qal1h Posted July 5 Share Posted July 5 So my hardware is all setup. i5 13600k, 64GB RAM, Asrock Extreme Z690 Array: 2x18TB WD Red Pros 2x6TB Hitachi HGST 12TB HGST Steps already taken: Build completed and Unraid installed Memtest completed All above drives pre-cleared This is the order of play: Transfer files to the above drives - through USB or SATA connection to server Then enable parity Setup cache pools using pair of NVMEs (RAID1) and pair of SATA SSDs (RAID1) NVMEs for appdata and docker VM stuff SSDs for downloads and large file stuff Setup shares and users Setup Plex and torrent infrastructure VPN/Firewall/DNS/External access stuff Immich/Nextcloud/personal devices backup related stuff Backup stuff (last because most of the previous steps were about consolidation and have copies of it all already) Sound reasonable? Quote Link to comment
wgstarks Posted July 6 Share Posted July 6 18 hours ago, qal1h said: Transfer files to the above drives - through USB or SATA connection to server You may find that SMB is more reliable. USB disconnects on large transfers can be very frustrating. Quote Link to comment
qal1h Posted July 6 Author Share Posted July 6 11 minutes ago, wgstarks said: You may find that SMB is more reliable. USB disconnects on large transfers can be very frustrating. Interesting, is USB connections with Unraid unreliable? Why would it disconnect? Same chance as disconnecting as on Windows? Quote Link to comment
wgstarks Posted July 6 Share Posted July 6 USB disconnects are commonly reported but depends on what external drives you are using, what ports on your motherboard, etc. Lits of variables and you would probably need to test on your hardware. Usually USB2 is better than USB3. Not sure about USBC, eSATA and TB. I know some people are using them though. I avoid windows so can’t help you there. Quote Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.