Synology is fairly decent, especially for the money.
I have about 45 server instances (about 1/3 of them are physical); we retired a large-ish Nimble storage array last week (sorry to see it go, it was very feature-rich for the money); migrated everything to pair of Dell MD3220i (each with an add-on MD1220 Tray) - about 44TB of Usable Storage in RAID10 (in total 8 Storage LUNs). Previously, they were running Thin-Provisioned disks on Thin Provisioned LUNs and it took a long time (months) to determine how much storage they were actually consuming on the SAN; Thin Provisioning and De-Duplication can work against you from an IOPS and Throughput perspective, and this was no exception. The old storage was provisioned haphazardly as well (no planned failure domain, no regard for disk controller ownership boundaries): it took a long time to get those issues smoothed out. Still working on Jumbo Frames (we have Cisco Meraki as core Switching - which is less than ideal for our server environment): our network is extremely simple, and our "network engineer" has no interest in talking to me about private VLANs, broadcast domains, or subnetting (He is more of a security guy than a network engineer). It is getting better, but I have to email, meet, cajole and beg for every niggling expenditure just to keep the Shitshow running... it is beyond tiresome.
I have about 45 server instances (about 1/3 of them are physical); we retired a large-ish Nimble storage array last week (sorry to see it go, it was very feature-rich for the money); migrated everything to pair of Dell MD3220i (each with an add-on MD1220 Tray) - about 44TB of Usable Storage in RAID10 (in total 8 Storage LUNs). Previously, they were running Thin-Provisioned disks on Thin Provisioned LUNs and it took a long time (months) to determine how much storage they were actually consuming on the SAN; Thin Provisioning and De-Duplication can work against you from an IOPS and Throughput perspective, and this was no exception. The old storage was provisioned haphazardly as well (no planned failure domain, no regard for disk controller ownership boundaries): it took a long time to get those issues smoothed out. Still working on Jumbo Frames (we have Cisco Meraki as core Switching - which is less than ideal for our server environment): our network is extremely simple, and our "network engineer" has no interest in talking to me about private VLANs, broadcast domains, or subnetting (He is more of a security guy than a network engineer). It is getting better, but I have to email, meet, cajole and beg for every niggling expenditure just to keep the Shitshow running... it is beyond tiresome.
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