Conclusion

Home file servers can be enormously useful in a multi-system residence.  Adding such a specialty system to a home network is easy, and certain file server operating systems are also very simple to set up and administer.  A home file server is also an easy introduction to servers in general.  Remember, the primary purpose of a home file server is storage - so rather than building around the CPU or GPU, build a home file server around the HDDs.  Home file servers don't need powerful CPUs - instead focus on power savings and adequacy rather than raw processing muscle.  While it's difficult - perhaps impossible - to know what HDD models are most reliable, choose your case carefully and take time managing cables so you can maintain optimal environments for your drives.  Buy high-quality PSUs so your HDDs are supplied with clean power.  And of course, back up your data!

"The files are in the computer.  It's so simple!"

Hard Drives
Comments Locked

152 Comments

View All Comments

  • HMTK - Monday, September 5, 2011 - link

    We don't even use encryption for our enterprise customers. There's just no point. How easy do you think it is recovering useful data from a RAID member? Not talking about a mirror here but RAID 5/6/10
  • qoonik - Sunday, September 4, 2011 - link

    Hardware:
    motherboard: supermicro X7SPA-H-D525 (
    - Intel® Atom™ D525 (Passive cooling)
    - Intel® ICH9R Express Chipset
    - 6x SATA (3.0Gbps)

    ram: 2 x 4GB DDR3 SO-DIMM Kingston
    case: CFI A7879 Mini-ITX NAS/Server Case - 4 Hot Swap Bays
    psu: FSP120-50GNF (FANLESS)
    fan: BeQuiet SilentWings 120 mm PWM
    hd: 1 x WD green 1.5 TB (completing ... )

    OS:
    Amahi Home Server (Fedora) http://www.amahi.org
  • Rick83 - Sunday, September 4, 2011 - link

    Gonna chime in here ;)
    motherboard is a gigabyte P55-UD5
    i5 650
    10xSATA + 2x eSATA + 1xIDE + 2xIDE from PCI card
    2x1 GB some-DDR3
    CM Stacker STC-1 (yes, the original goodness!) with 3 4in3 modules
    psu: seasonic 430W with plenty of power adapters
    fan: stock fans all around (120mm per 4in3, one 120mm exhaust, one 80mm top exhaust, no CPU fan), CPU cooler is a scythe Yasya
    hd: 1x 8GB transcend IDE flash module (SLC), 1x 2.5" transcend IDE ssd (SLC), 1x 40GB seagate IDE, 1x 80 gb WD IDE, 1x 80GB seagate SATA, 3x 400GB Seagate SATA, 5x WD 1TB EARS SATA, 1x Samsung 1TB SATA (12 spinning disks, 2 SSDs)
    an optical drive
    a TV-card (though apparently broken...stream coming out of it is corrupted)
    an IEEE1394 CF Card reader
    Setup is 2x RAID1 (second level back up, and dynamic system files, consisting of the small disks) ad 2x RAID 5 (main and back-up array)
    graphics: nVidia 6200 - looking to replace this with something that idles at lower energy - can't stand the card being as hot as it is, with no screens attached.

    Now having lived with that machine for a few years (previously it was running only 7 disks and a sempron single core on it, before that there was a pre-cursor server that was running on different celerons and as little as 32MB of RAM) I am currently looking at options to make the disks more accessible. Something this article doesn't touch on, is with many disks come many deaths. Which is where a hot-plug cage really comes into its own. So I'm on the look-out for affordable backplanes with 120mm fans which I can replace 1:1 with two of the 4-in-3s (my IDE disks will have less use in a hot swap cage ;) )
  • Death666Angel - Sunday, September 4, 2011 - link

    That's a nice coincidence. I just ordered my file server stuff this week and it got here on Friday. So far I just put it together, haven't turned it on, yet (exam stress).
    I haven't read this article, hope my stuff isn't too useless. ;-)
    Just a fyi, here is the system I have:
    - Sharkoon T9, 9 x 5.25"!!
    - AMD Phenom II X4 840 (fake Phenom btw)
    - Asus M4A88TD-V EVO/USB3, which supports ECC memory
    - 2x4GB Kingston DDR3-ECC 1333MHz RAM
    - 2 x IcyDock 5 in 3 Backplane (MB455SPF-B)
    - Intel Gigabit CT Desktop Adapter for PCI-E x1
    - A300 Couger PSU (staggered spin-up ftw! I just hope it works out ;-))
    - Highpoint Rocketraid 2680SGL + 2 MiniSAS to 4xSATA cables

    I'll use 8 2TB HDDs for a RAID5 with Linux Ubuntu, at least that's the plan. I'll also get a UPS soon. I have enough space to upgrade to a second raid adapter (the motherboard has 2 PCI-E slots and I hope the graphics slot will be accepted) and have 15 HDDs in the 9 5.25" trays and I can cram one additional one in there for sure ;-).
  • Rick83 - Sunday, September 4, 2011 - link

    That's a big RAID-5.
    Those are pretty risky: Rebuilds take a long time, and are dependant upon all other disks surviving that long.
    If you really want to go the way of 'one big RAID 5', I'd propose to go with 7 disks and keep one as hot spare. That way at least the rebuild will start right as the first disk dies, minimizing somewhat that other disks deteriorate gravely until a replacement disk is there.
    In general I'd stop with level 5 at 6 disks though. Consider Going with two 4-disk level 5's or a level 6 also.
    Ideally of course you'd have two level 5's where one is a regular back-up of the other, but using a different file system.
  • qoonik - Sunday, September 4, 2011 - link

    Also consider software protection like flexraid http://wiki.flexraid.com/.
  • Death666Angel - Monday, September 5, 2011 - link

    Yeah, my ideal solution was to go with RAID6 where 2 disks could fail (and of course a real RAID controller with a XOR unit and 16 sata ports) but that would have cost about 4 to 6 times the price of the 2680.
    I haven't heard good things about the spare disks, so I would rather go with 2 4HDD RAID5s. But I will do some testing before setting it up, I have 4 empty 2TB drives and will play around with pulling a disk out, having the array rebuilt etc. and then I'll decide which way to go.
    Luckily, the only sensitive, non-easily recoverable data will be my photos and probably some system images which will be backed up regularly. The music and videos can easily be ripped from my collection again. It will be time lost, but not inrecoverable :-).
    As for software RAID, I haven't heard of flexraid. I looked into FreeNAS and ZFS and that wasn't up my ally. Very powerful filesystem, but FreeNAS is too limited to just providing a NAS. I would like to have the option of going full server with this too, hosting different things. And the linux port of ZFS isn't stable as far as I heard, so that was out of the question.
    With the hardware controller I know that I am not OS dependant and all that I read is that in a case of failure, modern raid controllers can also be switched easily by a model from the same maker and not lose any data (which I heard wasn't the case a few years/decades back). :-)
  • alpha754293 - Tuesday, September 6, 2011 - link

    My current system is 10 * 3TB (30 TB raw, 27 TB RAID5). If I go with anything else, I'd have to probably pile LustreFS or some other kind of distributed FS on top of that, which adds to the complexity, and cost, and another system, and power, and complexity in the parity calculations.

    A second server will likely go online and it will run rsync or something akin to that for incremental backups.
  • Lonyo - Sunday, September 4, 2011 - link

    You seem to have missed the perfect board for an Atom based file server.
    http://pden.zotac.com/index.php?page=shop.product_...

    6 SATA ports, x16 and x1 PCIe slots (for potentially 2 RAID cards).
    DTX means it should fit in an mATX case (assuming there is one with enough HDD space), or if you are making something custom the footprint shouldn't be too big.
  • qoonik - Sunday, September 4, 2011 - link

    also suggest supermicro X7SPA-H-D525 ( Intel® Atom™ D525 (Pineview-D)
    Dual Core, 1.8GHz (13W) processor, 6 sata,2x RJ45 LAN port, Mini ITX)

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now