itimpi Posted July 21, 2020 Share Posted July 21, 2020 I agree that a warning at 4GB seem a bit low. However going larger than 8GB or 16GB is a waste of money as it is very unlikely you would ever use all that space. I would suggest that the warning at 8GB might be more appropriate as 4GB drives seem to be rare nowadays. Quote Link to comment
Dr. Justice Posted July 21, 2020 Share Posted July 21, 2020 FWIW, you can still easily purchase 4 gb sticks, and I don't think the warning as written is an incentive to go out and buy smaller, but does a reasonably good job of explaining that there's no benefit to bigger. It's just that sometimes people will go all-out and buy "the best" and might stick a 64 or 128 gb in there, and that's totally pointless. In any case, I will let the actual unraid developers choose whatever value they want here. It's just a number to edit in the code. Quote Link to comment
Xaero Posted July 21, 2020 Share Posted July 21, 2020 16 minutes ago, Dr. Justice said: FWIW, you can still easily purchase 4 gb sticks, and I don't think the warning as written is an incentive to go out and buy smaller, but does a reasonably good job of explaining that there's no benefit to bigger. It's just that sometimes people will go all-out and buy "the best" and might stick a 64 or 128 gb in there, and that's totally pointless. In any case, I will let the actual unraid developers choose whatever value they want here. It's just a number to edit in the code. This largely depends on your location. Most stores in my area that aren't technology-centric start at 16gb as the smallest size now. I also use my thumb drive to store a persistent home folder image, and some other stuff. Even with that though, I've only used 9.7gb/128gb. And I'm only using a 128GB drive for two reasons: It's faster than smaller drives It was free Quote Link to comment
limetech Posted July 21, 2020 Share Posted July 21, 2020 3 hours ago, Dr. Justice said: - If the key is larger than 4gb, a warning will appear saying the key is needlessly large for no added benefit (you can still write to it). We will probably adjust or eliminate this message. Quote Link to comment
josywong Posted July 22, 2020 Share Posted July 22, 2020 12 hours ago, Dr. Justice said: - If the key is larger than 4gb, a warning will appear saying the key is needlessly large for no added benefit (you can still write to it). my retail have 16gb as smallest capacity Quote Link to comment
mihu Posted July 25, 2020 Share Posted July 25, 2020 On 7/21/2020 at 3:47 PM, Dr. Justice said: - If the key is larger than 4gb, a warning will appear saying the key is needlessly large for no added benefit (you can still write to it). No benefit? The drive will last longer due to wear levelling. Quote Link to comment
Zonediver Posted July 27, 2020 Share Posted July 27, 2020 (edited) On 7/26/2020 at 12:17 AM, mihu said: No benefit? The drive will last longer due to wear levelling. FYI: A consumer USB-Stick has normaly "no" wear leveling... ...and certainly not in the size of 4-8GB If you want wear leveling, you need to use an "industrial grade" USB flash-drive Edited July 27, 2020 by Zonediver Quote Link to comment
limetech Posted July 27, 2020 Share Posted July 27, 2020 13 hours ago, Zonediver said: FYI: A consumer USB-Stick has normaly "no" wear leveling... ...and certainly not in the size of 4-8GB If you want wear leveling, you need to use an "industrial grade" USB flash-drive You could also create backup folders on the usb flash device and 'mv' files there, then new files will write to new blocks; though eventually the flash will fill up. For example, say you're going to update the OS. Already the update process will 'mv' (move) current bz* files to 'prev' folder, deleting those files and making their blocks available for re-use. You could first rename 'prev' to say 'prev-20200727'. Now Update OS will create a new 'prev' folder and 'mv' bz* files there - noting that 'mv' does not actually move it just changes a few pointers to place those files in the target directory. This way over time you end up writing further and further into the device. You could do similar thing with 'config' directory. But in normal use the usb flash is barely being used. We have usb flash devices used in test servers that have been hammered for several years now and still work fine. Quote Link to comment
spazmc Posted July 28, 2020 Share Posted July 28, 2020 At one time I used NAS4Free. One interesting thing it did is partitioned the drive. OS / Backup OS Latest / Previousversion Today thumb drives are getting bigger buy the day. Possible use case Quote Link to comment
Frank1940 Posted August 6, 2020 Share Posted August 6, 2020 (edited) Is the new tool available for use by the average user yet? EDIT: Reason for question: https://forums.unraid.net/topic/95565-usb-installer-not-seeing-usb/ Edited August 6, 2020 by Frank1940 Quote Link to comment
Devar Posted April 25, 2021 Share Posted April 25, 2021 Also wondering if this update is ready? None of my hardware even has a USB2.0 port anymore! Quote Link to comment
Zonediver Posted April 28, 2021 Share Posted April 28, 2021 (edited) For what is this Installer for??? I can remember, i copied all Files to the USB-Stick (FAT32, labled unraid), run "make_bootable.bat" and done... but this was in April 2010... Edited April 28, 2021 by Zonediver Quote Link to comment
Zonediver Posted April 28, 2021 Share Posted April 28, 2021 (edited) On 4/25/2021 at 7:22 AM, Devar said: None of my hardware even has a USB2.0 port anymore! ...almost every MB has USB 2.0-headers on board - you need a USB-Cable with a 10pin-header. Even the newest ASRock B560 Pro4 has two internal USB 2.0 connections (one header). Edited April 28, 2021 by Zonediver Quote Link to comment
iXNyNe Posted April 28, 2021 Share Posted April 28, 2021 22 minutes ago, Zonediver said: ...almost every MB has USB 2.0-headers on board - you need a USB-Cable with a 10pin-header. Even the newest ASRock B560 Pro4 has two internal USB 2.0 connections (one header). Personally I wanted to switch from VMWare to Unraid. My host hardware does have usb2.0. But it seemed much more intuitive to connect a USB flash drive to my laptop and create the unraid usb from there. My laptop does not have usb2.0 ports at all. I only have usb3.0 ports. This isn't the issue though. The usb creator can see usb2.0 flash drives plugged into my usb3.0 ports. The issue is the usb creator cannot see usb3.1 flash drives and certain usb3.0 flash drives. The usb version (2.x/3.x) shouldn't matter to the usb creator. As long as your host's motherboard will boot from it you should be able to create an unraid usb from any flash drive with the required ID (I think it's a GUID). I was able to manually create the unraid usb by downloading the zip file, unzipping it to the flash drive, naming the parition UNRAID, and running the make_bootable.bat. My host boots from it just fine. I registered and bought pro from within the unraid web ui, and it recognized the device ID without issue. The issue is just with the usb creator not even being able to see certain USB flash drives. Quote Link to comment
wgstarks Posted April 28, 2021 Share Posted April 28, 2021 2 hours ago, Zonediver said: For what is this Installer for??? I can remember, i copied all Files to the USB-Stick (FAT32, labled unraid), run "make_bootable.bat" and done... but this was in April 2010... LT is also using this tool for their restore feature. Quote Link to comment
Zonediver Posted April 28, 2021 Share Posted April 28, 2021 1 hour ago, iXNyNe said: The issue is just with the usb creator not even being able to see certain USB flash drives. That's the reason, why i use the "by hand" method 😉 And for creating the unraid-stick, i also use a USB 3.0 port on my PC. On unraid its recommended to use a 2.0 port - not on the "creating PC". Quote Link to comment
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