ID# ATTRIBUTE_NAME FLAG VALUE WORST THRESH TYPE UPDATED WHEN_FAILED RAW_VALUEġ Raw_Read_Error_Rate 0x000f 082 064 044 Pre-fail Always - 171088624 Vendor Specific SMART Attributes with Thresholds: SMART Attributes Data Structure revision number: 10 It was also interesting that smart test was completing successfully however I was noticing some increase in the read error rate: Eventually one of the two disks crashed (Segate Ironwolf) after 30 months, exactly two years after the end of the guarantee. Third mistake was using disks with two years warning instead of five : simple NAS drives vs Pro NAS drivers (or enterprise). What happens if your boot disk crashes? Have you backed up the configuration? How do you backup the configuration using CentOS? (answer: manually) Although I did not had a catastrophic failure I realized afterwards how dangerous this was. Second mistake was the use of a single SSD for the boot device. Recently I revisited my choice and moved to TrueNAS, but this is another blog post. Moreover, the updates were not always hassle free and I had issues from time to time. You don't have many options after the end of the support and I didn't want to spend time to format and configure a new NAS. However, CentOS eventually was a bad choice due to RedHat decision to stop supporting it. I selected CentOS because it was a good opportunity to learn more about the configuration of a Enterprise level Linux distribution. What is a pool? What is the dataset? What is encryption? Should I compress? Dedup? What are these permissions and how do they affect the windows shares? I just did not have time to spend on configuring the system. Third, I was not familiar with ZFS terminology and way of thinking. What will happen if something goes wrong and I need to connect using the command line? I 'm familiar with mdadm but not with BSD and ZFS tools. Second, I 'm not familiar with FreeBSD systems. First, the OS "requires" at least 8GB of memory (not true for simple installations). Although I really liked the idea of using this OS, I had three concerns. TrueNAS (was FreeNAS back then): FreeBSD distribution with ZFS support. The biggest drawback is that you have to make most of your configuration manually. All the base software is checked to work well with the system and there are few bugs that can cause trouble. Moreover, there are a plethora of open issues/bugs that can make your life harder than expected.ĬentOS: Stable Linux based on Red Hat. The main downside is that you don't have support for ZFS and you have to very often use the command line to fix things. Open Media Vault: Debian based Linux with many configuration options. I wanted a stable machine without surprises, unexpected behavior, as much less bugs affecting my setup. The hard disks were from different manufacturers (WD red plus and Segate) to avoid catastrophic situations: disks are part of a bad batch and you will have a second failed disk during the build of the RAID array. The old pc is powerful enough to do the basic NAS operation except real time transcoding of 4K or more than one 1080 streams.Ģx 4 TBs for the main storage configured as RAID 1 Few years ago, I created a NAS system using my old PC.
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