I want to build a truenas server with the cheapest CPU I can find that can support ECC RAM: Celeron G4900T + 64gb ECC RAM + 4x18 TB SAS drives.
I don’t have experience with ZFS or with truenas (core or scale), how much important is the CPU?
Use case: hundreds of thousands of small files mostly under 1 mb, but just 2-3 concurrent users
- reason why i use a C246 motherboard and other high end expensive components, but such a cheap cpu: someone will sell me used supermicro mobo+ECC ram+SAS HDDs for 500 euro, but no CPU. A Celeron G4900T costs like 15 euro, i was wondering if it could suffice, because this is already overkill for me, at the moment i have no idea on how to use the 36 TB of storage (2x redundancy) 
- You don’t mention your performance requirements and I’m unfamiliar with that CPU. Are you trying to saturate your 1G presumably NIC? Reads or writes? - No, just thousands of small files. Windows takes around a minute to enumerate all the files in the main share via SMB - You should be good, then. Probably don’t need SSDs for ZIL and L2RC either. Don’t forget to schedule a weekly scrub, to catch bit rot. Essential for large drives. 
- @Moonrise2473 
 That looks more like ARC problem, it can hold a large index of the filesystem if you give it enough room in ram, avoiding the need to seek thousands of files on a spinning disk, which takes time. HDDs are fine for sequential operations, Random IO, which is your usecase, is their biggest weakness.
 @eleitl
 
 
- I’ve upgraded from Xeon E3110(DDR2-665) to Celeron G4300(DDR4-2666), I feel confident attesting that CPU is much less important than RAM clockspeed for overall ZFS performance. YMMV 
- It’s ok until you start using jails or dedup. 
- ZFS tends to be more RAM intensive so make certain you have, at bare minimum around 16GB. But I would push for more. 
- In my (admittedly) limited experience with ZFS, it utilizes more RAM than CPU except for scrubs. 



