I recently purchased a Dell R730. My plan was to run a few VMs, and use the 8 drive bays as a a large RAID array. I have been getting to know Proxmox, which i dont really have any complaints about, over the past few months. I currently have 4 8TB drives set up in a ZFS pool in a TrueNAS core VM. It has become full. Last night I went to expand the pool capacity and I find out that its not possible to just add a drive. So now ive been reading about UnRaid, which has that capability. I think i know the right thing to do, but i wanted to hear other peoples opinions on the matter. Should i start fresh with a bare metal unraid install, or should i run unraid as a VM in Proxmox? Im kind of disappointed that truenas pools cannot be easily expanded as i just spent a few months working kinks out with proxmox and truenas

    • ffimmano@alien.topOPB
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      11 months ago

      Really? I don’t know how I feel about that. I guess that’s ok? It seems many people use unraid and like it. If I installed it as a vm would it run off a thumb drive? I made the decision to switch to bare metal unraid as it seems to fit my use case better than truenas. I’m currently moving everything to my older server.

  • will_a113@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    11 months ago

    This isn’t a limitation of TrueNAS, but rather of ZFS itself. A new ZFS feature that allows expanding the pool one drive at a time has been in the works for a long time now and is supposed to be rolling out really soon (as it has been for the past 2-3 years I think), but as of right now it can’t be done on any NAS solution that uses ZFS.

    As you noted, UnRAID can do it - because it uses a different kind of data+parity system (you can continue to add a drive at a time as long as the largest drive has your parity data, I think). If you were comfortable running TrueNAS in a VM then you should have no problem running UnRAID the same way. In fact, it will probably be faster just because it’s less resource intensive (and certainly less RAM intensive than ZFS)

  • cjchico@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    11 months ago

    You can “expand” it by increasing the capacity of each disk, but that can get costly.

    Depending on how you have your vdevs set up, you could just add another.