Hello all,
I've got PBS running in a VM on a couple of TrueNAS servers.
In order to eliminate hard drive accessing clicking sounds when the NAS isn't in use, I'm looking to move the PBS OS VM and the TrueNAS apps over to some form of solid state memory (rather than on the HDD pool).
These are very small chassis (Supermicro 5018-FTN4) that I've already designed and 3d printed brackets for to get a couple more 2.5in drives into already, so there is no room for any other 2.5in drives. As such, the two options are USB flash drives or USB-attached m.2-to-usb adapters.
At $10/drive for reputable flash drives (I'd get two different models and mirror them), that's a fair bit less than the m.2 direction, so the question is: How write-intensive is the PBS OS? I understand PVE is fairly chatty with the logs so this is not recommended, but I have not been able to find anything about PBS on this matter.
Note that this is for personal use.
Thank you
I've got PBS running in a VM on a couple of TrueNAS servers.
In order to eliminate hard drive accessing clicking sounds when the NAS isn't in use, I'm looking to move the PBS OS VM and the TrueNAS apps over to some form of solid state memory (rather than on the HDD pool).
These are very small chassis (Supermicro 5018-FTN4) that I've already designed and 3d printed brackets for to get a couple more 2.5in drives into already, so there is no room for any other 2.5in drives. As such, the two options are USB flash drives or USB-attached m.2-to-usb adapters.
At $10/drive for reputable flash drives (I'd get two different models and mirror them), that's a fair bit less than the m.2 direction, so the question is: How write-intensive is the PBS OS? I understand PVE is fairly chatty with the logs so this is not recommended, but I have not been able to find anything about PBS on this matter.
Note that this is for personal use.
Thank you