I tried running the best NAS distro on my Raspberry Pi, and it went better than I thought
Despite using between multiple distros during my home lab journey, TrueNAS Community Edition (or Scale, as it was called back in the day) is hands-down my favorite of the bunch, as it has the holy trifecta of solid data protection features, powerful ZFS roots, and top-tier performance. Unfortunately, it’s restricted to x86 systems, leaving OpenMediaVault the only popular NAS distro for Arm devices like the Raspberry Pi. That’s a shame, because certain high-end Raspberry Pi devices have enough memory to meet the minimum requirements for running ZFS pools.
Despite using between multiple distros during my home lab journey, TrueNAS Community Edition (or Scale, as it was called back in the day) is hands-down my favorite of the bunch, as it has the holy trifecta of solid data protection features, powerful ZFS roots, and top-tier performance. Unfortunately, it’s restricted to x86 systems, leaving OpenMediaVault the only popular NAS distro for Arm devices like the Raspberry Pi. That’s a shame, because certain high-end Raspberry Pi devices have enough memory to meet the minimum requirements for running ZFS pools.
Michael Johnson
Chicago
Chicago
Published by: aplhsindia.in
