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WGJOC's avatar
WGJOC
Tutor
Apr 30, 2019
Solved

Netger R9000 how long to to backup using ReadyShare Vault? It's been running for >20 hours!

I am trying the ReadyShare Vault backup routine on my new NetGear R9000 and just wondered if it should be expected for this to take a LONG time - this is the first backup?   I set it running arou...
  • antinode's avatar
    antinode
    May 01, 2019

    > I guess it's possibly backing up somewhere approaching 1TB of data.
    > [...]

     

       That's not a small amount.

     

    > [...] I'd like to know if this sort of time duration is normal [...]

     

       It may be.  You need to consider that you're dealing with the actual
    source storage device and the backup software on the Windows system, the
    network hardware, the file sharing software running on the
    (sub-amazing?) CPU in the router, the USB interface speed, and the
    actual destination storage device attached to the router. Many of those
    considerations vanish with a destination storage device which is
    directly connected to the source system. Without a much more detailed
    analysis, I would not bet that the router's USB interface is your
    bottleneck.

     

    > [...] and if subsequent back-ups are quicker i.e. is it one of these
    > systems where subsequent backups only change files that have been
    > changed since the last time?


       Almost certainly.

     

    > [...] NAS [...]

     

       I also wouldn't bet that a "true" NAS system would greatly improve
    your times.  My NAS experience is limited to small Seagate devices
    (NAS 220, and similar -- SATA disks, gigabit Ethernet), and I haven't
    done any large transfers to one lately, but I've spent at least a whole
    day waiting for an initial (Mac Time Machine) backup (smaller than 1TB)
    to finish.  Running the experiment would be much more reliable than any
    advice you're likely to get here.

     

       I _would_ expect a real NAS gizmo to suffer from fewer firmware bugs
    than the slapped-together mess of freeware which you'll find for file
    sharing on a Netgear router.  However, the primary advantage of a real
    NAS gizmo is RAID.  When your single USB-connected disk fails, you
    typically lose all the data on it.  When a disk fails in a RAID system,
    you don't.