unRAID

May 29, 2010

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:

  1. It can spin down disks when they aren’t being used
  2. Making a single disk larger is a piece of cake
  3. Your disks do NOT need to be all the same size
  4. The price is reasonable
  5. It’s Linux based, albeit on Slackware (I know, you just vomited a little, so did I)
  6. 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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