Ralph wrote:
[quote/]I've seen this kind of comment before, and I'm kinda puzzled, let me get this straight, your willing to spend $300+ on hard drives and not an $100 on peace of mind for your data with a hardware card? .
No Ralph, sorry but is not like this. My understanding is that NasLite is born to use old hardware as a shared disk. This is good but which is the value in having just a bunch of different partitions available via the network?
What I'm saying is that is a pity that NasLite does not implement a SOFTWARE functionality to create a Volume Set (not even a RAID 0) spanned between physical partitions/disks, this has nothing to do with data security. Also consider that with 100 buck I can buy a 300GB hd that, for some purposes, is better than an Hardware RAID card.
I do not think that the savvy users uses NasLite for mission critical applications so, the matter is, which market NasLite is approaching? Typically the so advanced home/small network user that is usually aware of the problems related to the lack of a reliable storage system (disks are reliable until you get one broken) and is using NasLite to share low value resources on their net.
If the things get tough, obviously you need to move on a more reliable solution and RAID is not always the best.
Bottom line, again, having the capability to implement Volume Sets or RAID 0 with a minimum of Share Management (I'm not even talking about basic share security) is something that Server Elements should think of.
I'm sure that most of us will be happy to pay 10 buck more (is a 30% increment on the pricing) for an advanced version of the product, also considering that there are other NAS software solutions that offers this out of the box.
I've also read your post about the shares enumeration (the one about the guy that has lost a disk and the various disk-n shares changed as n-1) and I think that this is another limitation you should remove. It is not acceptable to change the configuration on your systems if something goes wrong and the "buy-another-disk" option is not an acceptable solution.
What I'm saying is that NasLite is awesome in terms of performances but lacks some basic disk and resources management that will make the product nicer, more usable and more valuable without adding so much overhead on the computing capability of the processor box where is it run on.
Who knows, maybe it will be implemented...
Anyway, do you have a roadmap the registered users can see?
Thanks.
MB
PS: Yes, I'm running an LSI Logic SATA Hardware RAID Card