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submitted 1 year ago by slaecker@lemmy.world to c/homelab@lemmy.ml

Just want to share some love about Seagate.

My new DIY NAS is idle most of the time so I want to configure it to be as power efficient as possible.

I spent a couple of evenings trying to make my new WD Red Plus drives go to standby (spindown) after 30 minutes of inactivity, without success. I read about WD not respecting hdparm commands, interpreting them differently and tried all suggestions, again without success. I even read about WD support saying they don't support Linux. Strange as most of the available consumer NAS systems are based on Linux.

I then decided to try my 2nd choice drives: Seagate Ironwolf. On the first attempt they also didn't go to standby after configuring with hdparm. Then I found this: Seagate offers an open-source suite of tools named openSeaChest, which lets you configure and test your drives in any possible way including firmware updates and ... tada, power settings. After enabling idle_c and standby_z and configuring the timers the drives now do how I configured.

I returned the WD drives. Now Seagate is my top choice for future drive purchases 🧡

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[-] TCB13@lemmy.world 1 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

Great share! Thanks.


I returned the WD drives. Now Seagate is my top choice for future drive purchases 🧡

That's unfortunate, check my other post.

Now what's even more unfortunate and that I can't understand is why there seems to be no effort into porting the power management features of openSeaChest into hdparm. I don't even get why the Seagate open-source team isn't working in that because they've helped that project multiple times and for what's worth openSeaChest was made available by them as well.

this post was submitted on 23 Jun 2023
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