Qnap TS-879 Pro Turbo NAS review

£1644
Price when reviewed

Qnap has been making eyes at the SMB network storage market for some time now, and the new TS-879 Pro gives it a big edge over the competition. Most significantly, Qnap has made a break from the popular Atom processor: the TS-879 is one of the first to use a much faster Intel Core i3 CPU.

There’s more, too: it supports the latest 6Gbits/sec SATA III interface, has a pair of fast USB 3 ports and is 10GbE ready. Qnap also supplied our review system with an optional Emulex dual-port 10GBase-SR adapter so we could plug it into the Lab’s 10GbE network and see how fast it can go.

The appliance is well built. The eight hot-swap drive bays have locking buttons to stop the drives accidentally popping out. The USB 3 port at the front is linked to a Copy button above, and pressing it fires up a copy that will send the contents of the inserted device to a predefined folder on the appliance.

Qnap TS-879 Pro Turbo NAS

At the rear sits a plethora of ports, with another USB 3, four USB 2, two Gigabit and two eSATA ports. There’s also a PCI Express slot, and Qnap offers dual-port Gigabit or 10GbE cards. Fitting the supplied Emulex 10GbE card was easy; we removed the casing to access the slot.

Installation is swift, with Qnap’s Finder utility locating the appliance on the network and offering quick access to the newly designed Qnap Storage Manager (QSM) 3.5 web interface. This provides a side menu listing all features, and selecting one shows its details in the main window alongside, making it easy to use.

We popped in a quartet of 2TB SATA II hard disks and configured them as a RAID5 array, which took five hours to build. Unlike Thecus appliances, you don’t need to set space aside for IP SAN targets during volume creation.

We dived straight into performance testing over Gigabit using a Broadberry dual X5560 rack server running Windows Server 2008 R2. Iometer reported a fast read speed of 110MB/sec for a mapped Windows share, while drag-and-drop copies of a 2.52GB video clip returned read and write speeds of 104MB/sec. Using the FileZilla client to FTP the video clip returned the same speeds.

For 10GbE testing we used a dual-Opteron 4170 HE Dell PowerEdge R515, fitted with an Emulex dual-port 10GBase-SR card and configured for jumbo frames. With a direct fibre connection, we saw Iometer return a storming raw read speed of 586MB/sec for a mapped share.

This translated to a big boost for drag-and-drop copies, with the same tests now returning average read and write speeds of over 300MB/sec. Most businesses will connect the appliance to a switch over 10GbE and use it to link multiple servers over Gigabit; the TS-879 Pro is quite capable of handling those demands.

IP SAN performance is also excellent, with a 100GB target delivering a raw read speed of 111MB/sec over Gigabit, and the file copies returned similar rates. Moving to 10GbE saw Iometer report a read speed of 627MB/sec for the same target, and copy speeds of around 575MB/sec.

Qnap TS-879 Pro Turbo NAS

Along with top performance, the TS-879 Pro is packed with features. Backup options are well suited to businesses, with support for Amazon S3 and ElephantDrive services, plus Qnap’s free MyCloudNAS service, which we first tested with the TS-459 Pro II.

There’s also Qnap’s NetBak Replicator software for running scheduled backups of Windows workstations and servers. Remote replication is on offer, as the appliance supports sync services. As expected, multimedia features are in abundance and, along with MySQL, the appliance can host websites and use its Surveillance Station feature to monitor, record and deploy motion detection for up to four IP cameras.

New features are RADIUS and TFTP servers, onboard antivirus scanning and iSCSI LUN backup to a remote storage location over CIFS or NFS. It even has a built-in Syslog server where it can receive and store log messages from Syslog senders.

The TS-879 Pro sets standards for other vendors to aspire to. It’s packed with storage, including plenty of cloud services, and it came out with flying colours in our Gigabit and 10GbE tests. An A-List triumph.

Basic specifications

RAID capability yes
Wired adapter speed 1,000Mbits/sec

Connections

Ethernet ports 2
USB connection? yes
eSATA interface yes

Power consumption

Idle power consumption 75W
Peak power consumption 90W

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