The DiskStation DS1817+ is another comprehensive 8-bay NAS system from Synology designed to centralize storage for small growing businesses. At the center of the DS1817+ is a Quad-core 2.4GHz CPU with an AES-NI hardware encryption engine and up to 16GB in dual-channel DDR RAM, components that should allow the NAS solution to work well in most demanding environments (upwards of 1,179MB/s in sequential reads). The DS1817+ can store a maximum of 80TB in storage on a single system using eight 10TB drives, which can be upped to a massive total of 180TB via expansion units. This scalable solution also features four 1GbE LAN ports.





The Synology DiskStation DS1817+ is another comprehensive 8-bay NAS system from Synology designed to centralize storage for small growing businesses. At the center of the DS1817+ is a Quad-core 2.4GHz CPU with an AES-NI hardware encryption engine and up to 16GB in dual-channel DDR RAM, components that should allow the NAS solution to work well in most demanding environments (upwards of 1,179MB/s in sequential reads). The DS1817+ can store a maximum of 80TB in storage on a single system using eight 10TB drives, which can be upped to a massive total of 180TB via expansion units. This scalable solution also features four 1GbE LAN ports.

The most versatile feature of the Synology DiskStation DS1817+ is its PCIe Gen2 x8 slot (x4 link), giving users the option to install the company’s dual M.2 SSD adapter card (M2D17) for high-IOPS system cache and increased overall performance of the NAS. Users can also install a 10GbE NIC in the PCIe slot for mucher higher data transfers.

Like all Synology NAS solutions, the DS1817+ is managed by DiskStation Manager (DSM), which is currently in version 6.1. DSM is a powerful and comprehensive operating system that features tons of ways to easily manage your DiskStation. This includes File Station, a user-friendly file management tool with seamless drag-and-drop operation and advanced search and filtering tools; Surveillance Station, a web-based application that manages IP cameras; and Cloud Station Server, a comprehensive way to sync data from multiple platforms on your Synology NAS.

The Synology DiskStation DS1817+ is backed by a 3-year warranty and goes for roughly $950 and $850 for the diskless 8GB RAM and 2GB RAM models, respectively.

DiskStation DS1817+ Specifications

CPU Model: Intel Atom C2538

CPU Architecture: 64-bit

CPU Frequency: Quad Core 2.4 GHz

Hardware Encryption Engine (AES-NI)

Memory System Memory: 2/8 GB DDR3 Memory Module Pre-installed: 2GB (1 x 2GB) / 8GB (2 x 4GB) Total Memory Slots: 2 Memory Expandable up to: 16 GB (8 GB x 2)

Storage Drive Bays: 8 Maximum Drive Bays with Expansion Unit: 18 Compatible Drive Type: 3.5″ SATA HDD 2.5″ SATA HDD 2.5″ SATA SSD Maximum Internal Raw Capacity: 80 TB (10 TB drive x 8) (Capacity may vary by RAID types) Maximum Raw Capacity with Expansion Units: 180 TB (10 TB drive x 18) (Capacity may vary by RAID types) Maximum Single Volume Size: 108 TB Hot Swappable Drives Internal Drives: Btrfs EXT4 External Drives: Btrfs EXT4 EXT3 FAT NTFS HFS+ exFAT

External Ports: RJ-45 1GbE LAN Port: 4 (with Link Aggregation / Failover support) USB 3.0 Port: 4 eSATA Port: 2

PCIe: PCIe Expansion 1 x Gen2 x8 slot (x4 link) Add-in-card support M2D17 – Dual M.2 SSD adapter card for SSD cache PCIe Network Interface Card (Learn more)

Appearance: Size (Height x Width x Depth): 166 mm x 343 mm x 243 mm Weight: 6.0 kg

System Fan: Size: 120 mm x 120 mm x 2 pcs Fan Speed Modes: Cool Mode Quiet Mode

Easy Replacement System Fan

Wireless Support (dongle)

Brightness adjustable front LED indicators

Power Recovery

Noise Level: .2 dB(A)

Scheduled Power On/Off

Wake on LAN/WAN

Power Supply Unit / Adapter: 250W

AC Input Power Voltage: 100V to 240V AC

Power Frequency: 50/60 Hz, Single Phase

Power Consumption: 61.5 W (Access) 31.6 W (HDD Hibernation)

Environment Temperature Operating Temperature: 5°C to 40°C (40°F to 104°F) Storage Temperature: -20°C to 60°C (-5°F to 140°F) Relative Humidity: 5% to 95% RH

Warranty: 3 Year Hardware Warranty, Extendable to 5 Year Coverage – EW201

Synology DiskStation DS1817+ Design and Build

The DiskStation DS1817+ has a very similar design as the DS1517+ with its matt-black plastic enclosure. Each of the 8 drive-bays has a drive lock and status indicator and can be easily accessed by pressing the lower part of the tray and pulling the handle towards you. Along the top of the DS1817+ are the Status and Alert indicators, which gives information about the status of the NAS and warnings related to fan or temperature, respectively. To the right is the power button and the LAN indicator, the latter which displays the status of the network connection. TheUSB 3.0 port is located at the bottom right of the front panel, giving users the ability to connect external devices such as hard drives, USB printers, and more.

On the sides of the DS1817+ is the Synology logo, which is also used as ventilation. RAM is accessed through the bottom of the NAS. Simply remove the four screws to open up the bottom panel.

Turning the NAS around reveals the dual fans, which take up the most of the back panel; if one the fan malfunctions, a loud beeping sound will be emitted. To the right of the system fans is the PCIe expansion and the left is the power port. Simply remove the single screw and pull open the cover to access the PCIe slot. Note that the DS1817+ only supports the M.2 SATA SSD interface when using the M2D17; M.2 NVMe/AHCI PCIe SSD is not supported.

Along the bottom of the back panel is the Kensington Security Slot, the first eSATA port, four LAN ports, the reset button, three USB 3.0 ports, and the second eSATA port.

The DS1817+ offers a single PCIe expansion slot for an M.2 SSD card as well as networking add-on cars. While we have concerns over the amount of airflow the slot provides, Synology states that in their testing, cards are able to operate within their normal operating temperature ranges.

As mentioned above, the DS1817+ uses Synology’s popular DSM operating system. The OS has more than enough functions for users ranging from SOHO to SME, such as various RAID selection in data protection.

Application Performance Analysis

SQL Server Performance

Each SQL Server VM is configured with two vDisks: 100GB volume for boot and a 500GB volume for the database and log files. From a system resource perspective, we configured each VM with 16 vCPUs, 64GB of DRAM and leveraged the LSI Logic SAS SCSI controller. While our Sysbench workloads tested previously saturated the platform in both storage I/O and capacity, the SQL test is looking for latency performance.

This test uses SQL Server 2014 running on Windows Server 2012 R2 guest VMs, being stressed by Dell’s Benchmark Factory for Databases. While our traditional usage of this benchmark has been to test large 3,000-scale databases on local or shared storage, in this iteration we focus on running out four 1,500-scale databases on the NAS over iSCSI.

SQL Server Testing Configuration (per VM)

Windows Server 2012 R2

Storage Footprint: 600GB allocated, 500GB used

SQL Server 2014 Database Size: 1,500 scale Virtual Client Load: 15,000 RAM Buffer: 48GB

Test Length: 3 hours 2.5 hours preconditioning 30 minutes sample period



SQL Server OLTP Benchmark Factory LoadGen Equipment

Dell PowerEdge R730 Virtualized SQL 4-node Cluster Eight Intel E5-2690 v3 CPUs for 249GHz in cluster (Two per node, 2.6GHz, 12-cores, 30MB Cache) 1TB RAM (256GB per node, 16GB x 16 DDR4, 128GB per CPU) SD Card Boot (Lexar 16GB) 4 x Mellanox ConnectX-3 InfiniBand Adapter (vSwitch for vMotion and VM network) 4 x Emulex 16GB dual-port FC HBA 4 x Emulex 10GbE dual-port NIC VMware ESXi vSphere 6.0 / Enterprise Plus 8-CPU



When looking at SQL Server Output, we tested two SQL VMs each with a 15,000VU load applied. This gave us individual TPS scores ranging from 2,265.5 to 2,308.0 (RADI6), while aggregate results came in at 4,573.5 TPS.

Next, we looked at average latency of the new Synology NAS where VMs ranged from 1,881ms to 1,758ms (RAID6) while aggregate performance scored 1,819.5ms.

Sysbench Performance

Each Sysbench VM is configured with three vDisks, one for boot (~92GB), one with the pre-built database (~447GB) and the third for the database under test (270GB). From a system resource perspective, we configured each VM with 16 vCPUs, 60GB of DRAM and leveraged the LSI Logic SAS SCSI controller. Load gen systems are Dell R730 servers; we use four in this review.

Dell PowerEdge R730 Virtualized MySQL 4-8 node Cluster

Eight Intel E5-2690 v3 CPUs for 249GHz in cluster (Two per node, 2.6GHz, 12-cores, 30MB Cache)

1TB RAM (256GB per node, 16GB x 16 DDR4, 128GB per CPU)

SD Card Boot (Lexar 16GB)

4 x Emulex 16GB dual-port FC HBA

4 x Emulex 10GbE dual-port NIC

VMware ESXi vSphere 6.0 / Enterprise Plus 8-CPU

Sysbench Testing Configuration (per VM)

CentOS 6.3 64-bit

Storage Footprint: 1TB, 800GB used

Percona XtraDB 5.5.30-rel30.1 Database Tables: 100 Database Size: 10,000,000 Database Threads: 32 RAM Buffer: 24GB

Test Length: 3 hours 2 hours preconditioning 32 threads 1 hour 32 threads



During our sysbench tests, we looked at the DS1817+ configured in RAID6 using 4 VMs only where it posted a TPS score of 753. In comparison, the Netgear 628x measured 1,411 TPS.

Average latency of the DS1817+ showed 170.01 across 4 VMs while the Netgear NAS posted 71.91ms.

The DS1817+ reached a 99th Percentile average latency of 367.18ms while the Netgear showed roughly 24% faster latency.

Enterprise Synthetic Workload Analysis

Our enterprise hard-drive benchmark process preconditions each drive into steady-state with the same workload the device will be tested with under a heavy load of 16 threads with an outstanding queue of 16 per thread. It is then tested in set intervals in multiple thread/queue depth profiles to show performance under light and heavy usage. Since hard drives reach their rated performance level very quickly, we only graph out the main sections of each test.

Preconditioning and Primary Steady-State Tests:

Throughput (Read+Write IOPS Aggregate)

Average Latency (Read+Write Latency Averaged Together)

Max Latency (Peak Read or Write Latency)

Latency Standard Deviation (Read+Write Standard Deviation Averaged Together)

Our Enterprise Synthetic Workload Analysis includes four profiles based on real-world tasks. These profiles have been developed to make it easier to compare to our past benchmarks as well as widely-published values such as max 4k read and write speed and 8k 70/30, which is commonly used for enterprise drives.

4k 100% Read or 100% Write 100% 4k

8k 70/30 70% Read, 30% Write 100% 8k

128k (Sequential) 100% Read or 100% Write 100% 128k



In the first of our enterprise workloads, we measured a long sample of random 4k performance with 100% write and 100% read activity to get our main results. When populated with the Toshiba HK3R2 SSD iSCSI (RAID6), the DS1817+ had its top performance in iSCSI with 34,940 IOPS read and 10,923 IOPS write. In an HDD configuration, the Synology NAS posted its best performance with 2,271 IOPS (iSCSI) and 1,188 IOPS (CIFS) in reads and writes, respectively.

When looking average latency using a heavy 16T/16Q load the DS1817+ recorded its best read performance with the HK3R2 SSDs configured in iSCSI (7.33ms) while CIFS had the Synology’s best write score (19.81ms).

When looking at the max latency, the DS1817+ had leading performance when populated with the Toshiba HK3R2 SSDs in an iSCSI block-level configuration, posting 46.0ms read. Its best write performance was under CIFS SSD configuration, which had 131.9ms.

The last part of our series of 4K benchmarks looks at latency consistency via standard deviation. In this scenario, the DS1817+ had a leading 11.41ms in reads when configured with Toshiba HK3R2 SSDs (iSCSI block-level).

Our next benchmark measures 100% 8K sequential throughput with a 16T/16Q load in 100% read and 100% write operations. Here, the DS1817+ showed its best performance under iSCSI (file level), with 44,405 IOPS read and 39,119 IOPS write. The Netgear 628x gave an impressive 221,393 IOPS and 153,330 IOPS for reads and writes, respectively.

Compared to the fixed 16 thread, 16 queue max workload we performed in the 100% 4k write test, our mixed workload profiles scale the performance across a wide range of thread/queue combinations. In these tests, we span workload intensity from 2 threads and 2 queues up to 16 threads and 16 queues. From the charts below, the best DS1817+ configuration was by far the iSCSI block-level set up, which reached just under 18,700 IOPS by the end of the test.

When looking at 8k 70/30 average response times, the iSCSI block-level SSD configuration recorded the best performance for Synology’s DS1817+, which had a range of 0.4ms to 13.99ms.

Our max latency numbers showed similar results between both block- and file-level storage configurations when using SSDs whereas the HDD configurations were much more uneven. Here, the DS1817+ showed its best (and leading) performance under the CIFS SSD configuration with a range of 53.26ms to 168.7ms.

Standard deviation showed a similar trend, with the RAID10 iSCSI SSD configuration with CIFS SSD configuration recording the best performance for the DS1817+ (0.42ms to 9.19ms).

The last Enterprise Synthetic Workload benchmark is our 128K test, which is a large block sequential test that shows the highest sequential transfer speed for a device. In this workload scenario, the clear winner was the Netgear 628x, which had 2.3GB/s read (CIFS) and 1,76GB/s write (iSCSI) via the Toshiba SSDs. The DS1817+ showed it best read performance configured in block-level iSCSI with 948MB/s while writes hit 532MB/s in file-level iSCSI.

Conclusion

The Synology DiskStation DS1817+ is powered by a Quad-core 2.4GHz CPU with an AES-NI hardware encryption engine and up to 16GB in dual-channel DDR RAM. This scalable NAS solution offers up to 80TB in storage on a single system (8 x 10TB drives), which can be expanded to a healthy 180TB via expansion units. That said, the DS1817+ is somewhat of a mixed bag overall–something you don’t hear very often when we review a Synology product; performance lacked in several areas where it should have excelled, which certainly due to the design flaw where the add-on card slot is poorly ventilated, thus leading to overheating and sluggish performance. Because the PCIe slot is a huge selling point for the newer Synology NAS solutions, this makes for a significant issue.

Diving into performance details, the Synology DiskStation DS1817+ shows its best results when configured in block-level iSCSI connectivity using Toshiba HK3R2 SSDs; specifically for reads. For example, it posted 34,940 IOPS read and 10,923 IOPS write compared to 7,526 IOPS read and 12,918 IOPS write in CIFS during our long sample of random 4k (with 100% write and 100% read activity) benchmark. In the HDD configurations, the Synology NAS posted its best performance with 2,271 IOPS (in iSCSI) and 1,188 IOPS (in CIFS) in reads and writes, respectively. During our 8K sequential throughput tests, the DS1817+ recorded its best performance during our file-level iSCSI configuration with 44,405 IOPS read and 39,119 IOPS write; however, the Netgear 628x had significantly better results, with an impressive 221,393 IOPS and 153,330 IOPS for reads and writes, respectively.

When looking at the results of our mixed workload profiles, as the Synology DiskStation DS1517+ SSD iSCSI (block-level, RAID6) configuration handily beat the file-level iSCSI and CIFS performance; however, the Netgear 628x NAS posted much better performance. In our last Enterprise Synthetic Workload benchmark, we put the Synology NAS through the large block sequential test that shows the highest sequential transfer speed for a device.The DS1817+ showed it best read performance in a block-level iSCSI configuration with 948MB/s, while writes hit just 532MB/s in file-level iSCSI. Again, the Netgear 628x was far and beyond the best performer, with a massive 2.3GB/s read (CIFS) and 1,76GB/s write (iSCSI) with the Toshiba SSDs.

Pros

Good 4K performance

As usual, DSM adds powerful management functionality

Cons

Lacking in several performance categories

Bottom Line

Though excelling in some of our workloads, the overall lack of performance due to a significant design flaw is hard to ignore making the DS1817+ a rare disappointing release by Synology.

Synology 1817+ on Amazon

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