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EXternal Hard Drive Advice...
I have a 2012 MBA with a 256 GB Hard Drive...I am looking for recommendations regarding an external hard to use for backup purposes noting the following:
1. I have a WD ShareSpace 4 TB RAID 5 NAS which i) I use to backup my Windows computers and ii) I use to house my iTunes library. I would very much like to use this drive to backup my MBA but the NAS is not Mac friendly. 2. I will follow a backup strategy similar to that I use for my Windows computers...weekly full system backups...daily Home Folder backups. 3. I will likely partition the drive into at least 3 partitions...1 bootable for Mountain Lion install or the then current OS, 1 for TimeMachine and 1 for daily Home Folder backups. 4. I would appreciate recommendations as to the best rout to go -- Mac friendly NAS drive, USB 3.0 drive, thunderbolt drive, etc. -- and why. With much thanks, Joel Last edited by JoelBC; Jan 1, 2013 at 10:33 AM. |
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#3 | |
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Thanks, Joel |
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#4 |
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Your old drives should fit in the Synology NAS.
Which model, hmm. I have a DS212j which is a very popular unit, it supports up to 4GB drives. The 4 drive ones support RAID but have staggered startup so they're slow to wake from sleep if you allow them to spin down. The j series is good for home, the + will run a small business. There's a simulator on Synology's site to give you an idea what it has to offer. |
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#5 | |
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I also read on CCC website that for a functional system backup one needs to have the disks HFS+ formatted which I do not think is possible with a NAS...I will report ack once I hear back from CCC. Thanks, Joel |
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#6 |
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blueroom could you kindly describe your set up with the synology ds212j. Ive been trying to decide for weeks now which direction i should go with my media storage etc I just purchased a mac mini moving from an old dell. I have two externals that are almost full (about 2tb). I have appleTv in main room and contemplating purchasing another one for den or just have the mini connected directly instead of another appleTV. Thanks.
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#7 |
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I am still looking at NAS devices and all the devices that I have looked at -- unless I am missing something -- have disk drives that are NTFS formatted...are there any NAS devices where the internal drives are HFS+ formatted.
Thanks, Joel |
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#8 |
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I think Synology NAS devices are formatting new HDD as ext2fs/ext3fs which is Linux file system. Synology is the best choice for home nas.
Recently I bough an external Lacie 9032 3TB HDD for about £180 and it is USB 3.0 drive - very fast with my retina mac. I used some other manufacturers in the past but I have chosen this one reading good reviews etc. So far so good
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#9 | |
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Yes, I have a WD USB 3.0 drive and am backing up at the rate of 300+GB/hour... |
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#10 |
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user friendly, easy to configure, PLENTY options.
I did have Dlink 323 before, saw a difference after jumping to Synology. Google it, Synology nases are really popular. |
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#11 |
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Appreciate the response...the next thing that I need to do is compared read/write speeds between my existing NAS and a synology as it just might be time for a new NAS...
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#12 |
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smallnetbuilder.com has all sorts of benchmarks for many NAS's
Synology and pretty much every other NAS uses Linux's ext file system. It's all transparent to the client computers. Synology is very Mac friendly, has constant updates, lots of third party apps and IMHO the best user interface in the NAS business. |
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#13 |
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Appreciate that...the issue, at least as I understand things, is that the SYnology NAS does not come with hard drives so the benchmarks will be based on the drives that one inserts...
The specs for my existing NAS [which I am running in a RAID 5 configuration] are here http://www.wdc.com/wdproducts/librar...178-705023.pdf [see the chart on the 2nd page] ..any idea as to how much faster a new NAS could / would be... Thanks in advance, Joel |
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#14 |
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Here's the rub, fast GigE NAS's get their speed from dual network adapters running over managed switches (called link aggregation). Your MacBook does not support this.
Your WD Sharespace isn't reviewed on smallnetbuilders.com and the review here http://www.maximumpc.com/article/rev..._wd_sharespace calls it slow. Plus it doesn't work with your Mac according to your first post. PS the hard drives will have little effect on overall speed over a single Gigabit Ethernet port, RAID will also account for a speed hit. |
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It is also possible that some of the slowness is related to the fact that I am writing to a sparse bundle as I want to preserve the meta data. The questions...is a $600+ Synology NAS going to be noticeably faster as I would hate to spend the money and time to find that there is no improvement. Would greatly appreciate any insights you may have. Noted with thanks... |
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#17 | |
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1. I am using Cisco small business components in my home which are very verbose [i.e. router is a Cisco SA-520] and I am getting consistently fast internet speeds. 2. More to the point...all testing and results are based on a wired connection as I have a Thunderbolt --> Ethernet adapter. I really do need to dig into the comparative NAS write speeds. Joel |
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#18 |
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Synology is in my top five tech devices, but I didn't love the DS412+ for the following reasons.
1. It uses staggered startup on the drives after sleeping, this is good for power consumption and longer HDD life but it feels like ages before you can access the device. 2. Can't use the dual Ethernet adapters in Link Aggregation mode on MacBooks or iMacs. The former can be addressed by not allowing the drives to sleep, the latter you might be able to get creative as it can be set for link failover but you'll never get faster than about 80mbs (and that's with GigE jumbo frames enabled whose support is iffy on OSx and not available with WiFi) or possibly (I've not tried it) as your firewall, VPN and DHCP server. PS I Googled your SA520 WiFi and got this "Deadly slow in WiFi, Garbage, etc...) https://supportforums.cisco.com/thread/2172960 IMHO I'd start with trying out a new WiFi simultaneous dual band router (from somewhere with a good return policy) The AirPort Extreme, ASUS NT-R66U or Netgear WNDR-4500. Before you make any other changes to your setup. |
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Thanks, Joel |
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#20 |
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Hard wired GigE is a whole different ball of wax. Make sure jumbo frames are setup either off or the same on all your wired devices. Setting jumbo frames will speed up large file transfers over GigE on the NAS but not everything supports it.
I've got a 212j running beta 4.2 and it's fine for our household. BUT I'm an old geek and although we're now all Mac here I still drool over a few MHz and I personally would buy the 213 (yes it's overkill). The Wirecutter review is very good (212j) Here's something interesting about beta 4.2, it seems noticeably faster across the board including file transfer. If anyone can recommend a good Mac NAS benchmark tool I'd be happy to post my results. |
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**** Thanks for all the help and, to the extent that you can, keep it coming... |
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#22 |
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FYI, update the firmware (if applicable) to your HDD before installing it in the NAS.
I keep looking at that $420 DS213+ and wondering how much better a dual core PPC @ 1GHz is better than a single core ARM @ 2GHz. Also curious about how well the WD Red drives perform. PS worth looking into jumbo frames, your Air might support it (look for MTU under hardware) Your readynas has it here. It has to be set on all the wired GigE devices to function properly. http://www.readynas.com/?p=310 |
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#23 | |||
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1. I have a WD ShareSpace NAS and not a ReadyNAS...the User's Guide URL is herw http://www.wdc.com/wdproducts/librar...779-705006.pdf 2. The current MTU setting is 1500 as can be seen is the attached file. While I am still learning this pleas explain i) what it should be and ii) why. Thanks so much, Joel |
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#24 |
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MTU in simple terms is the packet size for data. It's like how big the trunk of your car is.
If you can change it on the PC and Air try 4000, reboot everything and see if your file transfers speed up. http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/lanwa...small-networks |
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#25 | |
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1. How will I tell that the MBA / NAS does not like 4000...for example, will it crash, etc. or is it simply the case that there will be no speed increase? 2. Why 4000 over 9400 as it appears that jumbo "needs" a setting of 9400. Thanks a lot, Joel |
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