Am Wed, Jun 30, 2021 at 09:45:13PM +0100 schrieb Neil Bothwick: > On Tue, 29 Jun 2021 15:56:49 +0200, Frank Steinmetzger wrote: > > > I reached 80 % usage (which is the recommended maximum for ZFS) and am > > now evaluating my options for the coming years. > > 1) Reduce use of space by re-encoding. My payload is mainly movies, > > among which are 3 TB of DVDs which can be shrunk by at least ⅔ by > > re-encoding. → this takes time and computing effort, but is a long-term > > goal anyway. 2) Replace all drives with bigger ones. There are three > > counter arguments: > > • 1000 € for four 10 TB drives (the biggest size available w/o > > helium) > > • they are only available with 7200 rpm (more power, noise and heat) > > • I am left with four perfectly fine 6 TB drives > > 3) Go for 4+2 RaidZ2. This requires a bigger case (with new PSU due to > > different form factor) and a SATA expansion card b/c the Mobo only > > has six connectors (I need at least one more for the system drive), > > costing 250 € plus drives. > > 4) Convert to RaidZ1. Gain space of one drive at the cost of > > resilience. I can live with the latter; the server only runs > > occasionally and not for very long at a time. *** This option brings me > > to my question above, because it is easy to achieve and costs no €€€. > > 5) (or 3a) Add an eSATA card and expand the RAID with external drives. > That way you can stick with 6TB drives. Antlist made a similar suggestion using external USB, and I gave a more detailed answer in reply to his mail. Your proposal, though different regarding filesystem setup, has the same drawbacks: I am dependent on an external case with its own power supply. Having everything in one case is very convenient when I want to take the data on a visit to someone – and it keeps my flat cleaner. :D I actually looked at external enclosures that I could simply hook up to a host computer, which then does all the work of speaking to the individual disks. The problems with that: - The host needs ECC RAM. NUC-Class devices don’t support that. Even most consumer boards don’t (at least officially). - USB is not suitable for RAID because it lacks protocol features in case of errors. - It’s also a costly endeavour. I found exactly one case that can hold 6 disks – it cost almost 700 € and only speaks firewire, which none of my hosts do. My NAS hardware was actually cheaper than that, including server-grade Mobo, 16 GIG of ECC RAM, a Gold-rated PSU, and an i3 with custom cooler. Tata. -- Grüße | Greetings | Qapla’ Please do not share anything from, with or about me on any social network. “If wishes were horses we’d all be eating steak.” – Jayne, Firefly