**Updated post** <—- Go to this one after reading this one over!
Let me preface this post by saying this is extremely experimental and definitely not supported by Synology and is only a test on my XPENology DS3615xs. I will also add that you will need to reboot your box at least once.
So I had a few WD MyPassport 3TB external USB 3.0 hard drives laying around and I really wanted to turn them into a RAID1 group to see what I could do with them. This is really dumb, but trust me, I’ve done worse. So I got to digging.
I really couldn’t find anything on Synology or XPENologys forum, well because this is not a good idea, but I kept digging. After about 30 minutes of digging like a hot dog digging a cool dirt hole, I came across a post by someone who was running into issues going over 20 drives and bingo, I found a diamond in the rough!
My Specs:
- Running DSM 6.1.3 Update 8 (Read below for update)
- Two (2) WD My Passport 3TB USB 3 Drives
- USB 3.1 ports on Mobo
To get started, SSH into your box and run the following command:
sudo vi /etc.defaults/synoinfo.conf
Find and change the following lines within this file:
FROM: maxdisks="12" usbportcfg="0x300000" TO: maxdisks="24" usbportcfg="0x300000000"
Reboot your box.
When my DSM came back online, I went to the Storage Manager and the two external HDDs now showed up as internal HDDs and I was able to add them to a RAID group. Great Success!
With some surface testing, I was able to get 50-120MB/sec with these two (super) slow external drives and turn them into something somewhat useful, for now.
Happy hacking!
Update: 11/26/17
Again, even though this isn’t probably the best use of a proper NAS configuration, after some more reading and poking around on the internet this could be a great use case for a Synology “HA” setup as a target to mirror your data to as a ‘Passive’ node on a Synology HA Cluster. An example of this would be a nicely equipped Active (Master) Node and then a node with just enough power to safely replicate your data to and keep safe in case your Active node has a major hardware failure.
Another use case is (old) HDDs mounted in an external enclosure such as a USB 3.1, USB-C or an eSATA enclosure. Note: for eSATA, the eSATA flag would need to be changed in the synoconf.conf file.
Update: 12/5/17
I’ve recently updated to DSM 6.1.4 Update 2 and this no longer works. Not sure what they changed but I am working on a workaround. Will create another updated post when I figure it out.
October 7, 2018 at 6:19 pm
Hello,
Did you find a solution to this problem ?
Thank you.
November 27, 2018 at 8:35 pm
Hi Khalid. What problem are you referring to?