Dell perc h200 vs h310
- #Dell perc h200 vs h310 drivers#
- #Dell perc h200 vs h310 windows 10#
- #Dell perc h200 vs h310 software#
- #Dell perc h200 vs h310 Pc#
- #Dell perc h200 vs h310 plus#
#Dell perc h200 vs h310 Pc#
How are you backing up ? What is the security levels on your PC or home Internet ? How are your systems hooked up to the UPS ? If you have servers (physical & VMs) storing data to the NAS, then you need to backup both the servers (physical & VMs) and the NAS ?. Why not stored in the servers then backup to the NAS ?
#Dell perc h200 vs h310 windows 10#
Windows 10 as a VM ? There is no Windows 10 license to do that (unless in a VDI solution of at least 10 Virtual desktop using Enterprise licenses and VDA or SA etc). This is a very bad idea.RAID card is not necessary for PCs.if you want get a PC based RAID adapter instead of server ones.but why waste $$$.get a NAS ? The disaster recovery capabilities alone would be unmatched by using VMs and ZFS. In this case as an example, getting access to Windows, ZFS, fast data transfer, a disk array, and the ability to migrate everything to new hardware in the event of failure seems more than worth the bit of setup to me. The thing is that the more of these type of setups I install, the less the complexity bothers me during the initial setup because in the long run you have SOOOOO much more versatility. I often thing of seemly overly complex setups like this nowadays (mostly because it becomes so easy to arrange with the advent of VMs).
I think this would be safe enough in case the Data gets lost in one of the two locations, and the remaining location would have reliable data. I think i don't need VM's at home, the QNAP Nas can store a backup copy in a folder or hard drive in my PC. and i want to schedule the NAS to make a backup everyday at night to home. This Nas is onsite and it's susceptible to floods, power surges, fires, theft. Medical practice management software, Prescription and an IRS File <- huge thing the IRS file). I thought in an option like that, but i considered it overkill (maybe wrongly) because i only need to backup some folders once a day.Ĭurrently there are 2 servers in the offices that send the crucial data to a QNAP NAS (medical records, CT scans,
#Dell perc h200 vs h310 plus#
That's why i asked if anyone knew if any of those Dell Raid cards would run on my PC: AMD RyASUS Prime x570P, 32GB ram, Samsung Evo Plus NVMe, boot it from usb drive with ESXI 6.7.Īll this if possible, or another Reliable Raid card that would work in my PC. I was trying to take advantage of my PC to store the backups at home, and substitute the server that runs the windows 10 on top of ESXI 6.7 (medical practice management software) if this happens again. Tech support told me to get a backup solution outside of the clinic. I also had data corruption, they took almost a week to recover it and during that time i couldn't use the practice management software. The reason why i'm concerned about the data is because lately we had power surges, serious ones that fried a 3000Va UPS 12 days ago.
#Dell perc h200 vs h310 drivers#
If possible and needed it could replace one of the servers in the offices, but for that it would have to run ESXI 6.7.Ĭurrently there are 2 servers in the Clinic: 1 runs Linux for a cbct device and another runs windows 10 on top of ESXI 6.7 (windows 10 because of drivers issues with medical devices - X-Ray's mainly, this last one runs the medical practice management software)īoth servers send the data to the NAS with 2 pairs of disks in Raid 1. The Raid Card would be to put in a normal computer, if possible, and act as a secondary backup for critical data at home. This could almost certainly be done with a single desktop as well on Windows 10.ĭata transfer from VM to VM will be at the speed of the memory so you should not have to worry about speed and it will also allow you to share that data out using FreeNAS to other machines. The HBA is passed through to a VM running FreeNAS which maintains an array of data. If you want to keep everything to a single box, I currently run a Windows Server with an HBA and Hyper-V role. Both of these would be more reliable as they are not dependent upon the controller in any way (data could be recovered with only a copy of Windows or a copy of Linux/FreeNAS/etc) and HBAs are also quite inexpensive.
#Dell perc h200 vs h310 software#
If your concern is reliability and you're only going to use a mirror, I might recommend just getting an HBA and putting them in software RAID (Windows) or depending on your use case ZFS. This time i'm looking for a more reliable option, even if it costs. Thanks for the suggestion, but years ago I used that option and because of a Motherboard failure all the data was lost.