Glimmerman911 Posted February 28, 2017 Share Posted February 28, 2017 I'm looking to replace my 250gig cache drive with something larger. Which brand(s) should I look at? Should I go with 2 x 500gig or 1 x 1tb? Quote Link to comment
jrd680 Posted March 12, 2017 Share Posted March 12, 2017 I'm looking to replace my 250gig cache drive with something larger. Which brand(s) should I look at? Should I go with 2 x 500gig or 1 x 1tb? I'd look at the 850 SSD, Segate I think. Not sure about 2 500gb or 1 1tb though. Quote Link to comment
trurl Posted March 12, 2017 Share Posted March 12, 2017 6 minutes ago, jrd680 said: I'd look at the 850 SSD, Segate I think. Not sure about 2 500gb or 1 1tb though. If you mean the 850 EVO, it is Samsung. Highly regarded Quote Link to comment
jrd680 Posted March 12, 2017 Share Posted March 12, 2017 If you mean the 850 EVO, it is Samsung. Highly regardedRight that's Why I meant. I didn't look it up. I have a 850 Evo in my laptop and it's fantastic! Quote Link to comment
mr-hexen Posted March 18, 2017 Share Posted March 18, 2017 Essentially any good brand SSD will be a gigantic leap in terms of disk performance if you're coming from a regular hard drive. Personally, i'd rather save a small fortune than pony up for a samsung drive. I currently use 2 AData SP550 (256gb) in a couple laptops and just recently added a SK Hynix 120GB SSD for unRAID, I've had 0 issues with all 3 drives. Quote Link to comment
Glimmerman911 Posted April 24, 2017 Author Share Posted April 24, 2017 What are the advantages and disadvantages of going with a single cache drive vs a pool? Quote Link to comment
JonathanM Posted April 24, 2017 Share Posted April 24, 2017 6 hours ago, Glimmerman911 said: What are the advantages and disadvantages of going with a single cache drive vs a pool? Single drive you can use XFS instead of BTRFS. Pool has to use BTRFS. If your server is perfectly stable and you never experience lockups or crashes, BTRFS is awesome, it has several features that XFS doesn't support. However... the chances of a BTRFS pool becoming unmountable with data loss or extreme recovery efforts needed after a lockup or unclean power down are anecdotally much higher, at least on these forums. In either case, single XFS or pool BTRFS, you are advised to use CA Backup and keep up with backup of any other data that resides on your cache permanently. Quote Link to comment
SSD Posted April 24, 2017 Share Posted April 24, 2017 I've also had good luck with the SanDisk SSD. Quote Link to comment
tdallen Posted April 24, 2017 Share Posted April 24, 2017 On 2/27/2017 at 7:20 PM, Glimmerman911 said: Should I go with 2 x 500gig or 1 x 1tb? How much space do you want and do you want redundancy? The default configuration for 2 x 500GB would be BTRFS RAID-1, so 500GB with redundancy. You can also configure the pool so that the second SSD extends the space available rather than creates redundancy but that's more useful for older mixed size drives rather than new. Quote Link to comment
DZMM Posted April 24, 2017 Share Posted April 24, 2017 I have a couple of the SK Hynix drives and they've performed well. I tend to find this round-up good http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/best-ssds,review-33589-2.html Quote Link to comment
Glimmerman911 Posted April 24, 2017 Author Share Posted April 24, 2017 7 hours ago, tdallen said: How much space do you want and do you want redundancy? The default configuration for 2 x 500GB would be BTRFS RAID-1, so 500GB with redundancy. You can also configure the pool so that the second SSD extends the space available rather than creates redundancy but that's more useful for older mixed size drives rather than new. Thank you for the info, that is what I was looking for, I wasn't sure what a cache pool was capable of. So if I buy another ssd like a 500g, I can ad that to my existing 250g cache drive, and have 750g of cache? I don't need redundancy as I am going to backup my permanent files off the cache drive every night. Quote Link to comment
trurl Posted April 24, 2017 Share Posted April 24, 2017 11 minutes ago, Glimmerman911 said: Thank you for the info, that is what I was looking for, I wasn't sure what a cache pool was capable of. So if I buy another ssd like a 500g, I can ad that to my existing 250g cache drive, and have 750g of cache? I don't need redundancy as I am going to backup my permanent files off the cache drive every night. Quote Link to comment
Glimmerman911 Posted April 24, 2017 Author Share Posted April 24, 2017 Thank you! Quote Link to comment
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