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Storage options help

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  • W This user is from outside of this forum
    W This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Right now my home server consists of a thinkcentre tiny and a single 6tb usb3 external drive.

    The goal is to eventually build out a nas, but that's not in my budget at the moment.

    Is there some kind of external device I can put multiple 3.5inch drives, has plenty of bandwidth for said drives, and routes through either usb3 or C and can potentially allow me to have a raid (or raid similar) setup for redundancy for the data?

    tal@lemmy.todayT 1 Reply Last reply
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    • W [email protected]

      Right now my home server consists of a thinkcentre tiny and a single 6tb usb3 external drive.

      The goal is to eventually build out a nas, but that's not in my budget at the moment.

      Is there some kind of external device I can put multiple 3.5inch drives, has plenty of bandwidth for said drives, and routes through either usb3 or C and can potentially allow me to have a raid (or raid similar) setup for redundancy for the data?

      tal@lemmy.todayT This user is from outside of this forum
      tal@lemmy.todayT This user is from outside of this forum
      [email protected]
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      I have a JBOD SATA USB-C enclosure that can do eight drives and has a fan. I'll follow up with the name in twenty minutes or so; not by it at the moment.

      It took me a while to find it when I got it, because my previous JBOD USB-C enclosure --- as with, apparently, most enclosures --- didn't have the ability to power back up on power loss without the power-on button being pushed. This has a mechanical button that locks in and doesn't have that issue. If that's something that would matter to you, I'd look for that when making a purchase.

      It's not a hardware RAID enclosure, but if you're using it on a Linux system, you can set up RAID in software on that.

      EDIT:

      https://www.amazon.com/Syba-Swappable-Drive-External-Enclosure/dp/B0DCDDGHMJ

      Also, follow-up point, but if you don't have a backup already, I'd do that and then if you still want a RAID setup for data redundancy on top of that to reduce downtime in the event of a failure, do that then. RAID won't guard against some issues that a backup will.

      W 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • tal@lemmy.todayT [email protected]

        I have a JBOD SATA USB-C enclosure that can do eight drives and has a fan. I'll follow up with the name in twenty minutes or so; not by it at the moment.

        It took me a while to find it when I got it, because my previous JBOD USB-C enclosure --- as with, apparently, most enclosures --- didn't have the ability to power back up on power loss without the power-on button being pushed. This has a mechanical button that locks in and doesn't have that issue. If that's something that would matter to you, I'd look for that when making a purchase.

        It's not a hardware RAID enclosure, but if you're using it on a Linux system, you can set up RAID in software on that.

        EDIT:

        https://www.amazon.com/Syba-Swappable-Drive-External-Enclosure/dp/B0DCDDGHMJ

        Also, follow-up point, but if you don't have a backup already, I'd do that and then if you still want a RAID setup for data redundancy on top of that to reduce downtime in the event of a failure, do that then. RAID won't guard against some issues that a backup will.

        W This user is from outside of this forum
        W This user is from outside of this forum
        [email protected]
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        Ohhhh hell yeah, I'm glad I came back, thank you

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