this post was submitted on 20 Nov 2023
2 points (100.0% liked)

Home Networking

189 readers
1 users here now

A community to help people learn, install, set up or troubleshoot their home network equipment and solutions.

Rules

founded 10 months ago
MODERATORS
 

This might sound stupid, but I really have no clue how this works because 90% of server related videos I watched either talked about prebuilt NAS options or skip the actual connection part.

So I’m currently getting into homeservers and I have put together a few build for a gameserver. Later down the line I want to include a NAS into that which I already planned for by having enough sata ports and space in the casing.

But looking for drives I noticed a lot of them come at 6gb/s read/write. But the mATX boards I looked at all come with 2.5gbs at best. I know network cards exist. Another issue would be that the boards don’t support pcie 8x, they either have 1-2 pcie 16x and 1-3 pcie 1x. Most network cards I have found were really expensive or 8x.

2.5gb/s is already plenty in most normal use cases.but I don’t feel comfortable deciding on a mainboard before understanding how to go about this bottleneck. Is adding 2-3 2.5gb/s network cards and option? Switches are a thing. So could you add 3-4 Ethernet cables from NAS to switch to router?

I’m really sorry if this is sounding like a joke, I hope someone give me the missing links of information to understand this

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

You are confusing yourself with hardware and different standards. SATA 3 can max out at 6Gb/s. Generic HDD works around 220mb/s, 1G network is 110mb/s, 2.5G network is around 300mb/s.

So to give you a perspective, if you have 1G as a local network, you can't max out a HDD capability, with 2.5G you double the performance, saturating the HDD, if you want more you need a generic 2.5" SSD, if you want to saturate the SSD you need 10G, in that case M2 SSD start to make sense.

Remember that if you want to go 2.5G, you need all the infrastructure of your home to work around that speed, not only the Nas.