00Lemming

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/679531

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/679471

Not sure the best place to ask this.

I have a DS420J 4 bay NAS, primarily used for my Plex server and data backups (among a few other things). I currently have 8x6x6 TB Iron Wolf NAS drives in a single volume with SRH and an extra 1 TB SSD JBOD. I have my Plex app and metadata stored on the SSD due to the increased performance I have seen vs. having it installed on the large pool (7200 RPM cap). I am sitting at about 85% used storage of my available 10.8 TB on the primary volume. As such, I am pre-planning my next storage upgrade and am curious about my options while staying with the current hardware. The future plan will be a NAS upgrade, but this little beast has been chugging along so perfectly I want to push it as far as I can.

If I was to remove the 1 TB drive and replace it with another 8 TB Iron Wolf, I would jump to 20 TB available storage. https://www.synology.com/en-us/support/RAID_calculator?hdds=6%20TB%7C6%20TB%7C8%20TB%7C8%20TB This increase would last me for quite some time ahead of a full NAS upgrade with more bays. In order to do this, I would obviously need to remove the 1 TB SSD to be replaced by the new drive. I have na external enclosure for this drive that can connect over USB to the NAS.

My question: I am finding somewhat conflicting information on how external drives are intended to be used/what their capabilities are when connected to the USB 3.2 port. It seems the intended functionality for backups (which makes sense). Am I able to utilize a USB connected drive and have it function in a similar manner to it being internal? Are you able to install apps from the Package Center to an external drive? Create volumes? I assume there will be some performance degradation due to the translation from SATA to USB, then back to SATA, but I anticipate the SSD will still perform better than adding the app back to the main pool. I just don’t know if I am potentially missing something with my evaluation. Those that have more experience with USB connected drive with their NAS, I would love to hear your experience. Thanks!

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/679471

Not sure the best place to ask this.

I have a DS420J 4 bay NAS, primarily used for my Plex server and data backups (among a few other things). I currently have 8x6x6 TB Iron Wolf NAS drives in a single volume with SRH and an extra 1 TB SSD JBOD. I have my Plex app and metadata stored on the SSD due to the increased performance I have seen vs. having it installed on the large pool (7200 RPM cap). I am sitting at about 85% used storage of my available 10.8 TB on the primary volume. As such, I am pre-planning my next storage upgrade and am curious about my options while staying with the current hardware. The future plan will be a NAS upgrade, but this little beast has been chugging along so perfectly I want to push it as far as I can.

If I was to remove the 1 TB drive and replace it with another 8 TB Iron Wolf, I would jump to 20 TB available storage. https://www.synology.com/en-us/support/RAID_calculator?hdds=6%20TB%7C6%20TB%7C8%20TB%7C8%20TB This increase would last me for quite some time ahead of a full NAS upgrade with more bays. In order to do this, I would obviously need to remove the 1 TB SSD to be replaced by the new drive. I have na external enclosure for this drive that can connect over USB to the NAS.

My question: I am finding somewhat conflicting information on how external drives are intended to be used/what their capabilities are when connected to the USB 3.2 port. It seems the intended functionality for backups (which makes sense). Am I able to utilize a USB connected drive and have it function in a similar manner to it being internal? Are you able to install apps from the Package Center to an external drive? Create volumes? I assume there will be some performance degradation due to the translation from SATA to USB, then back to SATA, but I anticipate the SSD will still perform better than adding the app back to the main pool. I just don’t know if I am potentially missing something with my evaluation. Those that have more experience with USB connected drive with their NAS, I would love to hear your experience. Thanks!

[–] 00Lemming@lemmy.world -1 points 1 year ago

Thanks @DarraignTheSane@lemmy.world for getting this going. I have high hopes 😊 if you need any mod support, please let me know.

 

I am a PSE for a large corporation that most people would not be familiar with (those users that frequent this sub probably would). However, we supply business critical software to many of the big companies you definitely do know. This puts me in a position where I work directly with some of the most well paid 'tech execs' you can find and has lead to many hilarious situations. Those are stories for another day however. Today is about Reddit - for they have angered me greatly.

I get a ticket this morning around 10 AM. As usual, I get a bunch of helpful information including an irrelevant screenshot and a one liner about how the RSS feed that they have pulling into one of their widgets wasn't working. On closer inspection, these mf's were hitting the r/sysadmin(!) RSS feed and pulling in new posts. Now, this is strictly business software we are dealing with. So while I can absolutely see why certain groups would value that feed, it was definitely the first I had ever seen such a thing in any of our environments.

Naturally (I feel), I am immediately floored with the potential possibilities and started thinking about how I might have to explain to this guy all that has transpired the last ~week in a business-professional email... I took a minute just to soak that in and let out a small chuckle. Fuck u/spez, I mutter.

Well since I was given zero actual information about their issue, other than 'no workie', I slid over to my main PC to go check r/sysadmin as I have done many times in the past - like muscle memory. I snap out of that, of course. I am done with Reddit. I had an idea. Just for fun I hit up Lemmy, just to see what was there. And lo and behold we have a fucking post about the massive reddit outage that went down today. I am all smiles at what has already happened here and hit downdector just to confirm. Yup, almost 50k reports at peak. LMFAO. I mean, really? My god Reddit. What are you doing?

So, given the info I was provided, I let him know that there was an outage and that was likely all the issue was - Try again once it has resided. A few small chuckles and I thought the story was done.

Now here's where I really lost it. I get word back a bit later and it's once again a one liner - 'No. Our sad, sad admins have been without r/sysadmin for almost two weeks now :(' I was laughing for a good 5 minutes at just the absurdity of it all (this issue obviously doesn't have anything to do with the recent changes, lol), all against the background of what we are seeing with Reddit. It also helped me realize how far reaching these failures are actually going to be once the end of the month rolls around. Colossal fuck up.

Happy to be here on Lemmy with you boys!