PC Pro

Qnap TVS-h1288X QuTS hero Edition

It’s pricey, but this desktop NAS is rich in features and promises enterprise-class data protection

- DAVE MITCHELL

SCORE

PRICE Diskless, £2,314 exc VAT from broadbandb­uyer.com

Nothing succeeds like excess, and Qnap’s TVS-h1288X has it in abundance. This imposing desktop NAS applia nce provides eight LFF and four SFF drive bays, along with dual internal M.2 NVMe SSD slots – and it presents all this storage over four embedded 2.5GbE ports, plus a dual-port 10GBase-T PCIe card.

It also enjoys all the benefits of Qnap’s 128-bit ZFS-based QuTS hero OS. This has some fantastic dataintegr­ity features, including near unlimited snapshots, end-to-end checksums for transparen­t errorcorre­ction, and triple-parity and triple mirroring RAID options.

To help you make the most of your storage, the OS also offers inline data deduplicat­ion and compressio­n, while off-site data r eplication is turbocharg­ed by the clever means of only sending changed blocks to remote appliances. For archival duties there’s WORM (write once read many) support too, to ensure that stored data can’t be tampered with.

As you’d imagine, a storage monster like this comes with plenty of power on tap. It’s built on a 3.3GHz six-core Xeon W-1250 CPU and comes with 16GB of DDR4 memory, which can be upgraded to a huge 128GB. Since the processor has an integrated Intel UHD Graphics P630 GPU, you can even connect a screen to the rear HDMI port, which supports 4K displays at refresh rates of up to 30Hz; connect a keyboard and mouse via any of the five embedded USB 3.2 ports and you can directly access the QuTS hero desktop for monitoring and management.

Naturally, the USB sockets can also be used to attach external drives, and if you want to max out the storage there’s space alongside the 10GbE card to add one or two of Qnap’s dual-port Thunderbol­t 3 cards. In theory, you could use various third-party PCIe cards too, but due to the internal design of the appliance, the outer slots will only take cards of up to around 156mm in length. Qnap’s expansion cards will fit without a problem, but we found our Intel and Emulex 10GbE adapters were too long.

If you’re familiar with Qnap’s QTS software you won’t have any problems setting up the TVS-h1288X because the web consoles are almost identical. The configurat­ion wizard starts by installing the latest version of QuTS OS and offering to create a system pool; Qnap recommends using SSDs for this, so we fitted two 1.92TB Micron 5200 Max SATA SSDs and added four 16TB Seagate IronWolf Pro drives for data-storage duties. We then used the Storage & Snapshots app to create a 42TB RAID5 pool from our IronWolf Pro drives and were impressed to see it ready immediatel­y – with QTS we’d have expected to wait days for the build to complete.

For each NAS share you can choose thick or thin provisioni­ng, and specify whether or not to apply encryption, deduplicat­ion and compressio­n, as well as whether a WORM policy should be enforced. There are two of these to choose from: the Enterprise policy won’t let you modify or remove individual files but permits deletion at the folder level, while the Compliance policy protects everything, so the only way to erase data is by deleting the entire storage pool.

“It’s built on a 3.3GHz six-core Xeon W-1250 CPU and comes with 16GB of DDR4 memory, which can be upgraded to a huge 128GB”

On top of all of this, there’s a great range of apps available. We counted 141 for this OS in the appliance’s support page, including key backup apps such Qnap’s Hybrid Sync 3, Qsync Central and HybridMoun­t, plus Hyper Data Protector for VMware and Hyper-V virtual environmen­ts.

To test performanc­e, we mapped a NAS share to a drive on a Dell EMC T640 Xeon Scalable server and fired up Iometer; this reported sequential read and write rates of 9.3Gbits/sec and 9.2Gbits/sec, while our realworld 25GB file copies completed at 8.3Gbits/sec and 4.9Gbits/sec respective­ly.

IP SAN performanc­e over 10GbE was just as fast. Here a 1TB iSCSI target gave read and write rates of 9.3Gbits/sec and 9.1Gbits/sec. Moving to a dual 10GbE MPIO link saw speeds leap to 18.5Gbits/sec and 15.4Gbits/sec.

The TVS-h1288X is one heck of a box. The price is high, but that buys superb connectivi­ty, plenty of storage capacity, bags of expansion potential and a wealth of data-protection features, courtesy of the exceptiona­lly powerful QuTS OS.

SPECIFICAT­IONS

Desktop chassis 3.3GHz six-core Xeon W-1250 CPU 16GB DDR4 (max 128GB) 8 x LFF SATA 4 x SFF SATA 2 x M.2 NVMe supports RAID0, 1, 5, 6, 10, 50, 60, triple parity, triple mirror 4 x 2.5GbE, 2 x 10GBaseT 5 x USB 3.2 HDMI 1.4b 3 x PCIe (2 free) 550W internal PSU 3yr hardware warranty

 ??  ?? LEFT The heroic OS provides great dataintegr­ity features and plenty of backup apps
LEFT The heroic OS provides great dataintegr­ity features and plenty of backup apps
 ??  ?? ABOVE This hulking storage appliance has enormous scope for expansion
ABOVE This hulking storage appliance has enormous scope for expansion

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