I already asked that question in a different thread, but maybe it's better to create an own thread for my problem.
My goal is to create a tiered storage pool with a resilience level set to single parity (both for ssd and hdd tier). Therefore I already own three 250gb ssds. The problem is that I couln'd find out the correct powershell commands to create such a storage pool. I have tested it with three old 512gb hdds.
So the testpool looked like this:
FriendlyName SerialNumber MediaType
------------
ATA Samsung SSD 850 S2R6NB0HC27909Z SSD
ATA SAMSUNG HD502HJ S20BJ90B690862 HDD
ATA Samsung SSD 850 S21PNSAG776420V SSD
ATA Samsung SSD 850 S21PNSAG203881E SSD
ATA SAMSUNG HD501LJ S0UQJ1DP901935 HDD
ATA SAMSUNG HD502HJ S20BJ90B690863 HDD
With that storage pool I'm also not able to select praity resiliency even, when using the gui. It would be nice if someone could help figure out the powershell commands. Or if tiered parity storage pools are not supported is there another way to incorporate the three ssds in a good way?
My goal is to create a tiered storage pool with a resilience level set to single parity (both for ssd and hdd tier). Therefore I already own three 250gb ssds. The problem is that I couln'd find out the correct powershell commands to create such a storage pool. I have tested it with three old 512gb hdds.
So the testpool looked like this:
FriendlyName SerialNumber MediaType
------------
ATA Samsung SSD 850 S2R6NB0HC27909Z SSD
ATA SAMSUNG HD502HJ S20BJ90B690862 HDD
ATA Samsung SSD 850 S21PNSAG776420V SSD
ATA Samsung SSD 850 S21PNSAG203881E SSD
ATA SAMSUNG HD501LJ S0UQJ1DP901935 HDD
ATA SAMSUNG HD502HJ S20BJ90B690863 HDD
With that storage pool I'm also not able to select praity resiliency even, when using the gui. It would be nice if someone could help figure out the powershell commands. Or if tiered parity storage pools are not supported is there another way to incorporate the three ssds in a good way?