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Don't need to know if Hyper-V is better or worse than ESXI or whatever other option there is :p

Ok, So I've shown the boss that we can upgrade newer software while keeping our current hardware by doing some virtualization.

NOTE - This is not a huge corp - LOL like 20 to 30 Users at MOST. I know we could do it all on Server 2012 Essentials or SBS 2011 but we need full fledge SQL for the new database we are gonna be running and SBS doesn't do Hyper-V I think. ESXI I guess could work there but still :p

We have 2 machines running Windows SBS 2003 R2 (#1) and Microsoft Windows Server 2003 R2 Enterprise (#2):

#1 Roles:

AD/DHCP/DNS/SharePoint(including SQL built in)

#2 Roles:

SQL 2005 for a program we use and File Sharing.

#1 runs on a Dell PowerEdge 2950 Dual (2) Quad Core Xeon 5405 - with 4GB now (Max is 32/64GB - can't figure out which!) 3x 15K SAS 146GB in RAID 5*

#2 runs on a Dell PowerEdge 2950 Single Quad Core Xeon 5430 - 8GB now. 3x SAS 15K 300GB in RAID 5*

* = I know RAID 5 sucks for write performance so that's already being switch to a RAID10.

Ok So what do you guys think about my plan to switch everything to #1, stuff some more RAM in there up to 20-30GB and virtualize?

So it would be like this:

#1 = Windows Server 2012 - AD/DHCP/DNS/File Shares + Program we use now but using SQL Express it comes with (has to be 2005!!)

#1.1 = Windows Server 2012 - Exchange 2010 and IIS for the web and ActiveSync stuff.

#1.2 = Windows Server 2012 - SQL 2008 SP3 + NEW Software for new database we getting.

#1 = 4 - 8GB Of RAM

#1.1 = 12GB of RAM

#1.2 = 8GB of RAM

Sounds do-able or am i just dreaming?

I am running #1 and 1.1 now on another (older) 2950 with 9GB and been part of the domain for like a week too and seems stable (other than known issues :p).

Any tweaks or changes you guys think would make it run better? Thanks!

Question 2 - Storage is an issue if you ask me, boss being cheap! I wanted to get 4 x 1TB SAS 7200RPM drives for $150 each to build the RAID 10. Now my plan is to use 2 x 146GB in RAID 1** and the 4 x 300GB 15K SAS in RAID 10.

So I know it's not recommended to run Exchange on a dyanamic VHD - but what if I ONLY put the Windows Install there but put the Information Store and other data that Exchange writes to (log and such) on a FIXED VHD of say 60GB while keeping the Windows/Exchange Install to a dynamic C drive to cut down on space usage (only like 20-30GB VHD then)?

** - Should I do RAID0 instead of RAID1 for the 146GB drives (OS ONLY, no Data) for more performance since we backup to a USB Drive + (PLUS) OFFSITE backup evernight? Shadow Copies - which they (offsite people) test by booting it in a VM to see if it works.

Edited by SHoTTa35
Added clarification to the RAID0 question.

Idk, esx is very easy to use, almost brainless even. The host os uses very little resources. I would certainly up your drive space. Do not do raid0, I would not recommend that practice in a business environment or on servers. You want the ability to fail and keep running.

Think of it like this, how critical is it for the business to stay running? If it can stop for a few days while you completely rebuild the servers then do RAID 0, if it can't afford to be down, do not do RAID 0. I don't know of any businesses that can be afford to be down for mutilple days. The best that I have seen for disaster recovery is 15 minutes up time, with configuration of the networks involved. The worst is your scenerio and what you are contemplating (RAID0 in a majority vm environment). If you implement your solution have the business owner prepared that he will never open his doors again after a drive failure.

You can sure virtualize everything to keep costs down on hardware and only consume software costs. You will need to Max out those boxes with memory (the free vmware hypervisor maxes out at 32GB). I would also try to either max out the drive space on the servers or I would consider purchasing the essentials plus from vmware or purchase the datacenter server from microsoft to be able to support iscsi and get a iscsi appliance to increase drive space exponentially.

Exchange 2010 doesn't currently work on server 2012, hopefully it will with a future update. Because of this I'm using Exchange 2013 Preview at home lol

Exchange 2010 does "work" on 2012 actually. I'm using now in a live production setup too (bad bad! I know, boss doesn't like "it's supposed to based on X" - wants to see it working before he commits to costs). - used this to get it installed:

http://syscomlab.blo...ws-server-2012/

Not to say there aren't a few little issues but those are from Upgrading from SBS 2003 R2 to Exchange 2010. It's not supported obviously but it is running now in a Hyper-V for testing - currently synced with the SBS 2003 R2 Exchange.

There's the can't install SP2 RU4 (error 1603) but that's not specific to my setup as people with 2008 R2 and 2010 having issues too.

/offtopic

How is 2013 Chris123NT - i would so do that too as i'm a beta guinea pig but guess i wouldn't put my job at risk for that :p 2010 is definitely a step up though from 2003, not sure how much diff there is with 2010 vs 2013 however. :)

post-698-0-12376700-1349975894_thumb.png

Idk, esx is very easy to use, almost brainless even. The host os uses very little resources. I would certainly up your drive space. Do not do raid0, I would not recommend that practice in a business environment or on servers. You want the ability to fail and keep running.

Think of it like this, how critical is it for the business to stay running? If it can stop for a few days while you completely rebuild the servers then do RAID 0, if it can't afford to be down, do not do RAID 0. I don't know of any businesses that can be afford to be down for mutilple days. The best that I have seen for dr is 15 minutes up time, with configuration of the networks involved. The worst is your scenerio what you are contemplating, if you implement your solution have the business owner prepared that he will never open his doors again after a drive failure.

AS for sc302 - I agree with you that's why i initially said RAID1 for the 2 x 146GBs (total 6 drives MAX). Internet being down is a bigger deal than server being down (even with the server doing DHCP/DNS, that's easy to bypass though). Email also being on that server so could be an issue but we use a spam appliance (Barracuda) that captures emails before delivering them to the server so email would still be received at aleast :)

What I was thinking is to install Hyper-V Server 2012 server on either of the other 2 Dell PE2950s we'll have left sitting around which can then run the VHDs from the Exchange and SQL. Those files would be on the RAID10 600GB Virtual drive (4 x 300GB) So those can survive failures plus the USB backup (3TB USB drive) plus Offsite.

You are right though, I was just hoping to have more storage. 4 x 1TB would give us 2TB total (reality, only using about 400GB now) so that should last a while.

They have this sweet sale now which to me made more sense than spending $120 vs 150 for a 300G vs a 1TB:

http://www.newegg.co...N82E16822148868

Wanted to get 4 of those.

raid 5 with a hotspare is fine that would give you 2 drives to loose. don't worry too much about the speed, data integrity is where it is at in business world.

Also remember when backing up, if you backup just data (which is fine) how long would it take you to bring up the environment to the point where it can receive that data? If you have to recreate all of the servers in a virutal server or a physical server from nothing it is going to take a whole lot of time to do so. Even images can take awhile if not kept up on. And services are not cheap for this type of dr. If you put all of your eggs in one basket and that basket breaks what then? Will you be able to put together another basket quick enough to allow the company to continue to funciton without loss? How are you backing up? What are you backing up? How are you going to recover from an absolute failure? What will you have in place to prevent absolute catrostrophic failure? With multiple servers just backing up data isn't enough, and having multiple servers in one basket is asking for trouble. Just like raid, you need redundancy on the server side or you need a powerful backup that can restore instantly.

Information noted (Y) :yes:

The backup consists of snapshots of the OS as well as Exchange/SQL data and data generated/collected for reports. We do lots of Word/PDF docs and reports and scans of paper to compile said reports. That's what's in the file share on the server. If the worse happen and say all HDDs die at the sametime, those drives could be replaced and then imaged and be back up and running (depending on how long the copy goes, probably a few hours for all data, less for just server and email. If say motherboard fried then a temp machine from the backup company can be brought in (local guys) and just mount the backups images we have and boot them.

Preventing failure - hmmm guess need to think about that part some more since everything does eventually fail. I was thinking of having the other servers around for backup hardware incase one should ever fail. As appraisers, if the computer goes down they can go do field work (collecting data) while the server gets put back together. Can even work for the most part without the information on the server, unless that is, the report is almost complete then gets lost because of a server crash! :(

Still wondering about the questions of dynamic VHDX files though for Exchange OS partition, still googling too. Don't tell me all you guys are installed to the hardware for each individual server? :D

I personally haven't made a thin provisioned db server. I would think that fragmentation would eventually kill u. I don't see why you couldn't do it for the is side being that it won't grow all that much.

You know it may be a whole lot cheaper to go exchange online. Ms is offering an unlimited space for $8 per user with their exchange online plan 2. IMO it is hard to ignore that, that includes spam and virus filtering.

Trust me, we went thru this with the boss. He said they had it few years back and just wasn't stable (probably their connection to the internet at the time too wasn't stable), that plus the reoccurring costs vs pay 1 time up front. I agree with you though, it's like $800/year ($4/month plan) vs tons money up front. Our internet has gone down maybe 2 times this year and it was more a widespread issue (NYC Region - fiber cut and "hardware failure") rather than just bad management. So it's not like the old days where they might have had DSL or something. It's a dead issue I guess... I was like we definitely don't need Exchange on premises, I think it's more the principle than anything. :p

I got the extra HDD from UPS today so just waiting on RAM now and I can start building her up so that's why I wanted to get a few questions knocked out :)

and with local caching, there really is no reason not to consider it. We have all been down the road where services have been severed, but that was before. Services have since improved greatly, and like you pointed out 400 or even 800 per year vs what could be easily a $10,000 install up front and the software will stay the same version until you decide to upgrade again with another 10,000 up front.

hardware + software + implemenation time.

Local caching should solve all those issues I agree, then again preaching to the choir here. :p

Basically got my extra 8GB of RAM now (already got the extra 300GB HDD to make a RAID10). Not doing full mode install just yet but gonna at least test out the RAM to make sure they are stable in one of the other machines.

So for the current setup, no other suggestions to for implementation? Seems good as I mentioned it?

Thanks again for helping me think about some things I might have missed :)

raid 5 with a hotspare is fine that would give you 2 drives to loose. don't worry too much about the speed, data integrity is where it is at in business world.

I disagree. If you are going to set up RAID-5 + HS, you might as well go with RAID-6.

Why?

RAID-5 with a hot swap means when a drive fails in the active array, it can immediatley begin a rebuild. Rebuilds degrade performance and have a chance of failing (URE).

RAID-6 means that when a drive fails in the active array, the rebuild process does not begin until a new drive is added to the array, and you'd still need to lose TWO more drives before there is data loss. Even being down one drive ("degraded") you could perform a solid backup incase the RAID-6 rebuild fails. Granted you could do that in RAID-5 in a degraded state, but you can't if it automatically starts rebuilding...

Welp doing it now. :s

Moved the SATA 160GB RAID5 drives to the new machine and imported the config and it booted. Gonna have to clone those drives now, RAID-5 SATA to the RAID1 SAS 146GB drives then boot that.

After that's all said and done it's a matter of creating the RAID10 4x300GB drives then copying the data back from the external drives to the server and we should be done :yes:

Just to copy all this data is what's taking forever :p

EDIT- 10/22/12

No complaints yet half-day into the new work week. Some folder redirection stuff didn't happen so smoothly but (Favorites/My Documents) but working those out slowly but surely.

Still having issues though with Mapped Drives - can't for the life of me get it to map (Local admin/UAC problem i hear). That is they still map via loginscripts that was used in 2003 days but new GPO mappings in 2008 and up isn't working. There is a problem on Windows 8 (client) where it wont work properly but i'm doing this on a 2012 server with Win7 clients. Gotta figure out that thing were you can see how they are applying and if anything has failed or whatever. :p

Edited by SHoTTa35
Adding updates
  • 3 months later...

Sorry to add this late into the discussions but you spoke of Hyper-V, you can download the Hyper-V 2012 Core RTM free of charge and run your VM's on that. I run a Hyper-V environment in a clustered configuration and it works really well. I would say the only downside is that ESXi supports Linux and other OS's better, but it sounds like you using an all Windows Environment anyway.

You can download the tools to run on your workstation (must be Win7/8).

Just offering another option, it's got quite a low overhead as well.

http://blogs.technet.com/b/keithmayer/archive/2012/09/07/getting-started-with-hyper-v-server-2012-hyperv-virtualization-itpro.aspx#.URGHFlqu9W0

  • 1 month later...

Sorry to add this late into the discussions but you spoke of Hyper-V, you can download the Hyper-V 2012 Core RTM free of charge and run your VM's on that. I run a Hyper-V environment in a clustered configuration and it works really well. I would say the only downside is that ESXi supports Linux and other OS's better, but it sounds like you using an all Windows Environment anyway.

You can download the tools to run on your workstation (must be Win7/8).

Just offering another option, it's got quite a low overhead as well.

http://blogs.technet...px#.URGHFlqu9W0

Hyper-V does an alright job of running linux...at least RHEL and ubuntu. I've got 4 Ubuntu VM's on a Hyper-V server and they run great. Only thing that sucks is no updated integration drivers for Ubuntu, so you can't use Dynamic Memory.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
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It must be noted that the Security Advisor still contains (in my opinion) a pretty major bug in that if you enable SPC and then do the required rebooting, the Security Advisor still says that SPC is disabled. TerraMaster provided the following statement about it: It is disappointing that TOS 7 has been in beta since December, and this OOBE issue is still there. Shutdown option has moved Instead of a Taskbar option to manage the NAS, all of these options have been moved to a "Start panel", initially I didn't see it and my contact had to show me how to power off the F4-425 Pro. To logout, reboot or power off you can find those controls at the top right of the Panel. It is also possible to power off through the TNAS mobile app beta. Storage setup Above, you can see the steps I took to create the Storage Pools and Volumes. I made a second Storage Pool using TRAID on two 4TB MP44Q SSDs (which, in this instance, is similar to RAID 5), and finally, I added the 250GB 970 Evo Plus drive as Hyper Cache on Storage Pool 1 in Balanced mode. Registering If you decide not to lock down the F4-425 Pro in Security Isolation Mode (blocking all external connections), then you could set up a TNAS device ID through the Remote Access setting in the Control Panel (which must be unique). This works in combination with an online TerraMaster account. TOS 7 TNAS Online Creating a TerraMaster account and linking the device online activates the warranty when you provide proof of purchase and the serial number, but it also gives you access through the TNAS mobile app, which allows you to complete certain operationsб including powering off and restarting the NAS remotely. A TNAS mobile update is required to gain access through TOS 7, and this is provided on the TerraMaster website, as it is not yet on Google Play. The app is evolving all the time and has made leaps and bounds since I first started reviewing TerraMaster devices almost three years ago. It is not quite there yet if you are comparing the likes of Synology, which, sadly, a lot of users online do all the time. OpenClaw setup One of the main selling points of the new F4-425 Pro is the inclusion of OpenClaw, with TerraMaster claiming that it is "powered by the world's first AI-native TOS 7 OS, supporting local-first smart workflows and independent data control." However, I immediately ran into problems trying to enable OpenClaw. After waiting 20 minutes at the "Enabling" message of the OpenClaw app following installation, I decided to do some searching online and discovered that it couldn't complete the installation process due to SPC being enabled, which is something TOS 7 immediately recommends to be enabled on first boot. SPC for NAS (TOS 7) is basically the same principle as UAC in Windows; it blocks executables from being launched by non-Super Users. After reaching out to my contact about these issues, I received the following response: Anyway, this only became clear when I closed the OpenClaw app screen and clicked on the OpenClaw icon in the taskbar; that is when I saw the message about disabling SPC. I think, due to the fact that this is a requirement, this should be a prompt during the installation process, not when closing the App Market and then trying to launch OpenClaw. There's also no 'Getting started' guide for people like me who have never used OpenClaw. I tried to add an LLM and discovered the tutorial led nowhere. That's when I started looking around the official TerraMaster forums, and I found a guide that helpfully explains that you won't get anywhere with OpenClaw unless you have a paid plan, which is disappointing because I imagined there would be an option to use a local LLM as I do in SubtitleEdit with Whisper-XXL. In addition, with the marketing imagery on the official site, it says that the OpenClaw feature is "all processed 100% locally for absolute privacy." which led me to believe that I could install a local LLM, not one that required paid tokens. In any case, TerraMaster does not provide guidance for this new feature, which was also a selling point of the F4-425 Pro! My contact also provided clarification about the above points I raised with TerraMaster Since it is not in the scope of the review to add paid services, I'll leave that to the people who are more qualified with OpenClaw. F4-425 Pro Surveillance App TOS also comes with a Surveillance app, which is not installed by default; it can be found in the App Market recommended section. In addition, after installing, it doesn't drop a shortcut on the Desktop or top taskbar, but you can "Send to Desktop" from the App Market listing for the app for a quick way to open it. Adding my Reolink POE doorbell camera was painless. TerraMaster doesn't appear to have a repository of preconfigured cameras; instead, the camera must be added using ONVIF or RTSP. No mobile Surveillance app TerraMaster still doesn't have a dedicated Surveillance app, although from searching online, Surveillance can be used and managed through the TNAS mobile app. I tried this with the updated TNAS mobile app beta in combination with TOS 7 and got a message that Surveillance was "Only accessible through web browser," so I reckon this must be limited to the stable versions of TOS 6 and the mobile app. More quirks In addition, whenever I minimized the Live View window in the browser Surveillance app, the feed appeared to switch to the Low-bandwidth stream, and there was no way to get the High-quality stream back. To get the High-quality stream back, I had to close Live View and then reopen it. Benchmarking A pretty cool feature of the TOS 7 is that it allows you to install directly to the NVMe M.2 SSD. In order to do that, you would have to leave out any HDDs during initialization, and even then, the system partitions are always written to two HDDs when they are eventually added. With three NVMe slots, this also gives an interesting scenario where you could build a TRAID storage Pool for installing all your apps and Docker on, and keep the third for SSD cache on the HDD pool. Limitless options! SATA PCIe 3.0 X1 A CrystalDiskMark test on a mapped network drive from within a Windows 11 25H2 PC (image above) connected over a 5 GbE hub was well within acceptable ranges. Although the read result on SATA was a little less than with the F4-425 Plus, for some reason, while writes were generally better. SATA PCIe 3.0 X1 I also ran the NAS Performance tester, which tests the link speed performance. As you can see, it pretty much maxes out the 5GbE connection. Of course, you can also opt to bond the two 5 GbE connections for a bit more umph, but I didn't do that. TOS 7, which, as of testing, is still in Beta, comes with an App Center that has a bunch of handy programs you can install right off the bat, such as Emby, Plex, Docker, as well as in-house Backup and Surveillance solutions. As you can imagine, any media streaming services you would want to host off the F4-425 Pro will work great, thanks to the Intel Core N350 CPU and its 16 GB of DDR5 memory. Accessing from mobile is only possible if Security Isolation Mode is disabled, which can put your NAS at risk from external sources, so there was no way to access it from the TNAS Mobile app. It's also quiet. I had this sat next to my computer on my work desk for the past week, and I did wonder if the noise I was accustomed to with NAS devices would annoy me, but all I could hear was a soft whirring of the rear fan (which was a little annoying) when the disks were not actively copying or reading data. Conclusion So what have I learned? Unfortunately, this release raises a few important questions and concerns that I feel haven't been adequately addressed. What I didn't like Our variant shipped with TOS 7 beta, and it's advised not to use it in a production environment. I feel that's a bit limiting on an $800 device. The mobile app is also still in beta and does not support some of the first-party apps, like Surveillance, and it still has quite a few bugs. I am a bit confused about the OpenClaw marketing along with the F4-425 Pro. I feel like that if it's going to be a main selling point, then offer official guidance on how to get started with it. TerraMaster recommends enabling SPC, but then markets the NAS for use with OpenClaw, which requires disabling SPC to be able to use it, opening up genuine security concerns for the NAS; and that's before you get into the security concerns of OpenClaw itself. Of course, the above issues won't be a problem if you decide to install something else on it, or even go back to the stable TOS 6. I wish TerraMaster had just given TOS 7 as opt-in rather than shipping with it. TOS 7 has been available as a preview since December 2025 (so well before my last TerraMaster review), and according to a thread on Reddit where a user shared a screenshot from the TerraMaster Facebook page, it is scheduled to launch today, June 23, but there's nothing about that in the TerraMaster news blog. My contact confirmed over email that TOS 7 exits beta today. The rubber feet also deserve a mention as they continue to be a problem, with them coming unstuck the moment you shift the F4-425 Pro anywhere on your desk. What I liked What it comes down to, though, aside from what I already mentioned, you are still getting a quality, affordable device here, so recommending it will depend on the individual's use case. If you're just looking for a relatively small NAS device to manage virtual machines on, backup your files, and take care of your home theater streaming, then it is a great device that will certainly futureproof you for some time. It provides good performance, takes up little space, and is, on the whole, very quiet. Four bays afford proper redundancy using TRAID or RAID 5, and you can even expand on storage capacity by adding the 2-bay D5, or 4-bay D8 Hybrid DAS over a USB 3.2 (10Gbps) link. Considering the 2024 releases were more about power, with the likes of an Intel Core i5-1235U high-end laptop CPU under the hood, I asked my contact last time if we could expect more of the same in higher-end models and was told: It makes a lot of sense to use Intel's N350 chip inside a NAS; it is more than capable of doing what the F4-425 Pro is intended for, media streaming and backup. The only downside is still the clear lack of community and even staff support on the official forums. In the past, I have had topics go unanswered for days, or there would be generic-type "we've noted this and passed it onto our developer team" type responses. Along with the other things I mentioned, it all ends up costing it a couple of points. If you are comfortable with the command line, Docker, and setting up TrueNAS or Unraid, you'll be fine. You can do great things with this hardware. In TOS, the apps are a bit lacking, and things don't always work as expected.\ AI NAS?! What has become clear to me this year is that we are going to start seeing all kinds of "AI NAS" come to market, and while that might be good for us consumers, be diligent and research these claims. Although the F4-425 Pro technically comes with AI, it is really using a cloud service that is externally sourced off-device through the third party OpenClaw app. My colleague did review a newcomer to the NAS space earlier this year, and it includes a local AI assistant inside the Zettlab D4 NAS, and they do not even use AI in the product name, check out Chris' review here. Where to buy and a discount coupon However, it does not change the fact that this is truly a great entry-level home media-class NAS that you can buy right now. TerraMaster is having a 20% off launch discount, plus you can also still apply our unique 10% off coupon on checkout, which only works on the official website. So here is a breakdown of the pricing that is only valid on the official TerraMaster website. TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N350) + 20% discount + 10% coupon = $575.99 TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N305) + 20% discount + 10% coupon = $503.99 TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N350) + 20% discount + 10% coupon = £525.59 TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N305) + 20% discount + 10% coupon = £460.79 Use NEOWIN coupon code during checkout for 10% discount Over on Amazon US and UK, the F4-425 Pro also gets a 20% launch discount, but here, the above 10% coupon cannot be applied. TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N350) for $639.99 at Amazon US (was $799.99) TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N305) for $559.99 at Amazon US (was $699.99) TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N350) for £583.99 at Amazon UK (was £729.99) TerraMaster F4-425 Pro (N305) for £511.99 at Amazon UK (was £639.99) As an Amazon Associate, when you purchase through links on our site, we earn from qualifying purchases.
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