this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2023
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TLDR: I am running some Docker containers on a homelab server, and the containers' volumes are mapped to NFS shares on my NAS. Is that bad performance?

  • I have a Linux PC that acts as my homelab server, and a Synology NAS.
  • The server is fast but has 100GB SSD.
  • The NAS is slow(er) but has oodles of storage.
  • Both devices are wired to their own little gigabit switch, using priority ports.

Of course it's slower to run off HDD drives compared to SSD, but I do not have a large SSD. The question is: (why) would it be "bad practice" to separate CPU and storage this way? Isn't that pretty much what a data center also does?

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[–] Molecular0079 4 points 1 year ago

Agreed! If the application can handle these files (or other resources) disappearing for a while during network issues, then sure, they can be separate. However, if an application depends on a file for its core functionality, I do not think it is a good idea.