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I'm a ZFS fan as well. I have a QNAP that has ZFS and two Truenas Scale servers, I use synchthing to keep them up to date. I'm paranoid about losing my music.
Wow, a lot of heroically complicated backup ideas. I can understand a need for real time backup for business data or a stable of laptops and desktops but for music too?I make a backup image of the C: drive every few weeks, individual folders can be backed up in the cloud and emails are on msn or Google if I ever need them but I haven't received an important email in years since I retired. I sometimes get new music once a week but usually once or twice a month. It's easy to plug in a USB HDD to copy the one or two albums to the backup, it take 5 minutes at most. In 20 years I never had an unplugged HDD go bad. There are stories of unused, unplugged SSDs loosing data over a long period which is why I stick with HDDs.Seems like if there is an active backup of multiple RAID drives constantly running, a drive will die every year. And most of the time the drives are not backing up anything, just humming in the background waiting to fail.Am I missing something?
2) I store much more than just entertainment media, some data of which is crucial (insurance information, taxes, blah blah blah). It's total is far too much to efficiently store in the cloud (although I expect that to change as bandwidths increase).
I don't think I'll ever be comfortable storing tax and other sensitive docs in the cloud.
Wow, a lot of heroically complicated backup ideas. I can understand a need for real time backup for business data or a stable of laptops and desktops but for music too?
dBPoweramp to rip CDs. Not free, but reasonably priced and well worth it. I rip in FLAC and another copy in AAC for use in car or phone. Approximately 700 albums which as FLAC is .4TB. Working copy is on HD in Roon Server. I keep three copies on other harddrives. No cloud storage. If the house burns down, I will have bigger things to worry about.
That's how I ended up with the current plan that I have.Oh, and btw, the idea of using an enterprise-grade server? Probably not. ECC? Check. Dual PS? check. Multiple hot-swap HDD bays? check. Array of fans that sound like a jet engine? Check - and deal killer. The first time it powered up would be the last time it powered up, as I would be told to get it the hell out of the house... Back to the other idea of an 'enthusiast' NAS case, mini-ITX mobo and silent fans.
It seems like a wise plan, and I don't think ZFS will disappoint. When my storage needs grow large enough, I'll switch from a mirrored setup to raidz. But it does take a long time to rebuild a raidz (or resilver a mirror). In my case, doubly so since my drive are all usb!
One thing I really wish zfs supported is erasure codes. It's raidz implementation seems pretty solid, but for larger installations (beyond what I personally would need) erasure codes would be much more efficient.
is there anything you'd recommend as a minimum to look for that would be unique to audiophile usage vs a typical data NAS?
I'm using a trash can Mac with 6 attached lightning drives. Performance much better than USB.It's running Debian with ZFS and each dual-drive enclosure is a mirror and then RAIDed together. Working decently so far.The company-I-work-for's cloud solution uses erasure code tech. I think MinIO also does, if that solution otherwise works for you.
Your mac solution sounds very interesting!
More details on my Mac solution.The Mac Pro is a MD878LL/A. No fans in particular, no overheating.Described on everymac.com https://everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_pro/specs/mac-pro-six-core-3.5-xeon-e5-gray-black-cylinder-late-2013-specs.htmlI replaced the OS on the Mac with Debian 10 on the internal SSD. Meant to dual partition but, whoops!, only linux on there now.Challenge is getting Thunderbolt 2 drives. I ended up with 6 of these dual enclosure ones from WDhttps://www.anandtech.com/print/6216/western-digital-my-book-velociraptor-duo-reviewI have a variety of drive sizes in them, ranging from 2TB to 10TB. I would upgrade some of them but the bitcoin people are driving up the cost of the larger drives.Under linux the enclosure's two drives show up as separate drives. I use ZFS to mirror the drives in one enclosure then aggregate all the enclosures together. Probably there's another better way than that but this was easy for me to understand as I was learning ZFS.This Mac also runs minimserver to server out my music and JellyFin to serve out some videos.I do use a laptop, usb-powered fan to keep the drives cooler.Fun thing for a propeller-head like myself to put together.