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Forum Discussion
dhl
Dec 05, 2013Luminary
Inexpensive NAS for over 4TB backups - recommendations?
To date, we've backed up our ReadyNAS Pros using cheap USB drives. This has served us well over the past three years but as we move forward to much larger disks and volume capacity, I'm rethinking this strategy.
We'll be upgrading our systems to a configuration of 4 x 4TB drives in XRAID-2 dual redundancy mode. This will give us ~8TB data with two extra bays for expansion.
I originally thought to use a USB hub and 2 x 4TB USB drives, splitting the contents of the data across the two disks. But with the cost of a 2-bay NAS like this Synology DS212j (http://amzn.to/1f0NQh2) so low, I'm thinking this would be a better solution since we can take advantage of the device's faster I/O and built-in power scheduling. I wish we could afford to use our Pros as backup and buy new ReadyNAS boxes but we're not there yet. ;)
Any thoughts/recommendations on inexpensive NAS for ReadyNAS backup? Brands? RAID modes (JBOD vs RAID 0)? Any gotchas to consider?
Thanks!
We'll be upgrading our systems to a configuration of 4 x 4TB drives in XRAID-2 dual redundancy mode. This will give us ~8TB data with two extra bays for expansion.
I originally thought to use a USB hub and 2 x 4TB USB drives, splitting the contents of the data across the two disks. But with the cost of a 2-bay NAS like this Synology DS212j (http://amzn.to/1f0NQh2) so low, I'm thinking this would be a better solution since we can take advantage of the device's faster I/O and built-in power scheduling. I wish we could afford to use our Pros as backup and buy new ReadyNAS boxes but we're not there yet. ;)
Any thoughts/recommendations on inexpensive NAS for ReadyNAS backup? Brands? RAID modes (JBOD vs RAID 0)? Any gotchas to consider?
Thanks!
39 Replies
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- mdgm-ntgrNETGEAR Employee RetiredThose are timestamps for when the last full backup was run for each job in epoch time. You could use e.g. http://www.epochconverter.com to convert those timestamps to a date and time.
- StephenBGuru - Experienced UserI believe the values are the timestamps of the last full backups for backup job 1 and backup job 2.
- mdgm-ntgrNETGEAR Employee RetiredYes it will use that file to determine whether a full backup or incremental backup should be run based on the settings for the job specified in Frontview.
- dhlLuminary
mdgm wrote: Those are timestamps for when the last full backup was run for each job in epoch time. You could use e.g. http://www.epochconverter.com to convert those timestamps to a date and time.
ah yes, makes sense. I'm not gonna worry about it.
My RSYNC incremental backup finished in about 5 minutes, btw.
Since my partners are out of town and the Pro hasn't been touched since I started this process, can I safely assume that RSYNC copied everything, including any files that might have been missed when the initial NSF full backup failed?
Would differences between EXT4 and btrfs account for the differences I see in the amount of data I seen in the backup vs the source (2.94TB vs 3.06TB)?
If not, what else might be going on? There was no info in the NFS log when full backup failed. - fastfwdVirtuoso
dhl wrote: can I safely assume that RSYNC copied everything
Why not just check?cd /path/to/source/directory
find . | sort > ~/src
cd /path/to/destination/directory
find . | sort > ~/dest
cd ~
diff src dest - dhlLuminaryawesome. Thanks for the tip!
- dhlLuminary@fastfwd -
My *nix skills are self-taught and a bit spotty ;)
How do I specify the directory path on a remote server in the shell?
Thanks! - xeltrosApprenticeIt depends on what command you use.
for SCP it's host:/path.
for SMB it's //host/path.
man rsync suggest an FTP-like path : rsync [OPTION]... rsync://[USER@]HOST[:PORT]/SRC [DEST]
The script fast fwd sent will work if you mounted the distant volume. Otherwise you can do on each NAS then use scp to copy from one to the other. - dhlLuminary
xeltros wrote: Otherwise you can do on each NAS then use scp to copy from one to the other.
This is what I wound up doing - easier than trying to remotely mount the distant volume.
And the results show that except for a handful of invisible files, source and destination are the same. I did a spot check of one of the invisible directories (a subsonic folder in .webroot) and found it was 180mb. My guess is permissions may have caused the NSF full backup to fail and this along with some of the other invisible files is why I'm see a data size difference between my source and the backup.
Whatever the cause, I'm confident the backup is good and everything's in order.
Thanks @fastfwd and @ xeltros for the shell tips. Always glad to learn! :thumbsup: - xeltrosApprenticeLinux commands don't handle hidden files by default.
for example, cp copies only visible files unless you specify -a afterwards or choose to format the source as /source/*. The /* meaning copy of everything in the /source folder (that kind of writing is called regexp = regular expression), depending on the shell this includes hidden files.
Also remember the shell trick only checked files by name, the fastest way to check what is actually there. But if you really want to check file version you'd like to include size and modification date but that's a lot more scripting and unless your transfer sent back some kind of error I assume it's safe to consider the files are correct. You can also try to relaunch rsync with update flag.
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