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2022-03-09 23:41:44 -06:00
---
title: My local data storage setup
date: 2022-03-10
---
Recently, I've needed a bit more storage. In the past I've relied on Google
Drive, but if you need a lot of space Google Drive becomes prohibitively
expensive. The largest option available, 2 TB, runs you $100 a year at the time
of writing. While Google Drive comes with a lot of features, it also comes with
a lot of privacy concerns, and I need more than 2 TB anyway. Another option
would be Backblaze B2 or AWS S3, but the cost is even higher. Just to set a
point of comparison, 16 TB of storage would cost $960 a year with B2 and a
whopping $4000 a year with S3.
Luckily in reality, the cost of storage per GB has been coming down steadily.
Large hard drives are cheap to come by, and while these drives are not
incredibly fast, they are much faster than the speed of my internet connection.
Hard drives it is then!
While I could get a very large hard drive, it's generally a better idea to get
multiple smaller hard drives. That's because these drives often offer a better
$/GB rate, but also because it allows us to mitigate the risk of data loss. So
after a bit of search, I found these "Seagate Barracuda Compute 4TB" drives. You
can find them on [Amazon](https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07D9C7SQH/) or
[BestBuy](https://www.bestbuy.com/site/seagate-barracuda-4tb-internal-sata-hard-drive-for-desktops/6387158.p?skuId=6387158).
These hard drives are available for $70 each at the time I'm writing this,and I bought 6 of them.
This gets me to around $420, plus a bit more for SATA cables.
Looking at [Backblaze Hard Drive Stats](https://www.backblaze.com/blog/backblaze-drive-stats-for-2021/),
I think it's fair to assume these drives will last at least 5 years.
Dividing the cost by the expected lifetime, that gets me $84 per year, far below what the cloud storage costs!
It's of course not as reliable, and it requires maintenance on my end, but
the difference in price is just too far to ignore.
## Setup
I decided to set this all up inside my desktop computer. I have a large case so
fitting all the hard drives in is not a big problem, and my motherboard does
support 6 SATA drives (in addition to the NVMe that I'm booting off of). I also
run Linux on my desktop computer, so I've got all the required software
available.
For the software side of things, I decided to go with `mdadm` and `ext4`. There
are also other options available like ZFS (not included in the linux kernel) or
btrfs (raid-5 and raid-6 are known to be unreliable), but this was the setup I
found the most comfortable and easy to understand for me. How it works is that
`mdadm` combines the disks and presents it as a block device, then `ext4`
formats and uses the block device the same way you use it with any regular
drive.
### Steps
I was originally planning to write the steps I followed here, but in truth I
just followed whatever the [ArchLinux wiki](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/RAID#Installation)
told me. So I'll just recommend you follow that as well.
The only thing I'll warn you is that the wiki doesn't clearly note just how long
this process takes. It took almost a week for the array to build, and until the
build is complete the array runs at a reduced performance. Be patient, and just
give it some time to finish. As a reminder, you can always check the build
status with `cat /dev/mdstat`.
## Preventative maintenance
Hard drives have a tendency to fail, and because RAID arrays are resilient, the
failures can go unnoticed. You **need** to regularly check that the array is
okay. Unfortunately, while there are quite a few resources online on how to set
up RAID, very few of them actually talk about how to set up scrubs (full scans
to look for errors) and error monitoring.
For my setup, I decided to set up systemd to check and report issues. For this,
I first set up 2 timers: 1 that checks if there are any reported errors on the
RAID array, and another that scrubs the RAID array. Systemd timers are 2 parts,
a service file and a timer file, so here's all the files.
- `array-scrub.service`
```toml
[Unit]
Description=Scrub the disk array
After=multi-user.target
OnFailure=report-failure-email@array-scrub.service
[Service]
Type=oneshot
User=root
ExecStart=bash -c '/usr/bin/echo check > /sys/block/md127/md/sync_action'
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
```
- `array-scrub.timer`
```toml
[Unit]
Description=Periodically scrub the array.
[Timer]
OnCalendar=Sat *-*-* 05:00:00
[Install]
WantedBy=timers.target
```
The timer above is the scrub operation, it tells RAID to scan the drives for
errors. It actually takes up to a couple days in my experience for the scan to
complete, so I run it once a week.
- `array-report.service`
```toml
[Unit]
Description=Check raid array errors that were found during a scrub or normal operation and report them.
After=multi-user.target
OnFailure=report-failure-email@array-report.service
[Service]
Type=oneshot
ExecStart=/usr/bin/mdadm -D /dev/md127
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
```
- `array-report.timer`
```toml
[Unit]
Description=Periodically report any issues in the array.
[Timer]
OnCalendar=daily
[Install]
WantedBy=timers.target
```
And this timer above checks the RAID array status to see if there were any
errors found. This timer runs much more often (once a day), because it's
instant, and also because RAID can find errors during regular operation even
when you are not actively running a scan.
### Error reporting
Another important thing here is this line in the service file:
```toml
OnFailure=report-failure-email@array-report.service
```
The automated checks are of no use if I don't know when something actually
fails. Luckily, systemd can run a service when another service fails, so I'm
using this to report failures to myself. Here's what the service file looks like:
- `report-failure-email@.service`
```toml
[Unit]
Description=status email for %i to user
[Service]
Type=oneshot
ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/systemd-email address %i
User=root
```
- `/usr/local/bin/systemd-email`
```sh
#!/bin/sh
/usr/bin/sendmail -t <<ERRMAIL
To: homelab@bgenc.net
From: systemd <root@$HOSTNAME>
Subject: Failure on $2
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
$(systemctl status --lines 100 --no-pager "$2")
ERRMAIL
```
The service just runs this shell script, which is just a wrapper around
sendmail. The `%i` in the service is the part after `@` when you use the
service, you can see that the `OnFailure` hook puts `array-report` after the `@`
which then gets passed to the email service, which then passes it on to the mail
script.
To send emails, you also need to set up `sendmail`. I decided to install
[msmtp](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Msmtp), and set it up to use my GMail
account to send me an email.
To test if the error reporting works, edit the `array-report.service` and change
the line `ExecStart` line to `ExecStart=false`. Then run the report service with
`systemd start array-report.service`, you should now get an email letting you
know that the `array-report` service failed, and attaches the last 100 lines of
the service status to the email.