Thank you for the detailed comparison.  I think that I will just spring the
$20 for NASLite.  I am hoping to run it with 4x500G SATA drives in a RAID 5
configuration.  My concern has been finding a SATA card that will work with
either distro.   I thought I had found a card but it does not support RAID
5.  I am assuming that RAID 5 needs to be a part of the controller or will
NASLite handle that since it bypasses the bios?

Thanks
-Gary

On 4/26/07, CW <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Here are the big advantages of NasLite over FreeNAS:

(1) Considerably, and I mean -CONSIDERABLY- faster data transfers.

How much faster?  Here's some Disc Wriggler scores:

-------------------------------------------------------
Here's a snippet from my Diskwriggler tests using 500 HD frames under NFS.
NASLite v2 is twice as fast as Freenas. Results are consistant with Samba as
well.

Server Protocol Test Timing "+/-" (lower is better)

Naslite v2 NFS DW HD 500 Frames Write 78.58 Seconds
FreeNAS 0.64 NFS DW HD 500 Frames Write 181.51 Seconds +102.93

Naslite v2 NFS DW HD 500 Frames Read 66.44 Seconds
FreeNAS 0.64 NFS DW HD 500 Frames Read 147.22 Seconds+80.78

----

Naslite v2 Samba DW HD 500 Frames Write 180.42 Seconds
FreeNAS 0.64 Samba DW HD 500 Frames Write 342.14 Seconds +161.72

Naslite v2 Samba DW HD 500 Frames Read 66.44 Seconds
FreeNAS 0.64 Samba DW HD 500 Frames Read 394.53 Seconds +328.09

-----------------------------------------------------------

Another link look at it:
http://dan.bcapro.com/naspeed/index.htm


(2) way better UI to have easier web based management.

(3)   This is the MOST important one:  PORTABILITY.  NasLite totally
bypasses controller BIOS.  I have picked up 1TB out of a PC that was a POC
(Pentium II/400) which ran my NAS, and that machine shot crap.  I moved it
over to a Sempron 2500 Socket A, which is doing it now.  All of my data
stayed perfectly fine.

I tried this with FreeNAS once, I had a machine I had setup with 400GB,
and it shot craps.  moved the drive over.. and all of the data was
LOST.  This is because FreeNAS works more on BIOS level trickery then a
total bypass.. so your data is 100% portable on NasLite.  Now, before I get
comments of "hey, if it's crucial data, use better boxes.." that's true to a
point, if I lose everything on my NAS right now, I'd really only lose TV
shows.  So I wouldn't be destroyed.  Still, I wouldn't be happy.  If it was
something truly critical though, where I was investing a ton of money, I
would still want NASLite just for the fact that if I'm going to do something
where I want great read/write performance, I might as well shell the $20 for
the right software to do it.

I've played with a lot of NAS distros and firewalls with NAS attached, and
I haven't found any that handle as much hardware or run nearly as fast as
NASLite.




--
-Gary

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