8 TB expansion limit needs to be documented!!!

Please provide feedback on either our product, web site or this forum here.

8 TB expansion limit needs to be documented!!!

Postby alexofindy » Tue May 29, 2012 10:39 am

This is negative feedback. The reader is forewarned. I am an unhappy camper....

I have a Ultra 6 PLus that is about a year old. I now find myself in the same position as mearglen, as described in this post:
viewtopic.php?f=66&t=62917&p=352749&hilit=8+TB#p352749

In brief, I started using my system by adding three 3TB disks, one at a time. Soon, I had a 5.5 (roughly) TB volume, configured in x-Raid-2 with single redundancy. I assumed, based on what was written in the Readynas user manuals and the Readynas marketing documentation that I would be able to add new disks when I wished to expand the volume, up to the 6 slots in my system. I was unaware of the 8 TB lifetime expansion limit I now see described in this forum (but not in the Readynas user manuals or in the marketing materials on this website).

Here's what the Readynas user manual says: "With X-RAID2, you can start out with one hard disk, add a second disk for data protection, then add more disks for additional capacity, and X-RAID2 accommodates the new disks automatically. " I can find no mentioned of the 8 TB lifetime expansion limit in the Readynas documentation. Had I known about the limit, I would simply have installed all 3 disks at one, and then powered up my system, rather than hot-installing the disks one at a time, which is what the documentation implies one should do (I think).

I now have 4 disks in my system, for a total capacity of 8.3 GB. If I add a 5th disk, as best I can tell from what has been posted, I will get only about 2.3 TB of new space, and then an "expansion fails" message. And my 6th disk slot is basically useless.

Though I do backup the critical data on my system, I have a lot of non-critical data, which I would nonetheless rather not loose, and the "backup your data, do a factory default" strategy is not really a good option.

So...from my point of view, Netgear really should have explained all this in their documentation, so I (and others) could have avoided the current problems, by installing all 3 disks when I first brought up my system.

At present, I think netgear should be looking in to solutions. For example, is the solution suggested here
viewtopic.php?f=66&t=62916&p=353102#p353102
likely to work, or is it as chirpa suggests dangerous? Will there be a workaround in the future?
Last edited by beisser on Tue May 29, 2012 3:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: fixed http link
alexofindy
Advanced ReadyNAS User
 
Posts: 196
Joined: Sun Dec 03, 2006 3:10 pm

Re: 8 TB expansion limit needs to be documented!!!

Postby beisser » Tue May 29, 2012 3:09 pm

well the limit is not readynas specific. the ext filesystem tools are not maintained by any of the readynas developers, they are merely using them.
so until anyone makes the tools truly 64 bit capable we will not see expansion beyond 16/8 tb.

only other solution would be a different filesystem. no idea how difficult that would be.
User avatar
beisser
Jedi Council
 
Posts: 2314
Joined: Mon Dec 10, 2007 3:12 am
Location: Near Munich, Germany
ReadyNAS: Pro

Re: 8 TB expansion limit needs to be documented!!!

Postby alexofindy » Tue May 29, 2012 4:09 pm

Beisser,

Thanks for the response.

I sort of figured the limitation was due to the Linux tools, and was not "readynas specific."

But the important point I'm trying to make is that the poor documentation that came with my Readynas (and which also appears on this web site) very much is "readynas specific."

If Readynas had provided documentation of this limitation (I, like other users, am running in to the 8 TB lifetime expansion limit), I would simply have put my 3 new hard drives in my readynas and then powered it up, when I first got the system. I would be all set, and could then make full use of the 6 disk bays in my system.

But readynas (netgear) did not do this. Instead, their documentation states, explicitly, that I can start with one disk, and then expand one disk at a time. Which is what I did. And which is why I (and others) now have significant problems.

I am posting this both to vent a bit, and in hopes that Readynas will amend their documentation and marketing material, so future users can avoid this issue.
alexofindy
Advanced ReadyNAS User
 
Posts: 196
Joined: Sun Dec 03, 2006 3:10 pm

Re: 8 TB expansion limit needs to be documented!!!

Postby ndirons » Sat Nov 24, 2012 2:50 pm

Agreed. Expecting ReadyNAS buyers to maintain an awareness that they're running Linux under the hood, let alone to anticipate and work around Linux-specific issues, is an incredibly negative sign for the future of the business.
ndirons
ReadyNAS Newbie
 
Posts: 10
Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2011 8:44 am

Re: 8 TB expansion limit needs to be documented!!!

Postby chirpa » Sat Nov 24, 2012 3:39 pm

Marketing would not agree to this, even as a footnote.

"X-RAID2 Expansion* (good luck beyond 8tb growth)"
User avatar
chirpa
Jedi Council Alumni
 
Posts: 15491
Joined: Mon Sep 24, 2007 11:52 am
Location: San Jose, CA
ReadyNAS: Repertoire

Re: 8 TB expansion limit needs to be documented!!!

Postby StephenB » Sat Nov 24, 2012 7:04 pm

I'd rather see it fixed than documented. For instance, by having the system do an off-line expansion when the 8 TB limitation gets in the way.
User avatar
StephenB
Incurable ReadyNAS Junkie
 
Posts: 5032
Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2009 5:08 pm
ReadyNAS: Pro


Return to Feedback



Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests