As motherboard layout is important in ensuring that airflow is as unobstructed as possible, case design is also critical in facilitating excellent airflow.  If you're building a system with one or two hard drives, most cases work fine for a home file server - just make sure there is a fan near the hard drive(s) so it is not sitting in stagnant air.  However, if your server requires multiple disks, here are a few cases that work especially well for file servers.

Mini-ITX

Fractal's Array R2 is a nearly perfect home file server case.  At less than 14" deep by 10" wide by 8" tall, it occupies little volume.  It positions a removable hard drive cage immediately behind a quiet yet powerful 140mm intake fan.  The hard drive cage accommodates up to six hard drives using vibration-dampening silicone mounts, and there is also room for a 2.5" drive (either an SSD or HDD).  According to my testing, when stuffed with six low-rpm 2TB mass storage HDDs and one SSD (with an Intel Pentium G620 CPU installed), the temperatures of the HDDs hover around 40C even when all drives are under artificial sustained load (using Iometer).  The PSU is a custom SFX form factor model, 80+ efficiency 300W unit with ample amps on the split 12V rail to power six HDDs.  The PSU features seven SATA connectors and one legacy molex connector, so there are no extraneous molex plugs and enough SATA plugs.  Furthermore, the cables are shorter than typical, so excessive cabling does not interfere with airflow.  The case itself is constructed of aluminum so it is lightweight, and its overall build quality is very high.  It does not have room for an optical drive, but I consider optical drives superfluous for a home file server.  If necessary, you can always hook up a USB interface external optical drive.  The only drawback of this case and its PSU is the price: at just under $200, it is not cheap.  However, the subjective aesthetics, objective functionality of the case and the custom PSU are worth the cost if you want a small but capacious home file server case. 

Micro-ATX

As I prefer home file servers that take up as little space as possible, Silverstone's TJ08B-E is a great, smaller micro-ATX minitower.  It's less than 16" deep, 9" wide, 15" tall and weighs less than 12 pounds.  It can accommodate up to five HDDs plus one SSD.  As with the Fractal Array R2, the hard drives are placed immediately behind a front intake fan - though in this case, it's an even larger 180mm unit.  The TJ08B-E is flexible in that it can hold a couple optical drives as well as a GPU in case you want to repurpose or multipurpose it.  When stuffed with four low-rpm green drives, the temperatures under load don't exceed 45C during sustained transfers.  Overall build quality is very good, like most Silverstone cases. 

Silverstone makes a diminutive, fully modular PSU that makes working with smaller cases like the TJ08B-E, Lian Li PC-Q08, and others much easier.  Silverstone also offers a short cable kit, making the ST50F-P PSU even better suited to SFF cases.  Finally, it's clear that Silverstone had smaller multi-HDD systems in mind when designing the CP06 SATA power plug extension cable.  This extender connects to a single SATA power plug and then has four SATA power plugs that are spaced closer than usual together, further reducing cable clutter.  Though the cost of these accessories adds up, they make an ideal cabling solution very easy to implement.  Regardless of whatever PSU you decide to go with, if you use a split 12V rail model, make sure you don't load up one rail with HDDs.  If you go with a single 12V rail model, you'll want that rail to be beefy - for example, don't try to put ten HDDs and four case fans on a budget PSU with a 20A 12V rail.

Full Tower

Very few cases can accommodate ten HDDs at stock (without adding adapters), and such cases are not at all small.  Full towers also typically offer excellent airflow, and cable management is not very difficult.  Fractal's Define XL is one of the least expensive 10 HDD bay full tower cases available.  It is well-built, and extra care has been paid to making the case quiet in the form of panel insulation.  It is impossible to hear active HDDs inside this case even when you're sitting just a few feet from it (even the notoriously loud VelociRaptors).  Further, there are plenty of integrated niceties like adjustable/flexible cable baffles that assist in cable management.  Seven of the ten HDD slots are immediately behind fans, with three slots one cage removed from the front intake fans.  Even still, the HDDs that aren't right behind the fans stay cool (between 35C and 40C).  At around $150, it is an excellent value.  Just make sure you don't pair it up with Silverstone's short cable kit! 

We've saved the most important aspect of a home file server - the hard drives - for the next and last component page.

CPUs, Motherboards, and RAM Hard Drives
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  • HMTK - Monday, September 5, 2011 - link

    Inferior as in PITA for rebuilds and stuff like that. On my little Proliant Microserver I use the onboard RAID because I'm too cheap to buy something decent and it's only my backup machine (and domain controller, DHCP, DNS server) but for lots of really important data I'd look for a true RAID card with an XOR processor and some kind of battery protection: on the card or a UPS.
  • fackamato - Tuesday, September 6, 2011 - link

    I've used Linux MD software RAID for 2 years now, running 7x 2TB 5400 rpm "green" drives, and never had an issue. (except one Samsung drive which died after 6 months).

    This is on an Atom system. It took roughly 24h to rebuild to the new drive (CPU limited of course), while the server was happily playing videos in XBMC.
  • Sivar - Tuesday, September 6, 2011 - link

    This is not true in my experience.
    Hardware RAID cards are far, far more trouble than software RAID when using non-enterprise drives.

    The reason:
    Nearly all hard drives have read errors, sometimes frequently.
    This usually isn't a big deal: The hard drive will just re-read the same area of the drive over and over until it gets the data it needs, then probably mark the trouble spot as bad, remapping it to spare area.

    The problem is that consumer hard drives are happy to spend a LONG time rereading the trouble spot. Far longer than most hardware RAID cards need to decide the drive is not responding and drop it -- a perfectly good drive.

    For "enterprise" SATA drives, often the *only* difference, besides price, is that enterprise drives have a firmware flag set to limit their error recovery time, preventing them from dropping unless they have a real problem. Look up "TLER" for more information.

    Hardware RAID cards generally assume they are using enterprise drives. With RAID software it varies, but in Linux and Windows Server 2008R2 at least, I've never had a good drive drop. This isn't to say it can't happen, of course.

    ------------------------------

    For what it's worth, I recommend Samsung drives for home file servers. The 2TB Samsung F4 has been excellent. Sadly, Samsung is selling its HDD business.

    I expressly do not recommend the Western Digital GP (Green) series, unless you can older models before TLER was expressly disabled in the firmware (even as an option).
  • Havor - Sunday, September 4, 2011 - link

    HighPoint RocketRAID 2680 SGL PCI-Express x4 SATA / SAS (Serial Attached SCSI) Controller Card

    In stock.
    Now: $99.00

    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N8...

    Screw software raid, and then there are many card with more options like online array expansion.
  • Ratman6161 - Tuesday, September 6, 2011 - link

    For home use, a lot/most people are probably not going to build a file server out of all new components. We are mostly recycling old stuff. My file server is typically whatever my old desktop system was. So when I built my new i7-2600K system, my old Core 2 Quad 6600 desktop system became my new server. But...the old P35 motherboard in this system doesn't have RAID and has only 4 SATA ports. It does have an old IDE Port. So it got my old IDE CD-ROM, and three hard drives that were whatever I had laying around. Had I wanted RAID though, I would probably get a card.

    Also, as to OS; A lot of people for use as a home file server are not going to need ANY "server" os. If you just need to share files between a couple of people, any OS you might run on that machine is going to give you the ability to do that. Another consideration is that a lot of services and utilities have special "server" versions that will cost you more. Example: I use Mozy for cloud backup but if I tried to do that on a Windows Server, it would detect that it was a server and want me to upgrade to the Mozy Pro product which costs more. So by running the "server" on an old copy of Windows XP, I get around that issue. Unless you really need the functionality for something, I'd steer clear of an actual "server" OS.
  • alpha754293 - Tuesday, September 6, 2011 - link

    @Rick83

    "MY RAID card recommendation is a mainboard with as many SATA ports as possible, and screw the RAID card."

    I think that's somewhat of a gross overstatement. And here's why:

    It depends on what you're going to be building your file server for and how much data you anticipate on putting on it, and how important is that data? LIke would it be a big deal if you lost all of it? Some of it? A weeks worth? A day's worth? (i.e. how fault tolerant ARE you?)

    For most home users, that's likely going to be like pictures, music, and videos. With 3 TB drives at about $120 a pop (upwards of $170 a pop), do you really NEED a dedicated file server? You can probably just set up an older, low-powered machine with a Windows share and that's about it.

    @Rick83/PCTC2

    I think that when you're talking about rebuild rates, it depends on what RAID level you were running. Right now, I've got a 27 TB RAID5 server (30 TB raw, 10 * 3TB, 7200 rpm Hitachi SATA-3 on Areca ARC-1230 12-port SATA-II PCIe x8 RAID HBA); and it was going to take 24 hours using 80% background initialization or 10 hours with foreground initialization. So I would imagine that if I had to rebuild the entire 27 TB array; it's going to take a while.

    re: SW vs. HW RAID
    I've had experience with both. First is onboard SAS RAID (LSI1068E) then ZFS on 16*500 GB Hitachi 7200 rpm SATA on Adaptec 21610 (16-port SATA RAID HBA), and now my new system. Each has it's merits.

    SW RAID - pros:
    It's cheap. It's usually relatively easy to set up. They work reasonably well (most people probably won't be able to practically tell the difference in performance). It's cheap.

    SW RAID - cons:
    As I've experienced, twice; if you don't have backups, you can be royally screwed. Unless you've actually TRIED transplanting a SW RAID array, it SOUNDS easy, but it's almost never is. A lot of the times, there are a LOT of things that happen/running in the background that's transparent to the end user so if you tried to transplant it, it doesn't always work. And if you've ever tried transplanting a Windows install (even without RAID); you'll know that.

    There's like the target, the LUN, and a bunch of other things that tell the system about the SW RAID array.

    It's the same with ZFS. In fact, ZFS is maybe a little bit worse because I think there was like a 56-character tag that each hard drive gets as a unique ID. If you pulled a drive out from one of the slots and swapped it with another, haha...watch ZFS FREAK out. Kernel panics are sooo "rampant" that they had a page that told you how to clear the ZFS pool cache to stop the endless kernel panic (white screen of death) loop. And then once you're back up and running, you had to remount the ZFS pool. Scrub it, to make sure no errors, and then you're back up.

    Even Sun's own premium support says that in the event of a catastrophic failure with SW RAID, restore your data from back-ups. And if that server WAS your backup server -- well...you're SOL'd. (Had that happen to me TWICE because I didn't export and down the drives before pulling them out.)

    So that's that. (Try transplanting a Windows SW RAID....haha...I dare you.) And if you transplanted a single Windows install enough times, eventually you'll fully corrupt the OS. It REALLLY hates it when you do that.

    HW RAID - pros:
    Usually it's a lot more resilent. A lot of them have memory caches and some of them even have backup battery modules that help store the write intent operations in the event of a power failure so that at next power-up, it will complete the replay.* (*where/when supported). It's to prevent data corruption in the event that say you are in the middle of copying something onto the server, but then the power dies. It's more important with automated write operations, but since most people kinda slowly pick and choose what they put on the server anyways, that's usually not too bad. You might remember where it left off and pick it up from there manually.

    It's usually REALLY REALLY fast because it doesn't have OS overhead.

    ZFS was a bit of an exception because it waits until a buffer of operations is full before it actually executes the disk. So, you can get a bunch of 175 MB/s bursts (onto a single 2.5" Fujitsu 73 GB 10krpm SAS drive), but your clients might still be reporting 40 MB/s. On newer processors, it effectively was idle. On an old Duron 1800, it would register 14% CPU load doing the same thing.

    HW RAID - cons:
    Cost. Yes, the controllers are expensive. But you can also get some older systems/boards with onboard (HW RAID) (like LSI based controllers), but they work.

    With a PCIe x8 RAID HBA, even with PCIe 1.0 slots, each lane is 2 Gbps (250 MB/s) in each direction. So an 8-lane PCIe 1.0 card can do 16 Gbps (2 GB/s) or 32 Gbps (4 GB/s). SATA-3 is only good to 6 Gbps (750 MB/s including overhead). The highest I'm hitting with my new 27 TB server is just shy of 800 MB/s mark. Sustained read is 381 MB/s (limited by SATA-II connector interface). It's the fastest you can get without PCIe SSD cards. (And as far as I know, you CAN'T RAID the PCIe SSD cards. Not yet anyways.)
  • Brutalizer - Friday, September 9, 2011 - link

    It doesnt sound like I have the same experience of ZFS as you.

    For instance, your hw-raid ARECA card, is it in JBOD mode? You know that hw-raid cards screw ZFS seriously?

    I have pulled disks and replaced them without problems, you claim you had problems? I have never heard of such problems.

    I have also pulled out every disk, and inserted them again in other slots and everything worked fine. No problem. It helps to do a "zpool export" and "import" also.

    I dont understand all your problems with ZFS? Something is wrong, you should be able to pull out disks and replace them without problems. ZFS is designed for that. I dont understand why you dont succeed.
  • plonk420 - Sunday, September 4, 2011 - link

    friend has had good luck with a $100ish 8xSATAII PCI-X Supermicro card (no raid). he uses lvm in ubuntu server. i think they have some PCI-e cards in the same price range, too.

    i got a cheapish server-grade card WITH raid (i had to do some heavy research to see if it was compatible with linux), however it seems there's no SMART monitoring on it (at least in the drive manager GUI; i'm a wuss, obviously).
  • nexox - Wednesday, September 7, 2011 - link

    Well, there are about a million replies here, but I think I've got some information that others have missed:

    1) Motherboard SATA controllers generally suck. They're just no good. I don't know why this site insists on benchmarking SSDs with them. They tend to be slow and handle errors poorly. Yes, I've tested this a fair amount.

    2) Hardware RAID has it's positives and negatives, but generally it's not necessary, at least in Linux with mdraid - I can't speak for Windows.

    So what do you do with these facts? You get a quality Host Bust Adaptor (HBA.) These cards generally provide basic raids (0,1,) but mostly they just give you extra SAS/SATA ports, with decent hardware. I personally like the LSI HBAs (since LSI bought most of the other storage controller companies,) which come in 3gbit and 6gbit SAS/SATA, on PCI-Express x4 and x8, with anywhere from 4 to 16 ports. 8 lanes of PCI-Express 2.0 will support about 4GB/s read, which should be enough. And yes, SAS controllers are compatible with SATA devices.

    Get yourself an LSI card for your storage drives, use on board SATA for your boot drives (software raid1,) and run software raid5 for storage.

    Of course this means you can't use an Atom board, since they generally don't have PCI-e, and even the Brazos boards only offer PCI-e 4x (even if the slots look like a 16x.)

    For some reason SAS HBAs are some kind of secret, but they're really the way to go for a reliable, cheap(ish) system. I have a $550 (at the time) 8 port hardware raid card, which is awesome (Managed to read from a degraded 8 disk raid5, cpu limited at 550MB/s, on relatively old and slow 1TB drives, which isn't going to happen with software raid,) but when I build my next server (or cluster - google ceph) I will be going with sofware raid on a SAS HBA.
  • marcus77 - Saturday, October 6, 2012 - link

    I would recommend you euroNAS http://www.euronas.com as OS because it would provide you more flexibility (you can decide which hw to use and can upgrade it easely).

    Raid controllers don't always make sense - especially when it comes to recovery (multiple drive failures) software raid is much more powerful than most raid controllers.

    If you wish to use many drives you will need an additional controller - LSI makes pretty good HBAs - they don't provide raid functionality but have many ports for the drives. You could use it in combination with software raid. http://www.lsi.com/products/storagecomponents/Page...

    If you are looking for a real HW raid controller - I would recommend Adaptec - they have a very good linux support which is mostly used with storage servers

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