{"id":144,"date":"2011-05-08T11:00:54","date_gmt":"2011-05-08T10:00:54","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/base6.com\/?p=144"},"modified":"2011-05-31T20:14:08","modified_gmt":"2011-05-31T19:14:08","slug":"freenas-i3-setup","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/base6.com\/2011\/05\/08\/freenas-i3-setup\/","title":{"rendered":"FreeNAS i3 setup"},"content":{"rendered":"

Just finished building some new hardware to run FreeNAS 8.0<\/a>. As there’s not a huge deal of info kicking around the internet about working hardware configurations I thought i’d post my experiences.<\/p>\n

Last time I built a PC I almost built a NAS box at the same, but looking at the increase in cost of building a separate network attached PC and the decrease in performance from accessing storage via a LAN I decided to put a RAID array inside my PC instead. The RAID array (on-board Intel Matrix RAID from my motherboard) has served me well and seen me through 2 drive failures in the past 5 years without issue – fortunately the Western Digital Caviar RAID Edition drives I purchased come with a 5 year guarantee with Advance Replacement<\/a> (Western Digital will ship the replacement drive within 3-5 days, without receiving the faulty one first as long as you provide credit card details). Luckily my Samsung Spinpoint boot disk has not failed thus far!<\/p>\n

I recently upgraded my network to gigabit ethernet, so network attached storage now seems more viable, plus I have filled up the RAID storage on my PC (which is probably close to wearing out anyway and I don’t fancy having to find a compatible motherboard to get my data back out again)…\u00a0ZFS<\/a> seems to be all the rage these days, and so it seems like hardware RAID is redundant. Some forum research seemed to indicate that ZFS needs a reasonably powerful CPU and plenty of memory, which ruled out my hopes of building a low-power fanless Intel Atom system. Therefore I decided to go with an i3, and the Zotac H55 Mini-ITX motherboard<\/a> as it has 6 SATA ports.<\/p>\n

As for a case, I looked at a few options including the Fractal Design Array R2<\/a>, the CFI A7979<\/a> and the Lian-Li PC-Q08<\/a>, but in the end decided to go with the Chenbro ES34169<\/a>.<\/p>\n

I also managed to find a Transcend 2GB USB drive<\/a> intended for industrial use which fits onto a standard motherboard 10-pin USB header to avoid having a USB thumb drive sticking out of the back of the case.<\/p>\n

A review<\/a> appeared to confirm that the ES34169 would work nicely with the Zotac motherboard and an i3. When all the parts finally arrived and I built the system, unfortunately it would not boot. Some swapping of PSUs eventually confirmed that the Chenbro PSU was fine (it would boot a lower wattage system) as was the Zotac board, CPU and RAM (it would boot on another PSU), so the only conclusion was that 120W was not enough for the system.<\/p>\n

Fortunately, Kustom PCs<\/a> were very understanding and shipped me a 180W ES34069<\/a> (which has an external power brick) whilst I shipped the 120W ES34069 (which has an internal open-frame PSU, and is not available in a 180W version) back to them.<\/p>\n

I had already purchased a low-height CPU cooler after reading the ES34169 review, and this fitted without issue. The only issue I did have building the case was that the SATA cables on the ES34069 were shorter than the ES34169 and two were not able to reach the SATA ports on the motherboard, so I had to replace these with some longer cables. After building the system, initially two of the HDDs did not register with the BIOS. These were the two bays I had switched cables for so I assumed there was an issue with the cables, however after ejecting and re-inserting the HDD caddies the drives appeared.<\/p>\n

The ES34069 looks good, the translucent front allows the blinkenlights<\/a> inside to be visible, which include a power and activity light on each individual disk caddy, somehow magically driven through the backplane (I had always assumed these would need a proprietary connection to a RAID controller).<\/p>\n

On booting FreeNAS from a USB stick I initially had an issue with the system hanging whilst trying to load the network card driver, which seems to be a problem<\/a> with the i386 BSD driver, however it works fine with the amd64 build (which is required for 64 bit support anyway).<\/p>\n

So, I can confirm without further ado that the following setup works with FreeNAS 8:<\/p>\n