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 🧡

  • TCB13@lemmy.world
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    8 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.