@newt
Having a GUI on a machine with a 30 Tb ZFS volume is indeed pretty homosexual 😏
@newt
I can't come up with what role this machine might have — a workstation? Why so much storage then? 30 Tb seems too much for there to be any redundancy, I'd rather go for redundancy at the cost of having less space. And if it's just a volume for throwaway stuff (and not rare digitised music does belong to this category), why bother with zfs at all?
If it's a file server of some sort, why bother having a GUI — the less stuff you have installed, smaller the attack surface to worry about 🤷
@newt
Of course it does, but none of them are relevant for storing stuff like music and movies that you can easily download again — I'd rather have stuff like that on a plain ext4 partition on a spinning rust hard drive that spins down to save power in half an hour of inactivity, plugged into an ARM machine like Raspberry Pi.
Run samba and minidlna on it and you can access your library from any machine on the network — watch movies directly from the TV, no need to keep your workstation running.
@newt
> ext4 doesn't support RAID
That's the point, why bother with RAID if you can grab that stuff from original media (or illegally p2p-download it if that is more your thing) — in case you ever lose it.
> I don't have other computers on the network
There are still good reasons to have those things available without having your main rig running — like power saving.
I also really appreciate being able to enjoy music and movies without having to keep any "real" computer running.
@newt
> No, I can't
Queen? Yeah man, nobody but you has that in their collection.
> I should have two computers instead of one
You can even plug an USB hard drive into your router — it would be a poor file server, but still enough to listen to the music and watch 4k movie rips.
Don't have a router because power is cheap and you prefer using a computer with active cooling for that too? 😂
That was my original point, the role of this machine is unclear to me.
@newt
Using one computer for everything but the kitchen sink makes sense to you — okay, not that I can make you not do it anyway.
Also "I don't want to bother — I use ZFS for everything" would be a valid point, "I'm storing music on ZFS because it has nice features" — nope! What are those features that would make sense for a digital music collection? Replication, snapshots? 🤭
@newt
Oh, FFS, I'm not here to make you do things my way: if you like your setup — fine, to me it seems unusual — that's it. But if you think that the way I see it is exotic and what you do isn't, I don't think so — people use things like AirPlay, Time Capsule or plug in USB disks into their routers to have a makeshift NAS and use DLNA with that — my solution just isn't a pre-made consumer device, yet very few keep their music collection on a ZFS volume in RAID 5 array.
@newt
> It would be slow as fuck. Right now, the read speed from the pool is around 400-500 megabytes/s (3-4gbits/s) before caching.
And why exactly would you need throughputs like that for music? Want to have a fast storage with redundancy and advanced features and keep your music there too — fine, me? I'm really glad that I can listen to the music or watch a movie without having to interact with a computer I do computer stuff on.
@newt
> Then why are you writing all this?
Wasn't I clear enough about it?😂 The role of your machine is confusing to me — you use the same computer for everything in the book, to me it's unusual.
In my Xeon machine I have four identical disks, they are two pairs of disks, which are mirrored arrays: one is ZFS and the other one is Windows Storage Spaces, neither has any music on it. I like listening to the music without having to interact with a computer, I listen to CDs a lot🤷