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    Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?

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    nas storage aetherstore rain raid
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    • DashrenderD
      Dashrender
      last edited by

      My machines mostly still have HDDs in them. 500 GB drives. Probably 300+ GB free. If I ignore the laptops (yes I know Laptops can be part of it.. AetherStore specifically tested their coming and going as part of their tests), I have around 50 machines. Assuming only doubling of the data, that would provide me with 7.5 TB of space total.

      Now the question is, what's the performance like?

      JaredBuschJ scottalanmillerS DashrenderD 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
      • JaredBuschJ
        JaredBusch
        last edited by JaredBusch

        @scottalanmiller you are calculating wrong.

        You claim that the NAS solution cannot be only 5TB because of growth of data. This is wrong. If the raw data to be stored is 5TB, then you need more than 5TB in AetherStore as well to handle the multiple copies that provides the RAIN.

        You cannot compare size to size. That is the wrong math.

        If you need to protect 5TB of data, you need 20TB of free space in the AetherStore RAIN array, more or less, to get the 4 copy redundancy that a standard install provides.

        The NAS only needs 5TB. Now the NAS does not have 4 copy redundancy, so you need to buy a second one at least and replicate for redundancy. The NAS does not need 4 copy redundancy because unlike desktops that go offline at random intervals, the NAS are supposed to be always online in a fixed location, so this means a 2 copy redundancy is likely sufficient.

        JaredBuschJ scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • JaredBuschJ
          JaredBusch @Dashrender
          last edited by

          @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

          Now the question is, what's the performance like?

          I never received any information about testing out the new version, so I have no idea.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • DashrenderD
            Dashrender @DustinB3403
            last edited by

            @DustinB3403 said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

            @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

            @DustinB3403 said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

            @aaronstuder said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

            @scottalanmiller Normally a 128GB SSD drive.

            So you'd need 40 SSD's at 128GB free space for 5TB usable storage. Which means you either need more SSD's in your organization, or to get larger capacity SSD's.

            Which approach would be better depends on if SSD prices take a dive, or your business grows and gets more equipment to add to the store.

            This only gets you one copy of data, not two or four as listed in Scott's example. For Scott's example, he'd need 160 machines with that amount of storage.

            I was descriptive enough for that to be clear, wasn't I?

            No - someone reading along, missing something and they think they only need 40 machines to get the same level of protection that Scott was offering in the OP. I was clarifying it.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • DashrenderD
              Dashrender @thanksajdotcom
              last edited by

              @thanksajdotcom said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

              @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

              @DustinB3403 said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

              @aaronstuder said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

              @scottalanmiller Normally a 128GB SSD drive.

              So you'd need 40 SSD's at 128GB free space for 5TB usable storage. Which means you either need more SSD's in your organization, or to get larger capacity SSD's.

              Which approach would be better depends on if SSD prices take a dive, or your business grows and gets more equipment to add to the store.

              This only gets you one copy of data, not two or four as listed in Scott's example. For Scott's example, he'd need 160 machines with that amount of storage.

              @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

              @DustinB3403 said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

              @aaronstuder said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

              @scottalanmiller Normally a 128GB SSD drive.

              So you'd need 40 SSD's at 128GB free space for 5TB usable storage. Which means you either need more SSD's in your organization, or to get larger capacity SSD's.

              Which approach would be better depends on if SSD prices take a dive, or your business grows and gets more equipment to add to the store.

              This only gets you one copy of data, not two or four as listed in Scott's example. For Scott's example, he'd need 160 machines with that amount of storage.

              I just have a hard time believing that EVERY machine in the company is on an SSD as it's ONLY drive. Even if you upgraded to SSDs, I'd assume your machines didn't ship that way, which means you should have spinning drives in them. Format them and just use them as data drives. Most ship with a minimum 500GB and it's still common to have 1TB drives in the machines. There's storage there too.

              Why would you assume that? I pull the drives out to reduce power consumption and cooling costs.

              JaredBuschJ scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @DustinB3403
                last edited by

                @DustinB3403 said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                @aaronstuder said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                @scottalanmiller Normally a 128GB SSD drive.

                So you'd need 40 SSD's at 128GB free space for 5TB usable storage. Which means you either need more SSD's in your organization, or to get larger capacity SSD's.

                Which approach would be better depends on if SSD prices take a dive, or your business grows and gets more equipment to add to the store.

                Right. If you are short on total, you need to consider the cost of adding more. One or two large drives would go a long way without offsetting the cost too much. If you need too many, it swings.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • JaredBuschJ
                  JaredBusch @Dashrender
                  last edited by

                  @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                  @thanksajdotcom said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                  @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                  @DustinB3403 said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                  @aaronstuder said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                  @scottalanmiller Normally a 128GB SSD drive.

                  So you'd need 40 SSD's at 128GB free space for 5TB usable storage. Which means you either need more SSD's in your organization, or to get larger capacity SSD's.

                  Which approach would be better depends on if SSD prices take a dive, or your business grows and gets more equipment to add to the store.

                  This only gets you one copy of data, not two or four as listed in Scott's example. For Scott's example, he'd need 160 machines with that amount of storage.

                  @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                  @DustinB3403 said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                  @aaronstuder said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                  @scottalanmiller Normally a 128GB SSD drive.

                  So you'd need 40 SSD's at 128GB free space for 5TB usable storage. Which means you either need more SSD's in your organization, or to get larger capacity SSD's.

                  Which approach would be better depends on if SSD prices take a dive, or your business grows and gets more equipment to add to the store.

                  This only gets you one copy of data, not two or four as listed in Scott's example. For Scott's example, he'd need 160 machines with that amount of storage.

                  I just have a hard time believing that EVERY machine in the company is on an SSD as it's ONLY drive. Even if you upgraded to SSDs, I'd assume your machines didn't ship that way, which means you should have spinning drives in them. Format them and just use them as data drives. Most ship with a minimum 500GB and it's still common to have 1TB drives in the machines. There's storage there too.

                  Why would you assume that? I pull the drives out to reduce power consumption and cooling costs.

                  I never leave 2nd drives in.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • JaredBuschJ
                    JaredBusch @JaredBusch
                    last edited by

                    @JaredBusch said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                    @scottalanmiller you are calculating wrong.

                    You claim that the NAS solution cannot be only 5TB because of growth of data. This is wrong. If the raw data to be stored is 5TB, then you need more than 5TB in AetherStore as well to handle the multiple copies that provides the RAIN.

                    You cannot compare size to size. That is the wrong math.

                    If you need to protect 5TB of data, you need 20TB of free space in the AetherStore RAIN array, more or less, to get the 4 copy redundancy that a standard install provides.

                    The NAS only needs 5TB. Now the NAS does not have 4 copy redundancy, so you need to buy a second one at least and replicate for redundancy. The NAS does not need 4 copy redundancy because unlike desktops that go offline at random intervals, the NAS are supposed to be always online in a fixed location, so this means a 2 copy redundancy is likely sufficient.

                    Conversely, if you only need 5TB total on AetherStore, that means you only 1.5TB or so on the NAS.

                    scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller @JaredBusch
                      last edited by

                      @JaredBusch said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                      @JaredBusch said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                      @scottalanmiller you are calculating wrong.

                      You claim that the NAS solution cannot be only 5TB because of growth of data. This is wrong. If the raw data to be stored is 5TB, then you need more than 5TB in AetherStore as well to handle the multiple copies that provides the RAIN.

                      You cannot compare size to size. That is the wrong math.

                      If you need to protect 5TB of data, you need 20TB of free space in the AetherStore RAIN array, more or less, to get the 4 copy redundancy that a standard install provides.

                      The NAS only needs 5TB. Now the NAS does not have 4 copy redundancy, so you need to buy a second one at least and replicate for redundancy. The NAS does not need 4 copy redundancy because unlike desktops that go offline at random intervals, the NAS are supposed to be always online in a fixed location, so this means a 2 copy redundancy is likely sufficient.

                      Conversely, if you only need 5TB total on AetherStore, that means you only 1.5TB or so on the NAS.

                      Depends how you look at it. For 5TB usable you need 20TB raw in either case. It's four copies both ways.

                      JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                        last edited by

                        @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                        @thanksajdotcom said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                        @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                        @DustinB3403 said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                        @aaronstuder said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                        @scottalanmiller Normally a 128GB SSD drive.

                        So you'd need 40 SSD's at 128GB free space for 5TB usable storage. Which means you either need more SSD's in your organization, or to get larger capacity SSD's.

                        Which approach would be better depends on if SSD prices take a dive, or your business grows and gets more equipment to add to the store.

                        This only gets you one copy of data, not two or four as listed in Scott's example. For Scott's example, he'd need 160 machines with that amount of storage.

                        @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                        @DustinB3403 said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                        @aaronstuder said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                        @scottalanmiller Normally a 128GB SSD drive.

                        So you'd need 40 SSD's at 128GB free space for 5TB usable storage. Which means you either need more SSD's in your organization, or to get larger capacity SSD's.

                        Which approach would be better depends on if SSD prices take a dive, or your business grows and gets more equipment to add to the store.

                        This only gets you one copy of data, not two or four as listed in Scott's example. For Scott's example, he'd need 160 machines with that amount of storage.

                        I just have a hard time believing that EVERY machine in the company is on an SSD as it's ONLY drive. Even if you upgraded to SSDs, I'd assume your machines didn't ship that way, which means you should have spinning drives in them. Format them and just use them as data drives. Most ship with a minimum 500GB and it's still common to have 1TB drives in the machines. There's storage there too.

                        Why would you assume that? I pull the drives out to reduce power consumption and cooling costs.

                        What do you do with them?

                        DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • JaredBuschJ
                          JaredBusch @scottalanmiller
                          last edited by

                          @scottalanmiller said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                          @JaredBusch said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                          @JaredBusch said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                          @scottalanmiller you are calculating wrong.

                          You claim that the NAS solution cannot be only 5TB because of growth of data. This is wrong. If the raw data to be stored is 5TB, then you need more than 5TB in AetherStore as well to handle the multiple copies that provides the RAIN.

                          You cannot compare size to size. That is the wrong math.

                          If you need to protect 5TB of data, you need 20TB of free space in the AetherStore RAIN array, more or less, to get the 4 copy redundancy that a standard install provides.

                          The NAS only needs 5TB. Now the NAS does not have 4 copy redundancy, so you need to buy a second one at least and replicate for redundancy. The NAS does not need 4 copy redundancy because unlike desktops that go offline at random intervals, the NAS are supposed to be always online in a fixed location, so this means a 2 copy redundancy is likely sufficient.

                          Conversely, if you only need 5TB total on AetherStore, that means you only 1.5TB or so on the NAS.

                          Depends how you look at it. For 5TB usable you need 20TB raw in either case. It's four copies both ways.

                          No, it is not 4 copies either way. I specifically called out that point in my post.

                          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • DashrenderD
                            Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                            last edited by Dashrender

                            @scottalanmiller said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                            @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                            @thanksajdotcom said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                            @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                            @DustinB3403 said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                            @aaronstuder said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                            @scottalanmiller Normally a 128GB SSD drive.

                            So you'd need 40 SSD's at 128GB free space for 5TB usable storage. Which means you either need more SSD's in your organization, or to get larger capacity SSD's.

                            Which approach would be better depends on if SSD prices take a dive, or your business grows and gets more equipment to add to the store.

                            This only gets you one copy of data, not two or four as listed in Scott's example. For Scott's example, he'd need 160 machines with that amount of storage.

                            @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                            @DustinB3403 said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                            @aaronstuder said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                            @scottalanmiller Normally a 128GB SSD drive.

                            So you'd need 40 SSD's at 128GB free space for 5TB usable storage. Which means you either need more SSD's in your organization, or to get larger capacity SSD's.

                            Which approach would be better depends on if SSD prices take a dive, or your business grows and gets more equipment to add to the store.

                            This only gets you one copy of data, not two or four as listed in Scott's example. For Scott's example, he'd need 160 machines with that amount of storage.

                            I just have a hard time believing that EVERY machine in the company is on an SSD as it's ONLY drive. Even if you upgraded to SSDs, I'd assume your machines didn't ship that way, which means you should have spinning drives in them. Format them and just use them as data drives. Most ship with a minimum 500GB and it's still common to have 1TB drives in the machines. There's storage there too.

                            Why would you assume that? I pull the drives out to reduce power consumption and cooling costs.

                            What do you do with them?

                            Not that it's been that many - around 10 total - they are sitting on the shelf. A few of them have rotated back into use in machines that had drives fail. Let's assume I have 6 left over.

                            yeah I could deploy those 6 and get 3 TB of total RAW space, or about 500 GB at quad redundancy.

                            After that I would have to spend a lot more on purchasing new drives than just purchasing a NAS and drives to get my 5 TB of quad'ed storage.

                            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • BRRABillB
                              BRRABill
                              last edited by

                              One of my main concerns was the fact that Aetherstore is basically ONLY local backup. So no offsite.

                              I guess you could backup the mounted Aetherstore store, though. So really no different than a NAS.

                              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @BRRABill
                                last edited by

                                @BRRABill said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                One of my main concerns was the fact that Aetherstore is basically ONLY local backup. So no offsite.

                                I guess you could backup the mounted Aetherstore store, though. So really no different than a NAS.

                                Correct. Both are local or remote. You can put AetherStore remote too.

                                DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • DashrenderD
                                  Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                                  last edited by

                                  @scottalanmiller said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                  @BRRABill said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                  One of my main concerns was the fact that Aetherstore is basically ONLY local backup. So no offsite.

                                  I guess you could backup the mounted Aetherstore store, though. So really no different than a NAS.

                                  Correct. Both are local or remote. You can put AetherStore remote too.

                                  Sure, assuming you have a second sight or a bunch of storage available in a server at a colo. 😛

                                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                                    last edited by

                                    @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                    @BRRABill said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                    One of my main concerns was the fact that Aetherstore is basically ONLY local backup. So no offsite.

                                    I guess you could backup the mounted Aetherstore store, though. So really no different than a NAS.

                                    Correct. Both are local or remote. You can put AetherStore remote too.

                                    Sure, assuming you have a second sight or a bunch of storage available in a server at a colo. 😛

                                    In either case you need a place to put the storage.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • scottalanmillerS
                                      scottalanmiller @JaredBusch
                                      last edited by

                                      @JaredBusch said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                      @scottalanmiller said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                      to awake a replacement drive.
                                      Low let's c

                                      await and Now

                                      Fixed

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                                        last edited by

                                        @Dashrender said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                        My machines mostly still have HDDs in them. 500 GB drives. Probably 300+ GB free. If I ignore the laptops (yes I know Laptops can be part of it.. AetherStore specifically tested their coming and going as part of their tests), I have around 50 machines. Assuming only doubling of the data, that would provide me with 7.5 TB of space total.

                                        Now the question is, what's the performance like?

                                        A lot of the performance comes from the main access node(s), so if those have fast drives it can make a big difference, or should.

                                        DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • scottalanmillerS
                                          scottalanmiller @JaredBusch
                                          last edited by

                                          @JaredBusch said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                          @scottalanmiller you are calculating wrong.

                                          You claim that the NAS solution cannot be only 5TB because of growth of data. This is wrong. If the raw data to be stored is 5TB, then you need more than 5TB in AetherStore as well to handle the multiple copies that provides the RAIN.

                                          You cannot compare size to size. That is the wrong math.

                                          If you need to protect 5TB of data, you need 20TB of free space in the AetherStore RAIN array, more or less, to get the 4 copy redundancy that a standard install provides.

                                          The NAS only needs 5TB. Now the NAS does not have 4 copy redundancy, so you need to buy a second one at least and replicate for redundancy. The NAS does not need 4 copy redundancy because unlike desktops that go offline at random intervals, the NAS are supposed to be always online in a fixed location, so this means a 2 copy redundancy is likely sufficient.

                                          I addressed all the parts of this, I thought. The AetherStore portion with this "So we are going to assume that for the size that you want that you have the necessary capacity in your organization, which is pretty common. If you need to buy disk drives just for AetherStore to have capacity, you will need to work out the numbers far more aggressively."

                                          The NAS does not need four copies, but to be roughly equivalent it does. Because the NAS approach is four copies in two nodes versus four copies in four nodes. There is more protection, not less, in the AetherStore approach. The RAIN rebalancing system is far more powerful than a NAS full sync replacement one, too, and far less manual.

                                          If you feel that the NAS approach with two copy redundancy is fine, that means that you are running two NAS devices, each with just a single drive, no RAID at all (other than a network RAID 1 at best.) That's an option, but I know of no business that would be happy taking on the pain and expense of buying NAS devices only to have to fully rebuild them with any drive issues.

                                          It's a stretch to really even think that you'd go with a single drive (or RAID 0) even on a secondary NAS device, but assuming that this was okay it would mean triple redundancy. You could do the same with AetherStore and turn it down to triple replication as well. Four is just a starting point and it matches the minimum I've seen from any business that has put in two NAS boxes that replicate - it is assumed that you will at least have RAID 1 on each, resulting in four copies for the NAS.

                                          I think that most companies would feel far more confident having triple mirrors on AetherStore compared to two NAS devices with one of them having no RAID at all, but a survey would be more telling.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • scottalanmillerS
                                            scottalanmiller @JaredBusch
                                            last edited by

                                            @JaredBusch said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                            @scottalanmiller said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                            @JaredBusch said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                            @JaredBusch said in Why Choose AetherStore Over a NAS?:

                                            @scottalanmiller you are calculating wrong.

                                            You claim that the NAS solution cannot be only 5TB because of growth of data. This is wrong. If the raw data to be stored is 5TB, then you need more than 5TB in AetherStore as well to handle the multiple copies that provides the RAIN.

                                            You cannot compare size to size. That is the wrong math.

                                            If you need to protect 5TB of data, you need 20TB of free space in the AetherStore RAIN array, more or less, to get the 4 copy redundancy that a standard install provides.

                                            The NAS only needs 5TB. Now the NAS does not have 4 copy redundancy, so you need to buy a second one at least and replicate for redundancy. The NAS does not need 4 copy redundancy because unlike desktops that go offline at random intervals, the NAS are supposed to be always online in a fixed location, so this means a 2 copy redundancy is likely sufficient.

                                            Conversely, if you only need 5TB total on AetherStore, that means you only 1.5TB or so on the NAS.

                                            Depends how you look at it. For 5TB usable you need 20TB raw in either case. It's four copies both ways.

                                            No, it is not 4 copies either way. I specifically called out that point in my post.

                                            If you have examples of companies that are concerned enough about their data to require redundant NAS units but don't care if their have RAID on them, I'd be very interested to learn about them. This is quite literally the first mention of this approach being used that I've ever heard of. I truly mean I've never seen a company go so far as to buy a second NAS but be okay with skipping the RAID in it. I can see the logic that would drive someone to consider that decision, but have never seen anyone even mention considering it before. And certainly never to do both nodes with no RAID.

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