Have you measured the power consumption with a kill-a-watt (or similar)?
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I have the nas connected to a UPS that reports it's power draw and it sits at about 100W at all times. There are one or two other small devices connected to it usually, so the nas itself is probably using a hair less that that at idle, but still it's quite high.
This seems very suspicious, get a cheap watt metter and test it with that. If it still says 100W I would say there's something wrong in your CPU, motherboard or software. Not necessarily the CPU, can be the motherboard or simply your Linux is set to run the CPU at full clock all the time.
Btw, I have a Ryzen 5 2600 and that thing goes down to 20W or so.
I specifically had to set things up in the BIOS so that it would never enter any efficient power/sleep states. It's a bug in the OS I'm using that was forcing me to do it, otherwise the whole thing would lock up on me.
That said, I have some smart-plugs that do power monitoring. I can try hooking up the nas to one of those just for kicks, it should be accurate enough for this sort of thing.
Edit: Just measured and looks like I was about right: 100W under load and around 80W idle
There is an issue with ryzen and certain PSUs that when it goes to idle it pulls so little power that the psu thinks it's off and kills the power, it can appear as a hang. there should be an option in the bios to change it to "typical power" or named something similar.
Oh interesting, that sound plausible. I'll check out the bios and see if I can find that setting. Thanks!
It's called power supply idle control, worth a test.
I specifically had to set things up in the BIOS so that it would never enter any efficient power/sleep states
This is most likely why you're running at 100W all the time. No need to further measure anything. Reset your BIOS to defaults, update the OS / use Debian and you should be good.
It's not that easy sadly. The entire NAS runs on Unraid and the issue is with that OS. I can't switch without totally restarting from scratch which would be a huge data migration, and a massive PITA configuration-wise.
Eventually I'd be open to switching to something like TrueNas Scale, but for now I need Unraid's unique ability to run a RAID array with differently sized drives
Oh. This kind of issues is why I now run everything on Debian. If you're paying a license you should ask for support and bash them until they fix whatever is wrong with their kernel power management.
Even if you get a new machine you've zero guarantees there wont be any other power management or networking issues with Unraid.
Yeah good point. I've been slowly working to move away from Unraid for those reasons, and have been having fun trying NixOS.
Anyway, I just made a post on the official support forums so hopefully I can get this looked at. Since I initially had the problems many updates have come out, so maybe it's not a thing anymore. I just can't risk testing that for myself!
I've got a 3800x that has plenty of performance but also uses a lot of power and I'm seriously considering upgrading to a 5700G. It's about 170 from Amazon right now.
Also, I don't think you're going to want your NAS to sleep/standby, that's really not typical.
I guess that's a good point, but then is the right move to just get the lowest power CPU possible? I really don't need it to do all that much and rn it's hogging power.
Maybe not the lowest power possible... I wouldn't recommend running your NAS on a raspberry pi even though plenty of people do
I'm running a mini-PC with the N100, 12GB RAM, and 2x18TB mirrored drives on ZFS and it seems to work well.
How did you attach the drives? Is this a NAS?
I have a Terramaster 4-bay DAS
How do you implement bit-rot protection?
I am running my disks as mirrors.
I'm looking at the TerraMaster F4-423 which is basically an Intel NUC soldered to a SATA controller. It has 4x 3.5" SATA bays, an internal USB slot for the OS, 2x m.2 slots, HDMI output, 2x 2.5G LAN, etc. Comes with 4GB RAM, supports up to 32GB. I think it's the smallest NAS with custom OS you can get.
Can you put Linux (God's intended OS) on it?
Of course. The original OS, Terramaster OS (TOS), is Linux based and you can replace it with other plain Linux versions or a NAS-specific distro such as OMV or UnRAID.
Since this is basically an Intel NUC, even Windows might run on the thing.
It's certainly odd that your current CPU draws so much power if it isn't under load. I would try to investigate that further.
That said, zfs ram requirements are related to the total storage. If you don't have hundreds of terabyte storage, 16GB ram should be sufficient.
Okay that's good to know. Right now I'm only using ZFS for the ssds so it's only like 2TBs, but I eventually want the ability to migrate the main array which will be more like 40TB (raw capacity, so some will be used for parity)
If you're really worried about power use, you could switch to an itx motherboard with an soc laptop chip in it.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
itx motherboard with an soc laptop chip
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I've seen in this thread:
Fewer Letters | More Letters |
---|---|
NAS | Network-Attached Storage |
NUC | Next Unit of Computing brand of Intel small computers |
PSU | Power Supply Unit |
RAID | Redundant Array of Independent Disks for mass storage |
SATA | Serial AT Attachment interface for mass storage |
SSD | Solid State Drive mass storage |
ZFS | Solaris/Linux filesystem focusing on data integrity |
7 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 12 acronyms.
[Thread #471 for this sub, first seen 31st Jan 2024, 20:15] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]
How many HDD are you running? Set to spin down or no? Those spinning all the time add up quickly.
Sleep state and power States are different things... I've never heard of power profiles causing issues. I'd try keeping sleep disabled in BIOS and then look into what you need to change to allow the processor to idle/downclock. There's no reason this shouldn't work I'm aware of.
Could try undervolting as well.
Okay maybe I can mess with that. I think when I initially was having problems I just nuked everything I could related to power states just to get things working again. Maybe I can try turning some stuff back on.
I'm only running 3hdds at the moment, and they're setup to spin down automatically which does save some power for sure.
Lenovo thinkcentre? 🤔
Renoir and Cezanne PRO Apus can idle under 15W. I’ve built my NAS inside a Node 304 as well and use a Gigabyte A520I with a 5650G and ECC RAM because ZFS. Asus b550i works as well. As long as you activate both power savers in bios (cec/aspm/erp) your system will idle under 15W excluding other stuff. I’ve not seen under 20W with asrock boards. With a asm1166 m.2 adapter you get enough sata for the drive caddies which leaves you with 4 sata on the mainboard for cache ssds that you can mount between the caddies.
Honestly, when Unraid is the culprit, why not change that instead?
I would, and I plan to someday, but my whole storage system is setup on it and migrating would be an enormous pain. Also right now I rely on it's ability to create a RAID array with differently sized drives. Next time I upgrade, I plan go get homogeneous drives, so maybe then would be the time to move away from Unraid.
Hm, you could set up a virtual machine on whatever host OS and have Unraid run in that instead.
I've thought about that before, I've used proxmox in the past and liked it. The hope I guess would be that proxmox is better able to handle the physical hardware than Unraid is, and the Unraid can blissfully mismanage it's vCPUs all it wants! I don't love the overhead of having a hypervisor, but maybe it would be worth it in this case.
How much effort have you actually put into trouble shooting the issue? Maybe it is just a wrongly set CPU governor (performance, instead of ondemand or something else)? Or a certain kernel flag that have to be set on boot?
I've done a whole bunch of things but the problem is that the issue w/ the OS locking up was intermittent, so really between every change I would have to wait and see and risk downtime.
I have MSI Z270-A PRO and intel G3930. With 2 SSDs it was draining 22W, but after adding toshiba 12TB HDD it went up to 35W. Before adding HDD I was testing different PSUs and some were using 35W (instead of 22W on this one). Check if your PSU is overdimensioned like 1000W or something like that (PSU is super unefficient if you use it at <10% of max power)
Note that I dont have GPU
Regarding the N100 idea: https://youtu.be/Ppo6C_JhDHM?si=UHUs6jseifBTuulZ
Look for the 4 minute mark, but the whole video is really good.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://piped.video/Ppo6C_JhDHM?si=UHUs6jseifBTuulZ
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.