this post was submitted on 22 Nov 2023
2 points (100.0% liked)
Homelab
380 readers
9 users here now
Rules
- Be Civil.
- Post about your homelab, discussion of your homelab, questions you may have, or general discussion about transition your skill from the homelab to the workplace.
- No memes or potato images.
- We love detailed homelab builds, especially network diagrams!
- Report any posts that you feel should be brought to our attention.
- Please no shitposting or blogspam.
- No Referral Linking.
- Keep piracy discussion off of this community
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Another reason not mentioned for having more disks is IOPs
For when you need performance along with the space.
If you need IOPS, you need SSDs. The days of getting IOPS from multiple hard disks have been over for a decade.
Ha, no.
SSD arrays absolutely have there place and I have deployed many for clients. But it is not the only performance solution. Like others have said capacity / performance planning is a must to know what you need and what you will need.
Hard drives are for capacity. SSD's are for performance. This has been settled for a number of years, and is why you see multiple levels of caching in front of any modern enterprise storage system.