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Synology Hybrid RAID Explained – Why it is AWESOME

What is the difference between SHR and RAID?

Synology Hybrid RAID or SHR, has been around for quite a while now, and though it has not made the big impact that Synology NAS’ Btrfs file system has, it is still an increasingly popular choice for many when it comes to protecting their hardware and their data in a Hard Drive Enclosure. Both NAS and DAS utilise RAID as a form of protection from an HDD or SSD failing and the consequences of data loss that can follow. It should always be highlighted that both traditional RAID and SHR are NOT forms of Backing up and you should ALWAYS have an offsite or at the very least off-system backup in place creating real-time images and copies of your mission-critical data. However coming back to the subject at hand, which method of redundancy should you be considering for your storage array – RAID or SHR?

What is RAID?

 RAID, or Redundant Array of Independent Disks, was originally many years ago as a way of combining lots of smaller disks together to create a much larger storage volume, with redundancy as a secondary priority. However with the large scale growth of Hard Drives these last 5 years and more, with Terabytes of data becoming available on single disks, the primary function of RAID has shifted towards data protection.

That isn’t to say that pooling smaller drives does not still happen, but with drives currently available to buy in 14TB such at the Seagate Ironwolf NAS Drive, you can see why the purpose of RAID in an archive and cold storage is more about hardware protection.

Available in numerous types, but the most popular of which is below:

What is SHR?

SHR is far more automatic RAID choice and designed for the less technically minded to protect their data from hardware failure, without having to delve too deeply into complex matters like parity and striping. It is also significantly easier to set up and considerably more scalable than traditional RAID. It is not supported on all Synology NAS server devices but I would recommend checking in advance that your chosen Synology NAS can utilise SHR here. But otherwise, if your NAS can support it, SHR arrives with a host of benefits both in terms of deployment speed and in maximum available capacity. SHR doesn’t arrive in multiple types like RAID but in just two different versions. SHR and SHR-2. SHR gives you the ability to protect your data from 1 lost hard drive and SHR-2 protects you from two. However, the key strengths in a Synology SHR RAID setup are:

The Synology DS1819+

RAID 5 – 8 Drives

(4x 2TB and 4x 4TB)

The Synology DS1819+

SHR – 8 Drives

(4x 2TB and 4x 4TB)

1 Disk of redundancy (2TB) 1 Disk of Redundancy (4TB)
Total Available Capacity

14TB

Total Available Capacity

20TB

SHR vs RAID – Which is better?

And so, down to business. Now you know what SHR and RAID are, what is now important is which should you choose. Both are excellent methods of redundancy and have their own benefits. But let’s take a look below at their strength and weaknesses:

SHR Strengths

SHR Weaknesses

And now onto Traditional RAID

RAID Strengths

RAID Weaknesses

RAID or SHR – The Result

 It probably won’t come as an enormous shock when I say that I recommend using SHR when using a modern Synology NAS. The benefit in the scaling options alone made it a real standout choice for me and for those who are brand faithful, you would only make it more convincing. Traditional RAID is still very relevant and very, very useful. But if you have the option to adopt SHR in your NAS setup, I urge you to do so at the point of installation.

 

 

 

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      Synology Hybrid RAID Explained 2019
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