Am Thu, Dec 08, 2022 at 06:36:14PM +0000 schrieb Wols Lists: > > > I've pretty much reached a limit on my backups.  I'm up to a 16TB hard > > > drive for one and even that won't last long.  Larger drives are much > > > more costly.  A must have NAS is quickly approaching.  I've been > > > searching around and find some things confusing.  I'm hoping someone can > > > clear up that confusion.  I'm also debating what path to travel down. > > > I'd also like to keep costs down as well.  That said, I don't mind > > > paying a little more for one that would offer a much better option. > > > > > > Path one, buy a NAS, possibly used, that has no drives.  If possible, I > > > may even replace the OS that comes on it or upgrade if I can.  I'm not > > > looking for fancy, or even RAID.  Just looking for a two bay NAS that > > > will work.  First, what is a DAS?  Is that totally different than a > > > NAS?  From what I've found, a DAS is not what I'm looking for since I > > > want a ethernet connection and the ability to control things over the > > > network.  It seems DAS lacks that feature but not real sure.  I'm not > > > sure I can upgrade the software/OS on a DAS either. > > > […] > > > > DAS is direct-attached-storage. I don't think you want that. > > Depends. If it fits in the safe, and can be connected using one of these > eSATA thingy connectors, it might be a very good choice. > > […] > > I get the impression Dale isn't actually PLANNING his disk storage. It's > just a case of "help I'm downloading all this stuff where do I put it!!!" Haha, thanks for the laugh. > Get yourself a basic 4-way DAS/JBOD setup, PLAN where you're putting all > this stuff, and plug in and remove drives as required. You don't need all > these huge drives if you think about what you're going to do with it all. That’s actually a good idea. Either use a hot swap frame for an internal 5¼″ PC bay, a desktop dock for bare drives or a multi-bay enclosure. The market is big, you have lots of choices. USB (with or without integrated hub), eSATA, one or two bays, etc: https://skinflint.co.uk/?cat=hddocks Advantages: - no separate system to maintain just for storage: save $$$, time and power - very flexible: no chassis limitation on number of disks - no bulky external enclosures, each using a different power brick and cable - minimum volume to put into a safe (just get or make a bulk storage case) Disadvantages: - not as “fancy” as a NAS - possibly not all disks can be used at the same time - physical handling of naked disks takes more care - LVM is not practical, so use each disk separately - you gotta remember which files are where¹ - SATA connectors aren’t made for very many insertion cycles (I think the spec says 50?), which doesn’t mean they endure much more, but still … > (And while it takes time and hammers the system, I regularly record off the > TV getting a 2GB .ts file, convert it to mp4 - same resolution - and reduce > the size by an order of magnitude - maybe more. Well, ts uses mpeg2 encoding, just like old video DVDs, which is very inefficient when compared with modern h264/h265. Modern digital TV broadcast uses h264 by now. Incidentally, I got myself a new HDD today: an external 2.5″ WD Passport Ultra 5 TB with USB-C 3.0. Just because I like portable storage and also because I need temporary space if I want to convert my NAS RAID-Z2 to Z1. ¹ I do have several external USB disks, plus the big NAS. All of which don’t run very often. And I don’t want to turn them on just to look for a certain file. That’s why I have another little script. ;-) It uses the `tree` command to save the complete content listing of a directory into a text file and names the file automatically by the name of the directory it crawls. So if I want to find a file, I just need to grep through my text files. -- Grüße | Greetings | Salut | Qapla’ Please do not share anything from, with or about me on any social network. The whale is characterised by its bulky form factor.