You’re welcome.
I’m not sure if you’ll get a speed benefit or not since there is no way to prioritize the SSD.
You’re welcome.
I’m not sure if you’ll get a speed benefit or not since there is no way to prioritize the SSD.
DSM and settings are installed on all volumes.
https://kb.synology.com/en-us/DSM/tutorial/Which_drive_is_DSM_installed_on
Use two providers on different networks. They can fill in the gaps for each other.
Not just performance; I can’t imagine it would be good for five drives of a volume to go missing if a single cable fails.
I’m wondering if I can move my four current drives into the DX517 and save the volume. Can I just move the drives around without consequence?
I’m starting to think a second NAS full of SSDs would be best to host home lab applications off of instead of trying to make it work with my current NAS and an expansion unit.
I added 16GB to mine. It was recognized without me doing anything special. I run about 15 Docker containers in addition to the normal Synology suite. I only end up using about 3 GB of ram, but I don’t mind having 17 GB available for paging.
Chris from Mr. Beast is non-binary.
Link from below:
https://edition.cnn.com/2023/04/15/entertainment/mr-beast-transphobia-chris-tyson-trnd/index.html
I highly recommend storing your DB and pictrs directories on an SSD volume.
macOS
So far so good on my little one user instance as well.
In my experience restart are infrequent. DSM runs plenty fast.
When I have a container that performs frequent small read/writes, i.e. lemmy and pictrs, I put those directories on a USB connected SSD. That greatly increased the performance of the containers I moved to that solution.
My other biggest performance boost was caching my main volume with two NVME SSDs.