Settings

Theme

My DIY NAS Adventure

nanmu.me

11 points by nanmu42 2 years ago · 6 comments

Reader

dervjd 2 years ago

I'd be curious to know what the actual NAS performance is like (IOPS, latency, etc).

Looked into building a DIY NAS a few years ago, but decided to buy (a Synology DS1618+) instead. I'm sure I could've saved a few hundred rolling my own, but having purpose build hardware + commercially supported software is worth the cost if it's data that you care about (versus something like storage for 'linux iso files').

I actually had an issue a few months back where my storage pool suddenly degraded and went read only. Was able to send a full diagnostics/log dump to Synology, and their support engineers took over to diagnose the issue. If I rolled my own, I'd be the one spending hours either figuring it out myself while stressing about losing data, and/or rebuilding entirely from my offsite backup.

  • LanternLight83 2 years ago

    I built my own NAS (six drives in a Mini-ATX case) about three years ago. Creating a custom init system and immutable distro on it has been my primary hobby since, and I expect to be finished within another ~two years, by which point the drives will be reaching their life expectancies. On the plus side I'm pretty sure this is a me problem, and that anyone else would have stuck with Proxmox and had their siht together in 3-6 weeks-- but maybe that person would also be the type to prefer a Synology in the first place :p

    I'd recommend both routes, but primarily synology unless you know you wanna geek out w/ it

magixx 2 years ago

I've looked into using SBCs for a DIY a lot, if you're fine with no hotswap and 4 disk then it's doable on the cheap. Since I wanted more than 4 drives and hotswap I gave up and ended up looking for a dedicated NAS. The issues with SBCs are usually the adapters you end up using have SATA controllers limited to 4 (or 6 for ASM1166) drives or use SATA port multiplers which reduces performance. For home uses, I don't think this matters that much tbh. Adding hotswap is costly due to backplanes and when you have more than 4 disks you run into annoying things like needing more power so you need a real PSU for your SBC. The best solution I though of for this was PicoPSU to keep the size down or FlexATX but the latter adds up in cost. After seeing the size and all these costs add up I just gave up.

aborsy 2 years ago

I put together a DIY solution, but I like my synology better.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection