BIOS Tweaking
One of the advantages of a purpose-built NAS is that it is built from the ground up in terms of software and hardware to be a NAS. Conversely that means one of the weaknesses of a DIY NAS like this is that it isn’t entirely designed to be a NAS, as a result you need to make smart hardware and software decisions to make it a better NAS. Some of those will need to be made in the BIOS to ensure more efficient operation as power consumption is a vital aspect of any NAS system as they will likely be on close to 24/7. Some of the tweaks I made and you might consider making are:
Performance
The performance of a NAS is going to be variable depending on a lot of things, these include: whether you’re accessing from a wired or wireless device, what standards of connectivity those wired and wireless devices use, what size files you’re moving, whether you’re reading or writing and so on. For our tests we’ve tried to simplify things a bit and show some realistic scenarios. Firstly, we tested LAN Speed Test Lite using a 1000MB file which is written to the NAS storage from an Intel-Gigabit enabled Windows 7 PC, then read back once the write is complete. On the upload the speed was very impressive and at 770 Mbps or 96.25 MB/s, this is able to take advantage of the Gigabit controller the NAS provides. In my honest opinion 96.25MB/s is probably a hard drive related bottleneck. On the download we achieved quite a lot more with 876 mbps which is 109.5 MB/s. This is more likely to be a network controller limitation as most hard drives will do 120-140MB/s on the reads and I know a lot of Gigabit NICs top out at 850-900 mbps on this test based on my experiences with a lot of motherboards I have reviewed.
Onto a more real world test and I tried moving a 2GB 1080p film from an Intel-Gigabit Windows 7 PC to the NAS, then read the same file back from the NAS to a different directory on the Windows 7 PC. This test gave similar results to the LAN Speed Test Lite benchmark revealing the read is a lot faster than the write at 111.1 MB/s (888.8 mbps) while the write sat at 89.6 MB/s (716.8 mbps). Again I believe the hard drive is the limiting factor on the write while the Gigabit ethernet limits the read. Either way though these are some seriously fast speeds but the obvious thing worth noting is to get these you’re going to need:
Remember any network file transfer is only as fast as the slowest link in the chain, the important thing is to consider the pathways taken between the server (the DIY NAS) and the client (the system sending or receiving files from the server). WiFi transfers (such as to phones, tablets, laptops and so on) will be limited by the speed of the wireless adapter on those client devices, typically these will be 802.11 N so will be much slower than wired transfers.
Power Consumption
Moving on to the power consumption and the results are fairly impressive, even when compared to dedicated NAS systems. Despite this being a fully fledged computer system we see just 39.5W with the NAS server in idle and always-on hard drives. You can set the hard drives to sleep on inactivity but this is known to reduce hard drive life-span so we’ve left them always on. Below you can see that the NAS box never really exceeded 50W under load which is fairly impressive. These tests were all performed from one client machine, if you added additional read and write tasks from additional clients you would probably be able to add more to the power consumption, but I think the take home message is that the system is incredibly power efficient. This is down to two main things:
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