Hive
Overview
FreeNAS provides storage via Pools. A pool is a bunch of raw drives gathered and managed as a set. My pools are one of these:
- single drive: no FreeNAS advantage other than health checks
- raid1 pair: mirrored drives give normal write speeds, fast reads, single-fail redundancy, costs half of storage potential
- raid0 pair: striped drives gives fast writes, normal reads, no redundancy, no storage cost
- raid of multiple drives: FreeNAS optimization of read/write speed, redundancy, storage potential
The three levels of raid are:
- raidz: one drive is consumed just for parity (no data storage, ie you only get (n-1) storage total), and one drive can be lost without losing any data; fastest
- raidz2: two drives for parity, two can be lost
- raidz3: three drives for parity, three can be lost; slowest
Hardware
Drives:
Pool | Capacity | Type | Drives |
---|---|---|---|
sassy | 0.2 TB | single | 250GB ssd |
splat | 3.6 TB | raid0 | 1.82 TB hdd x2 |
mack | 0.9 TB | single | 1 TB ssd |
reservoir | 2.7 TB | single | 2.73 TB hdd |
grim | 7.2 TB | raid0 | 3.64 TB ssd x2 |
LSI 8-drive SAS board passed through proxmox to hive as "PCI Device":