NAS
NAS Reviews
FreeNAS Review: Polished, Full-featured NAS Distro | FreeNAS Review: Polished, Full-featured NAS Distro |
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| Brandon Teska | |
| October 02, 2007 | |
Disk ConfigurationAdding and configuring disks in FreeNAS is very straightforward. Simply click the plus sign on the Disk:Management screen (Figure 4) to bring up the Disk: Add page. Figure 4: Disk ConfigurationHere you can set options like standby time, advanced power management and acoustic level (Figure 5). Advanced power management lets you set power usage and standby usage, a handy feature that gives you control to tweak drive power consumption at the cost of performance. Most of the time you'll be limited by network throughput, so powering down your drives to save energy isn't a bad idea. Figure 5: Advanced Power ManagementI chose to format the drives in UFS since it's the native file system for FreeNAS. Your other choices are FAT32, NTFS, ext2, or software RAID. My second choice would be ext2, largely because ext2 and its younger brother ext3 are the mainstay of Linux filesystems making it easy to find support and utilities for fixing broken filesystems. The file system you choose doesn't matter for browsing or serving files over the network. It only matters if you want to take the drive out of the FreeNAS box and use the drive's contents on another computer without too much hassle. Now granted there are some subtle performance difference between the different options, but for a small home network, they'll all perform about the same. RAIDFreeNAS supports software RAID (Figure 6), both common configurations such as RAID 1, 0 and 5, as well as complex configuration like RAID 1+0. FreeNAS also works with any hardware RAID controllers that are supported by BSD. Figure 6: Creating a RAID 1 ArrayThe RAID management features in FreeNAS are very well laid out. To set up a RAID array, add the disks under Disk Management and select Software RAID for the file system type. They'll then appear in the RAID menus and FreeNAS will let you add them to an array. To create complex arrays like RAID 1+0, simply add RAID arrays as members of the RAID volume. Tags: BSD, BYOD, FreeNAS, m0n0wall, NAS, open source, Related Articles:Server Elements NASLite-2 HDD ReviewBuild Your Own Atom-based NAS - Part 1 Lime Technology unRAID Reviewed New To The Charts: Maxtor Central Axis Build Your Own Atom-based NAS - Part 2 |
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