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Forum Discussion
Calvin386
Mar 31, 2018Aspirant
ReadyNAS 212 Back Up Question
I am using my NAS (Raid 1, 2 - 4 TB drives) attached to a R7000 Netgear router as a hard drive for my Microsoft Surface Book 2. As you know, there is not much onboard memory(128 or 256 GB) on solid st...
- Apr 04, 2018
Calvin386 wrote:
So it looks like I have a plan now. I will add an additional 8tb external hard drive as a redundant back up and reformat my current external hard drive to NTFS. Also will be looking into a UPS for my system.
That should work out well. On the UPS: you want one that has a USB output for monitoring. You connect that to the ReadyNAS, so it will cleanly shut down when the UPS battery drains. I happen to use Cyberpower myself, though many folks like APC.
Perhaps also switch to jbod (2 volumes) in the future when you need to recreate the volume anyway. You'd simply put some of the network shares on each volume (keeping reasonable free space on each). It looks the same from the PC, since it normally sees the shares, and not the full volume.
StephenB
Apr 02, 2018Guru - Experienced User
Sandshark wrote:
That mostly depends on what protocol you want to use for the backup. AFAIK (I don't own one), the R7000 does not run RSync, which is probably your best bet for backup.
I do own one, but haven't used it for a few years now. It doesn't support rsync. If I remember correctly, the performance was decent but not as fast as a direct USB connection in the NAS.
Your best option is to connect the USB drive to the NAS.
My second choice would be to connect the USB drive to your laptop and do the backup over wired ethernet. Unfortunately that can't use rsync, but you could use PC tools like FreeFileSync.
Sandshark
Apr 02, 2018Sensei - Experienced User
StephenBwrote:Your best option is to connect the USB drive to the laptop.
My second choice would be to connect the USB drive to your laptop and do the backup over wired ethernet. Unfortunately that can't use rsync, but you could use PC tools like FreeFileSync.
I think maybe you meant the NAS in the first sentance? As for the second, that makes the laptop a lot less portable, which is why I didn't suggest it. If you really use it more like a desktop, then that's certainly an option.
- StephenBApr 02, 2018Guru - Experienced User
Sandshark wrote:
maybe you meant the NAS in the first sentence?yes, thx - I've fixed that.
Sandshark wrote:
As for the second, that makes the laptop a lot less portable, which is why I didn't suggest it. If you really use it more like a desktop, then that's certainly an option.It certainly will lock down the laptop location while you are running the backup. I think it would be workable for a weekly backup schedule though.
- Calvin386Apr 03, 2018Aspirant
Thanks for all the replies. I ended up setting up my NAS 212 with 2 internal 4tb drives as a RAID 0. This is on a daily back up(using Netgear backup) to 8tb external hard drive connected to the usb 3.0 on the NAS. The NAS is used like a local hard drive on my Surface Book. My Surface book only uses onboard memory for apps etc...No local storage on the device. This is working very well so far.
- mdgm-ntgrApr 03, 2018NETGEAR Employee Retired
With RAID-0 if any disk the volume uses fails, all the data on the volume is lost. If you need maximum space a separate data volume for each disk is best.
A spanned RAID-0 volume only makes sense when performance is king and if your NAS unit and use case would give you signifcantly better performance using RAID-0 i.e. in very, very few use cases.
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