• WD Elements Desktop storage on RPI

    From marty@3:770/3 to All on Wednesday, August 03, 2022 19:42:00
    Hi, I am looking for an external disk for Linux raspberry pi media. Specifically WD Elements Desktop Storage, 14 TB, WDBBKG0140HBK-AESN . Is
    it noisy? Have any of you managed to get this drive to work on Linux,
    and reformatted to ext4 or zfs? Not a sign from WD about Linux support.
    Buying disk and enclosure separately is problematic as all enclosures I
    have found limit the disk size to 8 or ten TB, probably for power supply reasons.
    --
    Marty

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  • From marty@3:770/3 to Martin Gregorie on Wednesday, August 03, 2022 22:46:08
    On 3/8/22 22:34, Martin Gregorie wrote:
    On Wed, 3 Aug 2022 19:42:00 +1000, marty wrote:

    Hi, I am looking for an external disk for Linux raspberry pi media.
    Specifically WD Elements Desktop Storage, 14 TB, WDBBKG0140HBK-AESN . Is
    it noisy? Have any of you managed to get this drive to work on Linux,
    and reformatted to ext4 or zfs? Not a sign from WD about Linux support.
    Buying disk and enclosure separately is problematic as all enclosures I
    have found limit the disk size to 8 or ten TB, probably for power supply
    reasons.

    I've been using WD Elements 1GB and 2GB 3.5" USB-connected drives, each formatted as a single ext4 partition, as backups for several years now,
    under RedHat Fedora 35.

    No problems at all: they just work.



    Thanks for that. Reassuring.

    --
    Marty

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  • From Martin Gregorie@3:770/3 to marty on Wednesday, August 03, 2022 12:34:51
    On Wed, 3 Aug 2022 19:42:00 +1000, marty wrote:

    Hi, I am looking for an external disk for Linux raspberry pi media. Specifically WD Elements Desktop Storage, 14 TB, WDBBKG0140HBK-AESN . Is
    it noisy? Have any of you managed to get this drive to work on Linux,
    and reformatted to ext4 or zfs? Not a sign from WD about Linux support. Buying disk and enclosure separately is problematic as all enclosures I
    have found limit the disk size to 8 or ten TB, probably for power supply reasons.

    I've been using WD Elements 1GB and 2GB 3.5" USB-connected drives, each formatted as a single ext4 partition, as backups for several years now,
    under RedHat Fedora 35.

    No problems at all: they just work.



    --

    Martin | martin at
    Gregorie | gregorie dot org

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  • From Theo@3:770/3 to marty on Wednesday, August 03, 2022 14:44:45
    marty <marty@invalid.net> wrote:
    Hi, I am looking for an external disk for Linux raspberry pi media. Specifically WD Elements Desktop Storage, 14 TB, WDBBKG0140HBK-AESN . Is
    it noisy? Have any of you managed to get this drive to work on Linux,
    and reformatted to ext4 or zfs? Not a sign from WD about Linux support. Buying disk and enclosure separately is problematic as all enclosures I
    have found limit the disk size to 8 or ten TB, probably for power supply reasons.

    Not on a Pi specifically, but I've used three of those* on x86 Linux and they have been fine. They worked with ZFS, although with four drives in raidz2
    it's a bit hard on the USB subsystem - I eventually removed them from the enclosures and fitted them as SATA drives, where there's more bandwidth.
    (if fitting as SATA you need to ensure there's no 3.3v power supplied on the SATA power port - easiest is a 5.25" Molex to SATA power adapter)

    Noise is OK - not silent, not loud, they make noise when seeking but it's
    just a mild rumbling really. In raidz2 every noise is of all 4 drives operating at the same time, which makes it louder than it is for one drive.

    You don't need 'Linux support', you'll just have to reformat them and trash
    the Windows software that comes preloaded on the drive, but that's useless anyway.

    Not sure why enclosures would be limited to 8 or 10TB, since there's no
    limit at that point. Possibly they just never tested them with bigger
    drives.

    If using with a Pi, they have an external 12v PSU so you don't need the Pi
    to power them, so should be good to go. If you have multiple drives the
    5Gbps USB 3 port (~4 in real life) may become a bottleneck - not much you
    can do about that.

    Theo

    * I couldn't vouch for the exact part numbers and they may change mechanism
    between revisions - that one appears to be the Australian edition. It is
    important to avoid SMR drives with ZFS, so I'd just confirm that WD
    haven't sneaked in an SMR mechanism in the current version.

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  • From Theo@3:770/3 to Theo on Wednesday, August 03, 2022 17:09:46
    Theo <theom+news@chiark.greenend.org.uk> wrote:
    * I couldn't vouch for the exact part numbers and they may change mechanism
    between revisions - that one appears to be the Australian edition. It is
    important to avoid SMR drives with ZFS, so I'd just confirm that WD
    haven't sneaked in an SMR mechanism in the current version.

    I found the enclosure of one of mine, it's a 14TB WDBWLG0140HBK-XB.
    I also have a WDBWLG012HBK-0B which is a 12TB version.

    Theo

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  • From NY@3:770/3 to Theo on Wednesday, August 03, 2022 22:08:37
    "Theo" <theom+news@chiark.greenend.org.uk> wrote in message news:TaC*Z7PUy@news.chiark.greenend.org.uk...
    If using with a Pi, they have an external 12v PSU so you don't need the Pi
    to power them, so should be good to go. If you have multiple drives the 5Gbps USB 3 port (~4 in real life) may become a bottleneck - not much you
    can do about that.

    Slightly off-topic, but a cautionary tale...

    If you use a USB-powered drive you should use a powered hub to power the
    drive, rather than powering it from the Pi, because the latter with a
    genuine Pi PSU may overload the PSU.

    Fair enough, but... with a Pi 4 (as opposed to Pi 3 B+) you may find with
    some hubs that the Pi will fail to boot: it hangs before displaying anything diagnostic on screen until you unplug the USB hub from the Pi or the disc
    from the hub, at which point booting continues as normal. This is even using
    a specially-prepared USB cable that I had spare, which has its 5V line cut (there were rumours that the Pi 4 doesn't like an external device to feed
    power up the 5V line to the Pi. The same disc and hub worked fine with a Pi 3B+.

    I had to change to a 5 1/4" SATA drive in a powered USB-SATA caddy: that
    works fine. I imagine I could alternatively have used a 3 1/2" drive if I'd
    had one of those spare.

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