendations would be buying a proper HBA that is flashed to IT mode and buy more smaller capacity drives for the same capacity. Additionally make sure you have a few spare hard drives on hand for when your drives die.
    You buy smaller capacity dives so if a drive dies in your pool the time it takes to rebuild the data is less since the capacity is smaller. (Writing data at 250MB/s to five 4TB drives will be faster than writing to two 10TB drives in the event of a drive failure.)
    Wendell from Level1Techs has taught me a ton and I want to make sure I pass on what I’ve learned to others so they don’t make the same mistakes as me. (I bought four 12TB drives for fun and then I learned how long it took to build my RAID 5 array: 1000 minutes, if I went with more smaller drives it would have been done substantially faster.)

  • @WutipongWongsakuldej
    @WutipongWongsakuldej Před 8 měsíci

    I built a simple NAS/server that’s still running today. I was trying NAS OS at first, but revert back to Linux build as I find those NAS OS annoying to manage. Basically containerized service acts like a separated machine whereas I have to hook them to ZeroTier separately ( and the limit of that network is 25…).
    My server is an old gen 4 core i7 build with a Chia-era case (remember those crypto craze on storage drive ??). The drives are 7 4TB drive in madden RAID6 configuration (2 parity drives).

  • @shortwaverPL
    @shortwaverPL Před 8 měsíci

    TrueNAS Scale - excellent choice

  • @ledoynier3694
    @ledoynier3694 Před 8 měsíci

    you could add a SSD as a cache vdev on your pool and boost those transfer speeds. but as it is it's pretty good.

  • @juliangrinblat955
    @juliangrinblat955 Před 8 měsíci

    interesting, I have a very similar setup, same case, only I went with the EPYC3251D4I-2T
    I was wondering how to attach a fan to it, been running it fanless for a while
    Did you just run those zip ties under the heatsink and tighten it? Is it required to remove the heatsink to mount it that way?
    I was also thinking about trying 3d printed mounts I found in some forum, and trying to attach one of the low-profile noctua NH-L12S there, but worry that it'll not clear the drive cage then...

  • @SeasonsOfMists
    @SeasonsOfMists Před 8 měsíci

    Its great you went for the ipmi, you could script remote activation of the nas for backup then shutdown. Interesting you went for the Toshiba drives based on price a few months ago i update mine with the 18Tbs the price point has already moved on!

    • @LesNewell
      @LesNewell Před 8 měsíci

      That's pretty much what I did with my HP Microserver. It wakes up at 10PM every day, backs up my main server then goes back to sleep. It's been a couple of years since I built it but if I remember correctly the sleep script waits for at least 5 minutes with no disk activity and CPU load below a certain percentage before shutting down. I use IPMI to wake it at other times because the machine itself is buried in a barn some distance from the building my server is in.

  • @vamwolf
    @vamwolf Před 8 měsíci +1

    Get a ups!!! Also tip is mark date of install. For battery health life span . Also stagger offline back up to. Incase you get lock out due to ransom ware.

    • @arch1107
      @arch1107 Před 8 měsíci

      you are assuming he doesnt have a ups

  • @ShadeAssault
    @ShadeAssault Před 8 měsíci

    Heh, just filled up my NAS too. Ordered a pair of used enterprise 4TB drives to hold me over until I build a new box. Currently running Unraid but want to move to ProxMox and TrueNAS. My old AMD FX-8150 will finally be retired for good once I build that box.

  • @ABaumstumpf
    @ABaumstumpf Před 8 měsíci +2

    13:36 - "and with a speed of 250 - 300 gigabyte"😵‍💫

    • @finbenton
      @finbenton Před 8 měsíci +1

      SSD cache drive would be great on this.

  • @comrade171
    @comrade171 Před 8 měsíci

    Cool setup and vid, I would have liked to see you install truenas to a usb drive and then use the pcie drive as a cache or md cache tho

  • @BlitzkriegGT
    @BlitzkriegGT Před 8 měsíci

    list of parts please that case its really usefull

  • @thereverant5203
    @thereverant5203 Před 8 měsíci

    For my NAS, I went to a much cheaper but still extremely effective route: Asrock X570D4U mainboard (still with IPMI but takes standard AM4 processors!) with Ryzen 5700X (no GPU needed due to IPMI), Broadcom SAS 9300-8i adapter in HBA mode (software RAID5), 8x serial ATA SSDs and finally a used Dell SFP28 25GBps capable network card.

    • @darvamehleran786
      @darvamehleran786 Před 4 měsíci

      also Ryzen without GPU or Ryzens with PRO suffix supports UDIMM ECC memory

  • @sparkyenergia
    @sparkyenergia Před 8 měsíci

    I've had pretty good success with the ASmedia chipsets under Linux/BSD/Solaris. But The gold standard here would be to replace it with an LSI chipset in the 2008 or 2308 or 3008 line. Ebay for an ibm m1115(2008) or m1215(3008). Apart from that, solid build.

  • @someawesome7984
    @someawesome7984 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Silverstone make good, but in some things very outdated cases. For such a build I would reccomend Jonsbo N2 (White!), which is more elegant, well thought-out and made from aluminium. If you need all 8 HDD - then Jonsbo N3.

  • @qlum
    @qlum Před 8 měsíci

    General wisdom with raids for a while is to keep 2 redundant drivers at least.
    Simply because the chances of a failure while rebuilding are pretty large.
    That being said an effective backup strategy is more important. If the nas is a total loss all relevant data should still be at two different physical locations ideally.

  • @shaneeslick
    @shaneeslick Před 8 měsíci

    G'day Shiek, Makita & Roman,
    My storage is in a CoolerMaster N300 Case, it supports 1x 2.5 SSD, 8x 3.5" HDD & 2x ODD, OS is on 128GB SSD & using 3x 6TB & 5x 4TB HDDs as a back up for archiving old Home videos I have Edited for Family & Friends.
    I am just using W10 as the Mob had an Activated Key while hardware is i3-3220 + ASRock Z77Professional Fatal1ty (10 Sata Ports) + 8GB DDR3-1300 which were just bits & pieces leftover when doing upgrades over the years so thought I give them something to do rather than buying new parts or a NAS as they still work fine.

  • @magnusvaudane9450
    @magnusvaudane9450 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Just something to be aware of, nand loses its data over extended power outages. Even though you'll only be firing it up to use once every few months, probably good to boot it up once a month for a scrub to keep the nand cells fresh too.

    • @mitcHELLOworld
      @mitcHELLOworld Před 8 měsíci +3

      What are you talking about? His HDD array? Or his boot drive lol

  • @20102125
    @20102125 Před 8 měsíci +1

    More CAT! Hell yeah!

  • @thaywizgwar8238
    @thaywizgwar8238 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Cat. I came for tech, I stayed for cat.

  • @reasonss0fak1ngwut
    @reasonss0fak1ngwut Před 8 měsíci

    How do you set up all the drives to run in raid

  • @mp0011
    @mp0011 Před 8 měsíci

    I build my cheap NAS on HP z230 SFF with i3. Small and quiet, two HDD inside + one in additional in a swapable case. Works good enough to saturate 2.5Gbps lan. Everything under 50$

  • @phrasheekwerk354
    @phrasheekwerk354 Před 8 měsíci

    Could you introduce a parts list in your video description

  • @ambientnaturally
    @ambientnaturally Před 8 měsíci

    I like orange cats.
    I've had two.
    One was named 'Orange', the other one was 'Big Orange'.

  • @rlxd85
    @rlxd85 Před 6 měsíci

    Hey man really nice build, do you know what power consumption is load and idle?

  • @djbusters
    @djbusters Před 8 měsíci

    Curious, What was your choice on the SATA controller?

  • @p3tiny
    @p3tiny Před 8 měsíci

    could you maybe list the parts used please?

  • @FARBerserker
    @FARBerserker Před 8 měsíci +1

    Is the fan in the rear intake or out?
    If it is in as well, you could just have ducted from there onto the CPU Heat Sink right?

    • @der8auer-en
      @der8auer-en  Před 8 měsíci +1

      out. In on the side towards the HDDs and exhaust for warm air

  • @mr_jarble
    @mr_jarble Před 8 měsíci

    Soon you will join us on the path to data insanity. I just wrapped up my 256TB build running truenas scale

  • @luiserasmo
    @luiserasmo Před 8 měsíci

    4:45 That's a big chonky cat! (beautiful)

  • @darknessblades
    @darknessblades Před 8 měsíci +2

    For the PSU I would recommend using the redundant atx PSU "FSP Twins "

    • @ZleFox
      @ZleFox Před 7 měsíci

      talking about overkill PSU :D

  • @ragtop70
    @ragtop70 Před 8 měsíci

    Great build, but I have to admit to getting a bit of a headache when you pulled the heat sink off of the embedded Epyc. I’ve been wanting to build a similar system in a 2U case with SSDs in my recording studio and the embedded Epyc only needs a bit of air moving across it to keep it happy. After seeing the case, adding the fan was a good move since the front of the case is pretty solid (and bad for airflow). The RAID controller you’re using may be less than optimal, performance wise, but should get the job done easily in your application.

  • @gabest4
    @gabest4 Před 8 měsíci +4

    The motherboard was overkill, but it looks used, so I am not sure about the real cost :)

  • @Do_High_Go
    @Do_High_Go Před 8 měsíci +1

    You could get even better speed if you set up Arc and L2 Arc so your ram and SSD can be used as HDD cache, tho it might already be on for L1 RAM cache, having also L2 is still a great speed boost for HDDs.

    • @aeonikus1
      @aeonikus1 Před 8 měsíci

      I was about to say that he can get better performance with arc and l2 arc caching mechanism.

    • @nadtz
      @nadtz Před 8 měsíci

      Most people misunderstand how caching works with ZFS. If you want to speed up writes you would want to add a ZIL device (for sync writes) or more likely tweak other ZFS settings, not tweak ARC (or L2 ARC) which are used for reads.

  • @flikflak24
    @flikflak24 Před 8 měsíci

    Haven't seen that case since Linus used it years ago with that as rock rack motherboard ( back way before they got the big studio they have now )

  • @1NIGHTMAREGAMER
    @1NIGHTMAREGAMER Před 8 měsíci +1

    id recommend doing a deprecation of old videos where you put rlly old videos on your hdd nas and keep newer videos on ssd nas it so you can free up space on your ssd nas

  • @Nosity_
    @Nosity_ Před 8 měsíci +1

    Id love to know how long it would take to rebuild one of those drives after a failure, I know that people prefer to use more smaller capacity drives because it has less time where you would be in a position that a drive failure may result in data loss

    • @orfeous
      @orfeous Před 8 měsíci

      4-6TB is the sweetspot

  • @BryanSeitz
    @BryanSeitz Před 8 měsíci

    If you can spare a PCI-E slot, LSI SAS cards are quite nice for this purpose.

  • @niyamimbi1179
    @niyamimbi1179 Před 4 měsíci

    wanted to do a nas-ish thing here, got my eyes ona b550m-vc, has 8 SATA, 2x m2-all of these work at the same time- and usual PCIe expansion slots of b550, coupled with a cheap 2nd hand ryzen on an old office case, need it mostly for redundancy, and alls in a box

  • @shephusted2714
    @shephusted2714 Před 8 měsíci

    1 backup is not enough - you need two - and for small and medium biz concerns this is even more vital - 10g is good - networking is the weakest link, 2 raid10 with ssd is enough for most and it is cheaper to expand plus more reliable, less power and no moving parts plus much faster, use raid1 for the os drive, image raids to usb hdd regularly - you may goto nvme since they have price parity with ssd, also you can use bonding or bridging 10g or goto 40g - 40g cards are cheap and reliable - dual port 40g is 40 bucks - no switch needed just direct connect from ws to dual nas

  • @zMeul
    @zMeul Před 8 měsíci +2

    I went with TrueNAS CORE, SCALE is a mixed bag trying to do many things at once

    • @stephenxs8354
      @stephenxs8354 Před 8 měsíci

      one is freebsd based the other debian based

    • @ledoynier3694
      @ledoynier3694 Před 8 měsíci

      which isn't relevant here since he only does storage :P

    • @zMeul
      @zMeul Před 8 měsíci

      @@ledoynier3694 storage is better on CORE

  • @caspermartens
    @caspermartens Před 8 měsíci +1

    DerCat as tech support

  • @mickmagnetta6264
    @mickmagnetta6264 Před 8 měsíci

    👍

  • @thevoid6756
    @thevoid6756 Před 8 měsíci

    It doesn't matter how many drives you have in your NAS, they're still all in one place. Look into 3-2-1 for a basic backup method that's much safer.

  • @WilReid
    @WilReid Před 8 měsíci

    "Why didn't you build your own NAS? I mean, you are a professional tech CZcamsr!"
    "Wendell's passport is expired and he could not come to Germany to do it for me."