NAS Review: QNAP TS-563: I’ll Keep This One
TL;DR:
There’s a reason QNAP is one of the top players. The AMD chipset means
no Plex hardware transcoding, but it’s still a lovely box.
Preface:
I started trying to replace my 2-bay QNAP TS-220 when I realized that
it wouldn’t support my new 8TB hard drives without new drive caddies
(whoops). The ARM chipset was getting a bit old, and it was time to
upgrade to something that will still be supported in five more years. Or
two. Whichever. After months of shopping, I tried out the TerraMaster
F5-420, and it just… wasn’t great. Some good hardware and decent
performance (or so I thought), but a damaging level of observable
software engineering naivete (you can read about it here.
Then
while I was returing the TerraMaster, B&H ran a sale on the QNAP
TS-563. I had paid $299 for the TerraMaster, usually priced $499. The
TS-563 was on sale for $409! Yes, it was $100 more expensive than I had
paid, but man, that was a 5 bay QNAP at a lower price point than many of
the 4-bay units I had looked at. Sure, it had an AMD chipset, but that
was mostly going to impact power draw (still less than a desktop) and
Plex encoding (which sometimes sucks as the algorithms aren’t as good,
and is so situationally dependent for someone who doesn’t currently have
a Plex setup or any recordings it’s basically a distraction). It was
“only” the 2GB model, but I found you could upgrade the RAM — so I
would, if it was necessary.
B&H does not offer Prime shipping,
but I could afford to wait a week. I started setting it up the day
after I got it, but it took a few days to put this review together.
PACKAGING:
4/5 – A slightly prettier outer box than the TerraMaster, but slightly
harder to unpack — they made it deep, while TerraMaster had gone “wide.”
In addition, their accessories weren’t as nicely packaged as
TerraMaster’s, and I had to actually go look for a screwdriver!
PHYSICAL:
4/5 – Metal trays. Both cases were nice, but the metal caddies make a
world of difference — even if it’s meaningless once they’re assembled. I
do like the internal power supply as well. Even though the TerraMaster
trays had come up higher on the sides, the QNAP trays were just more
substantial. However, bay 3 — and only bay 3 — had issues with
insertion. Not at the backplane, but at the front. I tried several
times, and always had issues — but just with Bay 3. Bonus points to QNAP
for not labelling the trays as being associated with specific bays.
SOUND: 4/5 – Maybe I just expect too much. The device is nearly silent on idle, but drive noise is audible when under load.
INSTALLATION:
4/5 – QNAP, if anything, has gotten easier to install. Their website
(accessed via SSL) gives you a bunch of options for setting the
device up — including one that’s entirely cloud based! I opted out of
that option, and used their QFinder application. Nice installer, signed
installer.
USAGE: 2/5 – Logged in remotely via my default browser,
which QFinder invoked correctly, completed all the setup, including
updating the firmware. No hiccups. No goofs. Possibly a little too
helpful in the UI and too much going on, but I’m borderline competent —
someone who knows more may have appreciated more information (“What’s a
Thin Volume? What’s a Thick Voume?”), while a completely novice would
likely have loved how much help they offered through the web flow. The
web flow was also really nice — and bug free. No CSS errors, no minor
mistakes.
PERFORMANCE: 4/5 – Faster than the TerraMaster!
Surprisingly slow on Thin Volumes! Which I may never use, so the 4/5 is
somewhat spurious.
Read performance saturates the 100MBps Gigabit
ethernet connection. I tested via an isolated subnet behind a router
(the Archer C7) supporting no other devices, connected via CAT6 cables. I
used LAN Speed Test (registered!) to try a random assortment of 100
file sizes between 2MB and 5 GB written to the default public share on
the TNAS device, with Network Recycle Bin turned on. LAN Speed Test
writes a file, then reads it back to verify it, then deletes it. I tried
against four different RAID configurations, all with the same 5 8TB
drives; in all cases I waited while the drives configured, then
restarted the TNAS, then waited until the TNAS web interface indicated
the array was “Good.” I tried: RAID5, RAID5 with encryption, RAID6, and
RAID6 with encryption. By the time I got to RAID6 I did have a few other
things to do (attaching a bad USB device to a system can kill even
network I/O — did you know?), so the data is a bit noisier on that test.
_files/RAID-6-300x211.png)
Encrypted
results vary far more wildly than the unencrypted results. READ speeds
for both RAID5 and RAID6 hovered above 100MB/s at all file sizes. WRITE
operations on both RAID5 and RAID6 were about 85MB/s, clearly not
saturating the network bandwidth, and probably constrained by the
requisite parity calculations. Surprisingly, RAID6’s two distinct parity
calculations didn’t more significantly impact throughput — but I don’t
have CPU utilization information for this time, so I can’t guarantee
that two cores were involved in RAID6 versus only one for RAID5. The
noise on the RAID5 write information makes me wonder if I did something
wrong, but the average is really clear. RAID6 I already acknowledged I
caused some harm, but the removing the obvious noise makes a pretty
clear picture that RAID6 doesn’t substantially impact READ or WRITE
performance.
_files/RAID-6-encrypted-300x172.png)
Encrypted
READS were still saturating the network on both RAID5 and RAID6. WRITE
speeds dropped by about 5MB/s, except some data outliers on RAID5 that I
can’t explain. Still, average write performance was around 80MB/s.
Overall,
average READ/WRITE performance trounces the TerraMaster, and READS are
consistently saturating the network, with WRITES still at acceptable
levels.
_files/Average-Performance-300x94.png)
Wait! What’s that bottom row?
In
addition to RAID levels, QNAP also offers mechanisms to virtualize
constrained disk systems on top of a RAID array. They can be used for
quota enforcement and block-level snapshots… and I’m sure they can be
used for other things, but please see earlier where I admitted I hadn’t
read all the documentation yet. I will likely be directly using RAID5 or
RAID6, but I’ll read before I make a final decision. I decided to
attempt a “Thin” volume solution. I configured it on top of a RAID disk
storage. I chose Thin as it is “dynamically resized,” and I figured it
had to have worse performance than the Thick (fixed size) option.
It appears that Thin Volumes with Snapshot on WRITE performance is even worse than encrypted RAID6.
_files/Thin-volume-300x182.png)
So,
will I use Thin Volumes? Probably not — but again, read the
documentation. And, in every case, it’s still more performant than the
TNAS F5-420.
APPLICATIONS: 5/5 -Wow. QNAP has most apps I could want! Well, they no longer have CrashPlan, but that’s not their fault.
CONCLUSION:
5/5 – I’m sure there are better options out there. I will, at some
point, want to upgrade the minimal 2GB of RAM. But QNAP delivers an
altogether killer package, with area for a technologist to play
(Virtualization support!) as well as an abundance of information for the
novice. Even though I will never use the majority of the apps, they are
there. But the performance easily tops the TerraMaster I had to compare
it to, and was a far more polished application package — even if I did
miss the screwdrivers. And Bay 3. WTH, Bay 3? All in all, I feel
confident that my data will still be there in the morning.