databeestje wrote:
- Missing authentication. For all services, with local users and groups, A.D. is only required for Bussines users and home users should be fine with just local users.
- No web based management. Unable to administer the box using a webbrowser using http/https on a alternate port. many reboots required after configuration. Generate status pages on demand instead of generating them on interval. Add a meta refresh if required.
- No software raid support. This might seem weird for a home user, but people building a home NAS box are probably in the prosumer segment anyway. And Yes, I would want Raid 5. I need the performance in some cases and keep redundancy. I don't want to lose the important things _again_.
- Single disk write performance is _very_ low at 4 MB/s this is really weird since the read performance is up there with ~25MB/sec over Gigabit Ethernet. I am assuming write caches are disabled but even then a mere 10MB/s should be obtainable. This on different disks and machines.
It's not the network card perse as pushing 3 files at the same time equals about ~14-18MB/sec.
Cheers
Although I agree that for Business use, access control is mandatory, for home use, which is what I use NASLite for, I don't miss it at all.
As far as web management goes, it would be nice, but then again telnet is not that much of an inconvenience. I found that after thinking over the hardware configuration in advance and taking care of everything, reboots are minimal. I set v2 last night and had it up an running in a few minutes with just 2 reboots.
v2 has hardware raid support. I use a cheap 4port adaptec 2400a board for RAID5 and I am really impressed. I ve had bad experiences with software raid on windows boxes....
I find your performance issue strange. On mine I get 8Mb/s writes to the raid5 array and 7mb/s on a single disk in UDMA33 on a 100Mbit network.
The write cache is enable since it is clearly visible by observing the network monitor on a WinXP box which sends the files.