February 15, 20206 yr I'm aware that posting this on the Unraid forums may bring a slightly biased set of responses but i'm ok with that. I have a new server build nearing completion to replace my Synology NAS. Hardware: - ASUS WS C246 PRO LGA1151 ATX Workstation Motherboard - Intel i5-9400 - Corsair Vengeance LPX 32GB (2x 16GB) DDR4 CL16 2666MHz Memory - LSI 9201-16i HBA - Supermicro SC933T-R760B 15 Disc Hot Swap Chassis - Collection of mixed size WD Reds (3x10TB + 5x6TB) - Samsung 970 Evo Plus M.2 NVME 500GB SSD - Samsung 850 Evo Sata 500GB SSD Intended Use: - Plex server with the ability to grow in both storage and number of transcodes into the future (can add a GPU in future) - Sonarr, Radarr, Sab, Deluge media automation and aggregation - File storage (large landscape photography raw file backup) - Potential future addition of surveillance The Software Question: Coming from Synology and their hybrid raid system I have grown accustomed to being able to expand my array at my leisure with any size drive I like (as long as it's smaller than the parody drive/s) so naturally I land here with Unraid due to the ease of use that comes with the array management. I am also pretty familiar with Ubuntu, it fits almost all of my requirements outside of the array management. So that brings me to a crossroad in how to set up the software portion of my build. Do I: 1. Linux w/Unraid Array - Get the best of both worlds. Set up Unraid, create a Ubuntu VM. Use Unraid to manage my array and Ubuntu to install all my required applications? Positives: Can keep my mismatched discs, get the best of both worlds software wise, can have all of my applications installed on one OS for easy integration and cross communication Negatives: May be the most resource heavy? 2. Go full Ubuntu - Go to Ubuntu and just gradually grow a raid 5 or 6 array Positives: One OS, Can run full headless, least resource intensive? Negatives: Cost of replacing already owned discs, will use more power to keep all discs spinning all the time in raid? 3. Go full Unraid - Be a man, learn how to use dockers for all my programs and have them speak to each other on Unraid itself. Positives: One OS, Mismatched discs are ok, flexible array management and growth, Unraid sleep for power saving on an only randomly accessed server. Negatives: Fiddling and learning sucks initially, Sometimes communications breakdowns between dockers may mean more management required? This will be my first foray outside of a largely ease of use ecosystem in Synology so learning isnt a bad thing. I have a little experience with an Unraid trial, some Ubuntu experience but very little with VM's or Dockers so a little daunting at the moment. And although it seems I've answered my own question above, it would be great to have some light shed on how I can best utilize my hardware for my use case. Much appreciated. Edited February 15, 20206 yr by WooperDeeDoo
February 15, 20206 yr I use unraid and have a bunch of vm’s which I login to as workstations. Works for me. Vm’s just take lots of ram.
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