QNAP H686 -- Let's Install TrueNAS!

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  • čas přidán 10. 04. 2022
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Komentáře • 115

  • @keyboard_g
    @keyboard_g Před 2 lety +31

    TrueNas comes without all those lovely QNAP backdoors.

  • @TrueNAS
    @TrueNAS Před 2 lety +25

    Fantastic video! There has never been a better time to repurpose that old (or new) hardware!

  • @marcogenovesi8570
    @marcogenovesi8570 Před 2 lety +141

    that's probably the only way to safely use a Qnap device, nuke the stock firmware and replace with an OS that follows basic security principles and is updated regularly

    • @magoid
      @magoid Před 2 lety +3

      is the only way to be sure...

    • @rudysal1429
      @rudysal1429 Před 2 lety +4

      @@magoid this is the way

    • @NicholasLoomans
      @NicholasLoomans Před 2 lety +3

      Also the only way to use any router

    • @Lorondos
      @Lorondos Před 2 lety +3

      In QNAPs defence, they have been pretty proactive in updating their firmware, I have a QNAP NAS from 2015 and has had regular firmware updates to this date. Their handling of the whole deadbolt situation, was rather poor however. My major critique from my experience, there tends to be odd limitations in the OS regarding the ability to use certain file systems and other features that seem to come and go with each release.

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 Před 2 lety +7

      @@Lorondos regular firmware updates don't mean much if they don't solve CVEs from 2 years ago.

  • @alwaysraiders
    @alwaysraiders Před 2 lety +5

    Thank you for this. I thank you for this. I actually emailed QNAP yesterday to find out why my TS- 877 is not quts hero compatible. They said it is at end of life so thank you for this video

  • @K3rm1tFr0g
    @K3rm1tFr0g Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks for the great video Wendell.

  • @zetabyte0076
    @zetabyte0076 Před rokem

    Good matter approached for that video. TrueNAS, I enjoyed this trick so much. Congrats! See ya next video!

  • @marcin_karwinski
    @marcin_karwinski Před 2 lety +10

    I guess it's time someone at Qnap noticed this and had a light-bulb moment and decided to sell their boxes without the OS installed on that small 4-16GB SATADOM, just with larger OS storage capacity - say 32-256GB SATA DOMs... They could capitalise on hardware R&D, and in theory offer it cheaper cause you're not paying for the OS and software support features of the regular product... which also had quite a few holes/issues that made people notice Qnap in a wrong way... And thus such an offer could suddenly allow them to make a lot of $ for small investments, allowing users an option even in the BIOS to eg. run a setup of QuTS/QTS/QTSEnterprise over the net as a remote boot/deployment option...

  • @jonathannoneofyourbusiness4123

    I love it. This will be my next big project. :)

  • @SomeRandomPerson
    @SomeRandomPerson Před 2 lety +1

    Huh, well that's neat. I wish this had come out about 12 months ago when I was starting to look for a new NAS.
    I wanted 8 Bays of 3.5" + m.2 + 10G in that kind of quiet and small form factor (apartments don't have room for rackmount gear), and this seemed like the best option. iXSystems are great for doing TrueNas, but their hardware just isn't what I'm looking for -- besides that, not available here in Australia

  • @staticzord6985
    @staticzord6985 Před rokem +1

    Excellent video, please make installation of TrueNas Scale and show other QNAP models if possible. This video-board hack was awesome (most QNAP don't have HDMI/VGA nowadays).

  • @DeeDee.Ranged
    @DeeDee.Ranged Před 2 lety

    Got an old QNAP TS-459 Pro and as thhe QNAP OS wasn´t supported anymore replaced it with OpenMediaVault (OMV) on USB 16GB instead of using the USB DOM abt. 5 years ago. Stil working fine.

  • @leemachiin
    @leemachiin Před 2 lety +2

    👍 this is awesome. Has anyone ever tried this with an old netapp or synology?

  • @mrdali67
    @mrdali67 Před 2 lety

    Cool video, I only miss a list of "features" that I get from installing a 3'rd party OS like TrueNAS instead of the onboard one that like you said is already optimized for their hardware and offer build in ZFS support

  • @MedievalChips
    @MedievalChips Před 2 lety

    thank you for this videо, just got a qnap myself maybe I will try this :)

  • @TriStruggleBus
    @TriStruggleBus Před 2 lety +2

    I’m on a TS-451 which isn’t supported by QuTS Hero. I’ve upgraded it to 16G ram years ago, I bet it would work well with Zfs. As one of the disks is dying I’m considering to do this also… Reddit says it can be done.

  • @questionablecommands9423

    4:35 I remember quite ... fondly? ... the day I saw a pen test guy pull a hard drive out of a photocopier.
    The hard drive was NTFS formatted...

  • @djstraussp
    @djstraussp Před 2 lety +1

    Here we gooooooo. TS-653d with QTrueNas Scale. FTW !!!

  • @aimannorazman7959
    @aimannorazman7959 Před 2 lety +1

    Intro: Levelonetechs
    Channel: Level1Linux
    jokes aside, these seem like awesome OS conversion on a off the shelf NAS with some pcie expansion, and ecc support! Like DIY but much better, if you will.

  • @mikethomas8594
    @mikethomas8594 Před rokem

    love it

  • @Legion-495
    @Legion-495 Před 2 lety +6

    If anyone wondered. Yes Wendell is active on level1forums.
    And noice. I built my own NAS and just recently upgraded my Truenas Core to Truenas Scale.
    My suggestions. Show this upgrade process. Show how to use Plex and set correct permissions as docker.
    Same for Nextcloud.
    And my biggest issue. Getting a VPN for the Homenetwork. Preferably with a GUI option like the openvpn access server.
    I know Truenas got a OpenVPN service.
    But setting it up so it may detects and reaches the whole local network is super confusing. I always struggled with what settings the openvpn service needs. More often than not it was just guesswork and only halfbacked for me.

  • @JonathanSteadman2003
    @JonathanSteadman2003 Před 2 lety

    Love your videos. :)

  • @cinemaipswich4636
    @cinemaipswich4636 Před 2 lety

    I do like iX systems. I know the id of the Motherboard, and I can now make my own, because it will be a project for me. If you are time-short, then pre-built systems are very necessary. Now starts the search for optimum ram, and then, a 10Gb/s NIX for my workstation.

  • @criptoportugal
    @criptoportugal Před 2 lety

    Love this kind of hack 😄👍

  • @zstation64
    @zstation64 Před 2 lety +4

    The TS-h973AX is a super machine for this, Ryzen V1500B SOC, ECC DDR4, 2x 2.5G Intel NICs, an Aquantia 10G NIC, 2x U.2 NVMe/SATA 2.5" bays, 2x SATA 2.5" bays, 5x 3.5" bays.
    I'm currently running unRAID on mine, but toying with going FreeNAS Scale when I get a few days to tinker.
    I have a pair of Micron U.2 drives, a pair of WD Red SSDs, and 3 18TB WD Whites in it, and it performs great, can get well over 8Gbit transfers going between two client machines on 10G - limited by the RAM and storage on the clients.

  • @shawnhank
    @shawnhank Před rokem

    @wendell I have a TVS-h1688x and was thinking about installing TrueNAS Core on this box to see how it goes. Wondering if the Thunderbolt and 10 Gig Fiber NICs (QNAP branded) would be supported by TrueNAS. Any thoughts on this?
    Thanks for the great video.

  • @ninjmnky
    @ninjmnky Před 2 lety +17

    Realtek NICs work just fine ™ under TrueNAS Scale, as Debian is way less picky about its hardware.

    • @blender_wiki
      @blender_wiki Před 2 lety +5

      Using realtek NIC in a production environment is always bad idea unless you dont care about bad performance

    • @AinzOoalG0wn
      @AinzOoalG0wn Před 2 lety

      i noticed for qnap 2.5gbe, initially with truenas core it didn't work. but using truenas scale worked. i believe later there was an update for truenas core that said they added support for the 2.5gbe nics, so it may work now without having to resort to the alpha/beta truenas scale which is not recommended for production yet afaik.

    • @sheldonkupa9120
      @sheldonkupa9120 Před 2 lety +1

      Yepp, was my first thought, truenas scale is worth considering. I just like it as i suck at bsd😃

    • @SimonQuigley
      @SimonQuigley Před 2 lety

      Realtek is trash.

  • @sirusvirtus5885
    @sirusvirtus5885 Před 2 lety

    Awesome 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @rossmpostpro
    @rossmpostpro Před 2 lety

    Woah woah, 16gb isn't enough for TrueNAS? I'm sure I'm running mine off a small flash drive... Thanks man, love the content as always.

  • @wtf9165
    @wtf9165 Před 2 lety

    Did this on a TS-253A, have TrueNAS Core running of 2 USB Sticks

  • @ragdolltech3526
    @ragdolltech3526 Před 2 lety +4

    I've been angry about obfinscated computers since I was a kid, if anything people just become more angry about EVERYTHING as they get older Wendle!

  • @SoLDMG
    @SoLDMG Před 2 lety +2

    Right on time. I'm gonna try TrueNAS Scale, if the speed is better than Core, I'll keep it. If not, it gets banished into the Dark Crevices forever and I'll run Rocky Linux in a VM for any Docker stuff.

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 Před 2 lety +1

      afaik TrueNAS Scale (or any ZFS on Linux for that matter) is still a bit slower than TrueNAS Core (or ZFS on BSD)

    • @SoLDMG
      @SoLDMG Před 2 lety

      @@marcogenovesi8570 I’ve read the same online (Core being 2-5x faster) but my home server is not that fast anyway. Best way to find out is to try I guess!

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před 2 lety

      If you've got a fast CPU will it actually matter? If the point is you want to run VMs and Dockers on the same box then maybe it's worth it. Obviously if the data transfer is slow then it's a no go.

    • @SoLDMG
      @SoLDMG Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@wayland7150 I couldn't even get the Scale installer to boot on my system. Core works fine. System is cobbled together from stuff I had in the attic: FX6100 (with 4 cores disabled), 16GB DDR3, 4 4TB HDD's (new). So yeah idk.

  • @royng8677
    @royng8677 Před 2 lety

    Thanks L1, this video is great. I can leave qnap hell. But I want to point out one thing that at “2:50” mention the dom should be USB 2 interface (so call 9pin or some say 10pin) instead of SATA. ~Why I know that since I am also a one of “victim” of H686.~

  • @Catge
    @Catge Před rokem

    Wendell lost a good amount of weight in just a year. That's great to see

  • @Mr_Wh1
    @Mr_Wh1 Před 2 lety +1

    That thing cost 1970 USD here in Denmark. Yes, 1970 USD... Sorry, but for that price I can put something together that is better. Disks included within the budget.

  • @wiebowesterhof
    @wiebowesterhof Před 2 lety

    I have a HS-210 and it basically borked the files when one of the drives failed and it then decided to drop the 'new' disk before finishing the mirror. Very frustrating. As I can barely buy anything where I live, I am now looking at the TS-253D (which I can buy). It has an Atom CPU, not a proprietary one. Would that be able to take TrueNAS Core?

  • @Marc_Wolfe
    @Marc_Wolfe Před 2 lety

    Yes, I'm certainly annoyed when "the computery bits are obfuscated".

  • @chromerims
    @chromerims Před 11 měsíci

    That SATA-DOM (disk on module) is another L1 "cheat code"! How cool? 😎👍
    Kindest regards, neighbours and friends.

  • @MooTaters
    @MooTaters Před rokem

    Considering QNAP's track record of handling vulnerability(s) they were warned of and given a grace period on by security professionals...I guess I'm glad you made this as I may do it, unless I sell it all to swap to a TrueNAS mini x+, which is cheaper with more ECC RAM and dual 10GbE, though 1 less 3.5" bay, might just be the better option. Only thing is TrueNAS doesn't tell you the exact CPU you're getting.

  • @krausshusha2694
    @krausshusha2694 Před rokem

    Having just watched Lawrence Systems' report on QNAP security, I suddenly understand Wendell's prevarication about why you'd want to do this.

  • @zepesh
    @zepesh Před 2 lety +5

    Computer Janitor song #shorts

  • @aeiplanner
    @aeiplanner Před 2 lety

    Doesn't QNAP have some hardware with built-in Thunderbolt connectivity options? It'd be nice to throw TrueNAS on that and have it connected directly to a mac for video editing.

  • @kaseyklynstra2210
    @kaseyklynstra2210 Před 2 lety +6

    3:18 I've been running TrueNAS off a 16GB SSD for years now... I was under the impression that you couldn't store anything to the boot SSD besides the OS (no VMs, plugins, jails, etc.), so I'm curious what your reasons are for that?

    • @Maxjoker98
      @Maxjoker98 Před 2 lety

      I've never used such a device or OS, but my guess is that the rootfs is simply on there, and without further mounting(entries in fstab or whatever) containers and applications etc. will be stored on there. So if you're just using it as a network connected storage device, it's probably fine, but once you want to make good use of the hardware, e.g. by running a few containers, you'll quickly run into issues.

    • @abzzeus
      @abzzeus Před 2 lety

      It used to be that people ran boot on USB pen drives, so it wasn't possible to run VMs etc due to speed
      Now that we've move up in size, speed and reliability to SSDs, it is potentially "possible" abet difficult BUT I'm not recommending investigating as it is easier to have seperate boot / VMs /Jail volumes (with them on ZFS) where you can monitor manage and move if required. How much is a pair of 120GB SSDs? $40?
      Boot is literally that - boot, you can backup your config move the data drives to a new installation, restore config and you're good to go (I've done it)

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před 2 lety

      I'm using a pair of USB 3 32GB Sandisk thumb drives. This saves money and SATA ports which I can use for actual storage drives. It seems fine, no problems at all.

    • @Maxjoker98
      @Maxjoker98 Před 2 lety +1

      @@wayland7150 It is probably fine, as long as you don't have many writes on your root fs(e.g. mount / read-only, put containers on actual storage).
      It goes without saying that storing irreplaceable data on such an USB stick is a bad idea.

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před 2 lety

      @@Maxjoker98 As long as you have your keys and config backed up it should be fine. Just make a new install and your pools pop right back in.

  • @leviathanpriim3951
    @leviathanpriim3951 Před 2 lety

    Neat thanks Wendell, I wonder if this is something a passive cooled gtx 1030 could help with

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před 2 lety

      Are you sure that's enough GPU power for a text interface?

  • @rudypieplenbosch6752
    @rudypieplenbosch6752 Před 2 lety

    Interesting

  • @staticzord6985
    @staticzord6985 Před rokem

    How many watts and volts has the power supply that comes with QNAP H686?

  • @MarlonSardini
    @MarlonSardini Před 2 lety +1

    Don't agree, I would avoid QNAP, but if I were forced to use one I'd immediately replace their junk software, especially the Hero version, with TrueNAS. Had loads of issues with my TVS-h1288x, one day it even decided to simply delete one of my pools. Gotta love backups. The hardware has also major cooling issues. Mine idles at 60-70°C, at 50% load it rushes to 90°C in seconds and stays there even with the fans screaming. Only after installing three additional Noctua 60mm fans the heat is being kept at bay (-20°C).

  • @teddybear9152
    @teddybear9152 Před rokem

    Will this work on a TS-653a?

  • @noelsoubrayentassin6013
    @noelsoubrayentassin6013 Před 6 měsíci

    bonjour je suis francais est ce que avec le model TS6X53D JE peux installer synology ou trunas

  • @borys4206
    @borys4206 Před 2 lety

    Could you please do a review of the steam deck!

  • @nerdkidleo
    @nerdkidleo Před 2 lety +2

    Realtek and freebsd, please just get along guys.

  • @b2bb
    @b2bb Před 2 lety

    *With a pleading face*: Not TrueNAS Scale, Papi Wendell??
    _engagement_

  • @hiddeninthewires2308
    @hiddeninthewires2308 Před 8 měsíci

    This has ipmi why would you put an external gpu card?

  • @amessman
    @amessman Před 2 lety

    1:40 but what standard is it?

  • @BlackLinerer
    @BlackLinerer Před 2 lety

    Was this recorded 2020?

  • @eliparshan2515
    @eliparshan2515 Před 2 lety +8

    Should this belong with Level1BSD and not Level1Linux?

    • @godslayer1415
      @godslayer1415 Před 2 lety

      TrueNAS is based on Linux - not BSD.

    • @danbrown586
      @danbrown586 Před rokem +1

      @@godslayer1415 TrueNAS CORE--which is what's being installed here--is based on BSD. SCALE is the new kid on the block, and is Debian Linux-based.

  • @ChrisM541
    @ChrisM541 Před 2 lety

    The H686 is close to £1000, unpopulated - will a basic small form factor/HTPC self-built PC, with TrueNAS installed, not give you much, much more potential at a much lower cost?

  • @josel.flores4617
    @josel.flores4617 Před 2 lety +3

    TrueNAS won't fit on 16gb? I highly doubt that.

    • @Felix-ve9hs
      @Felix-ve9hs Před 2 lety +1

      TrueNAS will probably even fit on a 4GB Disk, since a boot environment usually uses less that 2GB - but upgrading to a newer version might become a problem

  • @RupertoCamarena
    @RupertoCamarena Před 2 lety

    I was thinking unraid...

  • @krausshusha2694
    @krausshusha2694 Před 2 lety

    0:44 oh c'mon you missed out on a golden opportunity...
    "... you can't stop."

  • @nikolaskallias8162
    @nikolaskallias8162 Před rokem

    ok now turn that qnap nas to a synology one with xpenology

  • @abognasar6
    @abognasar6 Před 2 lety

    What about that round port just above the top RJ-45 port? Is that a serial jack?
    Can you use that instead if you dont have a compatible gpu? Or does it not support BIOS interaction?
    And what kinda weird adapter/cable would you need?

  • @Tofflus
    @Tofflus Před 2 lety +2

    are there any reason why TrueNAS core is used instead of TrueNAS scale?

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 Před 2 lety +1

      He wants to test the speed of ZFS on BSD (what Truenas Core is) vs the speed of ZFS on the Qnap firmware.

  • @Xxx_EvilSmurf_xxX
    @Xxx_EvilSmurf_xxX Před 2 lety

    I kinda want to see ubuntu on it, running as a desktop. lmao

  • @thumbnailqualityassurance7853

    It's not a SATA DOM. It's just USB.

  • @jmonsted
    @jmonsted Před 2 lety +1

    Holy crap, that thing is expensive.

    • @strandvaskeren
      @strandvaskeren Před 2 lety

      Yeah, but it works on older qnap's too, just remember to check the cpu specs. Personally I prefer to run plain Debian rather than Truenas, works fine. I guess you could even run Armbian on some of the Marvell cpu stuff, all though I haven't tried it.. yet..

  • @hermannpaschulke1583
    @hermannpaschulke1583 Před 2 lety +1

    I guess QNAP's OS is based on Linux?

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 Před 2 lety

      yes, all NAS have a Linux-based firmware.

    • @jmonsted
      @jmonsted Před 2 lety +2

      @@marcogenovesi8570 (except for the ones that don't, like Netapp)

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 Před 2 lety

      @@jmonsted Netapp makes SANs.

    • @Felix-ve9hs
      @Felix-ve9hs Před 2 lety

      @@jmonsted afaik netapp uses something based on FreeBSD and ZFS?

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Felix-ve9hs I'm not sure they use ZFS, most of their drives need to be formatted with 520 byte sectors and do the integrity checking like old raid controllers do. ZFS sure doesn't need that.

  • @shephusted2714
    @shephusted2714 Před 2 lety

    this is not something you want to do unless you want to undercut qnap and sell better nas plus cheaper to boot - with a better mb you have better cooling, better expansion options - you may have to shop around a bit but nas is nas - truenas has been around - putting the os on the nvme is a good way to go vs sata dom - you can do raid1 for better fault tolerance

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před 2 lety

      It would be great if someone made a case with SATA/SAS bays already wired and it's own PSU. Just add an mATX board.

  • @darkphotographer
    @darkphotographer Před 2 lety +1

    don't see the point to buy a device like that at 2000$ just buy a normal pc and you will have money left over to buy actual storage

  • @LA-MJ
    @LA-MJ Před 2 lety

    realtek ethernet huh

  • @Paper-if7hp
    @Paper-if7hp Před 2 lety

    Cool. But next time can you splay it out, coat it with neoprene, and dunk it in a mineral water filled fish tank decorated with superheroes?

  • @klemmonade
    @klemmonade Před 2 lety +6

    Im never a fan of custom form factor NAS/Servers, I dont get why people buy them either, they are always overpriced af.

    • @Quettesh
      @Quettesh Před 2 lety +1

      Not everyone is capable of setting up their own unRAID/TrueNAS/OMV... machine. Most people don't even know how to build a computer but they need NAS. Just because you don't get why doesn't mean there are no situation where they are a good solution. Synology DSM so easy to set up than even people who have only basic experience with networking will manage it.

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 Před 2 lety +2

      this is a turnkey NAS, a significant part of the price is the stock firmware with web interface and apps and services. Of course it will lose to a barebone server

    • @danbrown586
      @danbrown586 Před rokem

      They do tend to be expensive, but size and noise are important to lots of people. I built my parents a NAS (using TrueNAS) on a HPE MicroServer Gen8, and it's fairly compact (and certainly quiet), but it's still quite a bit bigger than a 4-bay QNAP or Synology. And you aren't going to get 4 bays, in a "normal" computer, much smaller than a MicroServer.

  • @Cobinja
    @Cobinja Před 2 lety

    3rd

  • @leonkernan
    @leonkernan Před 2 lety +2

    Does anyone still trust Qnaps OS? Because they shouldn’t, they’re a buggy insecure mess.

  • @LogicException
    @LogicException Před 2 lety

    0:00 Activate Windows please ;)

  • @speedbird737
    @speedbird737 Před rokem +1

    really happy running QuTS on my Qnap h-1688X - with all the apps I could ever need - some people never happy