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klausla's avatar
klausla
Aspirant
Sep 09, 2020

Access to Netgear Readynas Ultra RNDU4000 withOS6

Hello together,

I am using a Readynas Ultra 4 with two disks. I want to access the data on the disks. But as the machine has only USB2 and the network access is to slow as well, I am looking for a way to access the hard disks directly via SATA. But I wasnt able to access the hard disks via sata. Neither under windows nor under ubuntu. I already formatet all disks and stared up with OS6. Thank you by the way for supporting that via the update files over here.  Has anybody done this or an Idea to access the hard disks. As I start again from scrap I can use any raid or jbod or anything format which netgear offers. Thank you for taking time for this.

 

8 Replies

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  • StephenB's avatar
    StephenB
    Guru - Experienced User

    The NAS uses btrfs - which isn't supported in Windows, but it is available with ubuntu.  Start be installing btrfs on the ubuntu system.  Then we can walk through the way to manually mount the disks.

    • klausla's avatar
      klausla
      Aspirant

      Dear Stephen,

      thank you so much for your help and answer. So what file system I should use to acces the disks via btrfs ? xraid, raid, jbod? after installing btrfs within ubuntu and connet the hdisks with an usb to sata connector, the hard disks should be seen as a normal disk? Like an usb stick?Or is there more knowledge necessary?

       I am using a dell laptop with an actual ubuntu LTS. 

       

       

       

      • StephenB's avatar
        StephenB
        Guru - Experienced User

        klausla wrote:

        But as the machine has only USB2 and the network access is to slow as well, I am looking for a way to access the hard disks directly via SATA.


        Getting back to this.  Network access with your ultra should be over 70 MB/s for large files, and it is the best way to access your files.  Of course, getting good speeds is much easier over wired ethernet - if you are using wifi, then the best approach is to switch to ethernet when you are doing a lot of file access.

         

        Direct access to the disks is useful if something has gone wrong.  But it's not something you should be doing routinely.  One factor is that you can damage the SATA connectors on the disks if you remove/reinsert them too often.  

         

        Also, you always need to power down before you remove disks for this purpose (and power up after the disks have been reinserted).  Plus you should be careful to preserve the slot order.

         


        klausla wrote:

        Dear Stephen,

        thank you so much for your help and answer. So what file system I should use to acces the disks via btrfs ? xraid, raid, jbod?

         


        You'll need to install both mdadm and btrfs. 

         

        The file system is btrfs.  It is used with all RAID modes.  Conceptually, RAID creates virtual disks from your physical storage, and the file system then uses those virtual disks.  Those virtual disks are called RAID groups.  With ReadyNAS, the raid groups (virtual disks) are mdxxx devices.  They start from md127, and go downwards from there (md126, ...).  There are also two other other RAID groups - md0 and md1.  md0 is the OS partition (the NAS boots from it).  md1 is used for swap.  Neither contain your data.

         

        What RAID modes are you using now? (XRAID or something else)?

         

        If you have one volume, then the normal way to mount it in linux (as read-only) is to enter

        # btrfs device scan
        # btrfs fi show
        # mount -o ro /dev/md127 /data

        If you want to mount it read/write, then you'd leave out the -o ro

         

        If you have multiple volumes, then you need to sort out the correct device to mount for each (md127).  That might take a bit of trial and error if some of the volumes were vertically expanded (and have multiple RAID groups).  But the btrfs fi show command should help.

         


        klausla wrote:

         

         I am using a dell laptop with an actual ubuntu LTS. 

         


        Note you will need to connect all the disks.

         

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