What are some best practices in mounting NAS shares that you all follow?

Currently I am mounting using fstab to my user’s home directory with full rwx permissions, but that feels wrong.

I’ve read to use the mnt directory or the media directory but opinions differ.

My main concern is I want to protect against inadvertently deleting the contents of the NAS with an errant rm command. And yes I have backups of my NAS too.

Edit: this is a home NAS with 1 user on this Linux PC (the other clients being windows and Mac systems)

Would love to hear everyone’s philosophy! Thanks!

  • NotAnArdvark@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    6
    ·
    1 year ago

    Agreed on the latency issues. I tested SMB and NFS once and found them to be pretty much the same in that regard.

    I’m interested to test iSCSI, as for some reason I think it might be better designed for latency.

    • dan@upvote.au
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      If you want the lowest latency, you could try NBD. It’s a block protocol but with less overhead compared to iSCSI. https://github.com/NetworkBlockDevice/nbd/tree/master

      Like iSCSI, it exposes a disk image file, or a raw partition if you’d like (by using something like /dev/sda3 or /dev/mapper/foo as the file name). Unlike iSCSI, it’s a fairly basic protocol (the API is literally only 9 commands). iSCSI is essentially just regular SCSI over the network.

      NFS and SMB have to deal with file locks, multiple readers and writers concurrently accessing the same file, permissions, etc. That can add a little bit of overhead. With iSCSI and NBD, it assumes only one client is using the file (because it’s impossible for two clients to use the same disk image at the same time - it’ll get corrupted) and it’s just reading and writing raw data.

    • Rockslide0482@discuss.tchncs.de
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      main thing to note is that NFS is an object based storage (acts like a share) where iSCSI is block based (acts like a disk). You’d really only use iSCSI for things like VM disks, 1:1 storage, etc. For home use cases unless you’re selfhosting (and probably even then) you’re likely gonna be better off with NFS.

      if you were to do iSCSI I would recommend its own VLAN. NFS technically should be isolated too, but I currently run NFS over my main VLAN, so do what ya gotta do