ChrisReeve
Explorer
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2019
- Messages
- 91
Hi
I am currently planning to upgrade my NAS to either 9 or 10 white label WD Reds (shucked from WD Easystore 10TB external drives). I am planning to run one large ZFS2 pool, resulting in around 65 TB usable space. While planning this, I am trying to figure out the probabilities for failure, but I have no clue what to expect with regards to resilver performance (MB/s).
So, with the following specs, what kind of speeds should I expect?
Motherboard: Supermicro X9SRL-F
CPU: Xeon E5-2630L v2
RAM: Hynix 24GB (6x4GB sticks)
Drives: 10x10 white label WD Reds
Also, I might upgrade my RAM and CPU together with the drives, to a Xeon 2650 v2, and 64GB RAM (4x16GB sticks, with the possibility to expand to 128GB later). Will this significantly affect resilver performance?
Edit: If it matters, the vast majority of files on the pool, are largers files (video files) with sizes varying from 100MB to 60GB per file). I would also be able to stop using the server while resilvering, if this impacts performance to a significant degree.
I am currently planning to upgrade my NAS to either 9 or 10 white label WD Reds (shucked from WD Easystore 10TB external drives). I am planning to run one large ZFS2 pool, resulting in around 65 TB usable space. While planning this, I am trying to figure out the probabilities for failure, but I have no clue what to expect with regards to resilver performance (MB/s).
So, with the following specs, what kind of speeds should I expect?
Motherboard: Supermicro X9SRL-F
CPU: Xeon E5-2630L v2
RAM: Hynix 24GB (6x4GB sticks)
Drives: 10x10 white label WD Reds
Also, I might upgrade my RAM and CPU together with the drives, to a Xeon 2650 v2, and 64GB RAM (4x16GB sticks, with the possibility to expand to 128GB later). Will this significantly affect resilver performance?
Edit: If it matters, the vast majority of files on the pool, are largers files (video files) with sizes varying from 100MB to 60GB per file). I would also be able to stop using the server while resilvering, if this impacts performance to a significant degree.
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