unRAID
As a computer geek, I’ve long had a large stash of data that consumes far more than the available single disks of the times.
Over the years, I’ve built a number of file servers to suit my needs, all based on Linux, and mostly using software RAID in Linux. Unfortunately, there’s a number of issues that never seem to sit well with me.
So, needing to build (yet again) a newer, bigger file server, I started looking for alternatives. I considered Windows Home Server, freeNAS, OpenFiler, and others, including unRAID.
I finally settled on unRAID, as you might guess from the title of this story. Here’s just a few of the reasons:
- It can spin down disks when they aren’t being used
- Making a single disk larger is a piece of cake
- Your disks do NOT need to be all the same size
- The price is reasonable
- It’s Linux based, albeit on Slackware (I know, you just vomited a little, so did I)
- There’s a very active community surrounding it
So far, I’m very happy. I purchased a Norco 4220 case, with 20 hard drive bays, hopefully enough expansion room for a number of years. I’m using an older Asus A8N-SLI motherboard, with 2 PCIe x16 slots, which each house a Super Micro AOC-SASLP-MVP8. I tossed in 2GB of RAM, but it’s probably not necessary just to serve files.
In any case, if you’re stuck in a situation similar to mine, take a good look at unRAID. You might be really glad you did.
Maybe someday I can do a talk on unRAID at my local Linux Users Group.
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