NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
kevinfor2014
Jun 09, 2019Guide
What is the best way to increase IOPS/Throughput on Readynas
We are running into performance problems running multiple Hyper-V servers (vhd via SMB shares SQL etc) + multiple network backups on our readynas & would like to know the best way to increase perform...
StephenB
Jun 10, 2019Guru - Experienced User
kevinfor2014 wrote:
Then add 2x4TB SSD if we created a seperate flexraid volume for the metadata with the SSD (raid0/1/5 which is best?)
If you're thinking about metadata tiering (ReadyTier), then I'd go with RAID-1. 2x4TB is more than you'll need for just the metadata - you'd end up with ability to do data caching as well. I doubt that RAID-0 would run any faster. You aren't doing sequential access, so there is no read-ahead gains, and SSDs have 0 seek time. And RAID-0 would be more fragile.
One poster here recently tried ReadyTier, and ran into stability issues. Another option is to simply create an SSD volume, and migrate some of your shares (or LUNs) to it.
kevinfor2014 wrote:
could we still run the 2nd volume on XRaid2 (4x10TB 6x6TB) so we don't have the 14.6Tib of unused space of traditional Raid6
The FlexRAID vs XRAID mode applies to the entire unit. So you'd need to switch to FlexRAID to run either ReadyTier or to create a second SSD volume.
However, you can still concatenate RAID groups on the mechanical disks to use all the space. https://www.netgear.com/images/support/WP_ReadyNAS%20FlexRAID%20Optimization%20Guide_18May17.pdf
kevinfor2014 wrote:
What is the purpose of RAM on the readynas? - is it running Apps AV scans etc or does upgrading from default 16 to 64GB max create a larger cache before data hits the SSD layer.
Well, of course the RAM is used generally by the OS and the ReadyNAS application. But a lot of the RAM is used for caching. I don't know how much gain you'd get by upgrading the RAM, though it wouldn't hurt to try it. You should confirm that there are no warranty implications (it would void the warranty on the desktop models).
Related Content
NETGEAR Academy

Boost your skills with the Netgear Academy - Get trained, certified and stay ahead with the latest Netgear technology!
Join Us!