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xPanda posted:Are you able to elaborate on this? Finding information on PMP support in Opensolaris is really difficult, but the build log says it was added in build 122 or thereabouts. I've seen a few posts around of people who claim to have it working. i spent a lot of time yesterday trying to work out which sil chipset works with which card. while i can't help you with open solaris if you can, load up windows and make sure that you are running the most recent bios on the 3132 card and that it's the correct bios to be running ie if you want raid use that otherwise use the base bios. There are also some bugs with the sil3176 firmware that might need to be updated, as they are to do with hot plugging.
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# ? Feb 13, 2010 15:10 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 01:17 |
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What do you guys think of this build for my latest NAS creation? http://secure.newegg.com/WishList/PublicWishDetail.aspx?WishListNumber=13711266 I'll also be throwing in a 2 port SAS card (which can handle 8 SATA drives) and maybe a DVD reader or writer. This will run Opensolaris with the 5 2 TB drives in a RAIDZ, and the 2 other drives as a mirrored root drive. I'll also be using Xen, hence the beefy CPU and RAM. Sometime in the future I'll get a 6th 2 TB drive for the 3 in 2 enclosure to use as a hot spare, and in the future I can buy another 5 in 3 enclosure and add on another 5 disk RAIDZ. Unless there are any parts better/cheaper than what I've listed here, I think I'm going to pull the trigger when my tax refund comes in. I'm most unsure about the motherboard. I like that that one has two PCIx16 slots, though I only need 1 x8 slot for the SAS card. I also like that it has 2 PCIx1 slots that I can use for more NICs or whatever. If it could be 10-20 cheaper that would be cool, but at that poing I'm sperging over so it's probably not worth it.
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# ? Feb 13, 2010 22:02 |
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FISHMANPET posted:What do you guys think of this build for my latest NAS creation? FISHMANPET posted:What do you guys think of this build for my latest NAS creation? I used that case in my build as well. It's OK for a cheap case but don't expect super high quality. There are tabs between each of the 5.25" bays that you'll have to bend/cut out to get your 3-to-5 drive cage in. Also, the expansion slot covers in the back of the case are stamped in, so you'll bend the poo poo out of things trying to get them out. No included power supply either, didn't see one in your wish list. Take a look at http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817121405 for the 3-5 drive cage, too. Amazon carries them through Buy.com for a better price than Newegg, and they're already cheaper via Newegg than the iStar cage you have listed. I have one, they're built very well and work great. Only downside is the 90mm fan is a little loud.
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# ? Feb 13, 2010 22:52 |
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Jazzzzz posted:I used that case in my build as well. It's OK for a cheap case but don't expect super high quality. There are tabs between each of the 5.25" bays that you'll have to bend/cut out to get your 3-to-5 drive cage in. Also, the expansion slot covers in the back of the case are stamped in, so you'll bend the poo poo out of things trying to get them out. No included power supply either, didn't see one in your wish list. I've already got one of those SuperMicro cages for my first NAS, but I'm willing to spend a bit more for the iStar because it looks pretty () and because it has a matching 3 in 2 enclosure. I've also been through the ordeal of hammering down the tabs so that's no big deal. For Power Supply I haven't got one in mind but I was aware that that case didn't include one, I just hadn't thrown it on that wish list. Any recommendation for a better case? I dig that that one has 9 5.25 bays and nothing else cluttering the front, so I can just fill the whole drat thing up with drives. On a completely different note, any suggestions for a simple plug and play 2 TB Nas? I need to get one for somebody else, and I see in another thread somebody said WD's offerings sucks, so I'm open to suggestions.
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# ? Feb 15, 2010 17:40 |
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Has anyone on this forum been able to fix the Seagate 7200.11 line BSY stuck drive error? Or possibly have a kit or willing to provide the service? I bought poo poo myself to do it, but i'm horrible at all this soldering, pin outs, and poo poo.
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# ? Feb 26, 2010 10:02 |
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I'm hoping that there's a simple answer to this request... What I'm looking for is a (relatively) inexpensive NAS for my home, in order to serve audio and video to an atom-based PC in my living-room running XBMC, attached to my receiver and television. My only requirement for the NAS is that it have four drive bays and that it not totally suck. A bonus would be RAID5, but I'm thinking that sort of solution would be out of my budget. At the moment I'm looking at the NAS200, but it only has 2 drive bays... Any suggestions?
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# ? Feb 27, 2010 07:42 |
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The Intel SS4200-E as mentioned earlier in this thread (Newegg Link) is a 4-bay array that does raid 5. I got one about 6 months ago and stuffed it full with 4x WD 1.5TB Green drives. The default software comes with SMB, NFS and FTP support, as well as a UPNP AV server. It's running a standard Intel MB/CPU, so if you are adventurous you could try to install something else on it, like Windows Home Server or unRaid, but since it has no video-out, there is a fair bit of effort and extra parts required. It's pretty big for a 4-bay NAS (we refer to it as "The Suitcase") but is very solidly constructed. There are external USB and eSATA ports for expansion. I have my UPS plugged into the USB port and it automatically shuts itself down whenever we lose power (It sends me an email about it, too). I actually had a drive fail in it about a month ago, and was able to replace the drive without any harm to the array (But it did take about 4 days for it to rebuild the drive once replaced). Newegg has it on-sale for ~$150 occasionally, but it's only ~200 normally. Edit: Here is a picture of the inside I took when I put it together: Puweyxil fucked around with this message at 20:45 on Feb 27, 2010 |
# ? Feb 27, 2010 20:37 |
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Puweyxil posted:It's pretty big for a 4-bay NAS (we refer to it as "The Suitcase") but is very solidly constructed. Hah, I've taken to calling mine "the briefcase" - seems fitting. I'd second the Intel device, I've been loving mine. I like the layout of the case a lot and for the price, it was hard to beat. A seller on ebay had them for $135, so it is worth checking there too.
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# ? Feb 28, 2010 03:22 |
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How cool does it keep the drives? And is the fan pretty loud?
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# ? Feb 28, 2010 04:07 |
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DLCinferno posted:How cool does it keep the drives? And is the fan pretty loud? I've got two 1.5TB WD green drives installed right now and a bunch of disk activity was just taking place - the drives stayed just under 90F and the unit is very quiet. There are two fans in the rear of the unit and are spinning at ~1400 RPM. Can hardly hear them and the server is sitting next to the rest of my home theater gear.
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# ? Feb 28, 2010 04:38 |
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Puweyxil posted:The Intel SS4200-E as mentioned earlier in this thread (Newegg Link) is a 4-bay array that does raid 5. This is probably a dumb question, but on the newegg link it says: "It handles up to 4 SATA II drives in its internal 3.5" drive bays for a massive 4TB storage space." Which made me think if I stuffed 4 2TB hard drives into this device I'd only get to use half of it, but since you put 4 1.5TB drives in it I assume I'm missing something?
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# ? Mar 1, 2010 02:58 |
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Somewhere in the reviews at Newegg, someone said they had success using 1.5TB drives, so that is what I went with. It reports 4.1TB of storage, which I believe is correct thanks to drive-math: No idea what it would do with 2TB disks. I had a friend who picked one of these up, and while being very satisfied by it, he had trouble updating the firmware. The "Check for Updates" link in the GUI lies and claims there are no updates when one is available directly from Intel. Also, the firmware update process wouldn't work when he was using Firefox, he had to switch to IE to get it to work properly.
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# ? Mar 1, 2010 05:58 |
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cross-posting from the system building thread. What's the best file system for cross-platform compatibility? I ordered a Drobo and 5 1TB drives for some local backup storage at work but I know I'm going to have to be moving it back and forth between Mac and PC from time to time. How should I go about formatting this? I know in the past it's been an issue.
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# ? Mar 1, 2010 19:43 |
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If you don't care about speed use NTFS and install NTFS FUSE 3G on the mac. Otherwise use HFS+ and install macdrive or something similar on the PC. Finally if you can live with a horrible filesystem and a ridiculous filesize cap use FAT32
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# ? Mar 1, 2010 19:52 |
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I'm looking for a NAS for small business with around 2 TB of capacity and NFS support as well as the ability to plug in a USB drive to back up specific folders from the device. It will only have two purposes one is as a target for backup execs backup to folder option the other to keep a copy of a couple of ESXi server images on for emergency restores. Ideally I'd like to keep the price in the 600-1K range, I've been looking at QNAP, but if anyone has any advice on other brands to look for or avoid I'm all ears. As it's just a backup target for 2 windows servers I don't think the specs need to be that high, but when we run a full backup it will have 1-200 GB to back up in a night.
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# ? Mar 1, 2010 20:54 |
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friendship waffle posted:If you don't care about speed use NTFS and install NTFS FUSE 3G on the mac.
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# ? Mar 1, 2010 22:51 |
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Does anyone have any info about running unRAID as a guest OS under VirtualBox or VMware Server? Are there any big hurdles? Can it still spin down the drives while running as a virtual os?
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# ? Mar 4, 2010 12:13 |
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supster posted:Does anyone have any info about running unRAID as a guest OS under VirtualBox or VMware Server? Are there any big hurdles? Can it still spin down the drives while running as a virtual os? You'd have to give the virtualizer direct access to the disks, but I'm not sure if that's possible without running a hypervisor. Xen might be able to do it, but I don't think VirtualBox of VMware could do it.
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# ? Mar 4, 2010 16:51 |
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bob arctor posted:I'm looking for a NAS for small business with around 2 TB of capacity and NFS support as well as the ability to plug in a USB drive to back up specific folders from the device. No suggestions?
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# ? Mar 4, 2010 20:04 |
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deimos posted:Here's my hardware: Trip report for this: FUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCK port multiplication (lack of) standards. The TR8M requires a SI chip for port multiplication, so I ended up having to buy a plain PCI slot adapter. Also I bought 4x 2TB Hitachi drives instead of 1.5 EADS. The Hitachis are very good. It peaks at 90 MBps and averages 40-60MB using btrfs with compression, which is pretty good, also power usage is below 30W for idle and 110W for all drives spinning (using very aggressive power settings in linux). btrfs has heavy caching and it's performing like a dream. I used the native btrfs raid instead of going with an FS over lvm2. It has survived 2 power outages (whoops unplugging the wrong cord and nuking the drive array) and has had zero data loss.
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# ? Mar 4, 2010 22:58 |
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Welp, aside from the fact that opensolaris has some kind of bizarre bug with intel multiprocessor computers using the regular ata driver, my new media/noise box is doing very well. I decided to use the Norco 4220 gigantic case of doom because frankly between the three computers in the house we probably have 15 drives. I also learned that they make Reverse breakout cables which let you plug your SAS backplanes into a regular old SATA port, which saved me quite a bit of money, because I have an old Areca 1220 raid card I can use. Currently my raidZ1 pool is 4 1.5 TB WD green drives, but once I migrate data over, I'll be adding another 4x 1 TB raidz1 vdev to the pool, and possibly a bunch of random sized drives acting as random scratch/download disks. I should have enough controller ports available to drive all the disks, so we'll see. The one thing people never mentioned on the reviews of this case is how god damned LOUD it is. The thing has 4 80mm delta screamers in it. I can hear it through a closed door, and can't hear other people talking in the next room if I'm near it. On the other hand, once I figured out how the gently caress opensolaris worked, I was able to set up xVM, 3 windows images for use as various media servers/download boxes, and got VNC to work for all the images and misc poo poo set up. Hell, the hardest part of that was figuring out how the gently caress to make samba work and allow windows clients to log into it. Currently migrating the contents of my old RAID5 onto the larger RAIDZ1 then breaking it and moving the hardware over. I'll have pictures of the build sometime later.
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# ? Mar 5, 2010 00:45 |
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Methylethylaldehyde posted:The one thing people never mentioned on the reviews of this case is how god damned LOUD it is. The thing has 4 80mm delta screamers in it. I can hear it through a closed door, and can't hear other people talking in the next room if I'm near it. Methylethylaldehyde posted:On the other hand, once I figured out how the gently caress opensolaris worked, I was able to set up xVM,
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# ? Mar 5, 2010 02:00 |
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FISHMANPET posted:You'd have to give the virtualizer direct access to the disks, but I'm not sure if that's possible without running a hypervisor. Xen might be able to do it, but I don't think VirtualBox of VMware could do it.
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# ? Mar 5, 2010 04:57 |
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Methylethylaldehyde posted:The one thing people never mentioned on the reviews of this case is how god damned LOUD it is. The thing has 4 80mm delta screamers in it. I can hear it through a closed door, and can't hear other people talking in the next room if I'm near it. http://www.mediasmartserver.net/forums/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=6120&sid=0b2d5ecee7d9621b73daebc713a3c6b2 Dude makes a fan bracket that will hold 3 120MM fans instead of 4 80MM fans. Because it's bigger it creates more of a seal between each side of the case, so the fans don't need to be as powerful to pull the air through, and because they're bigger fans they can be slower and quieter to move the same amount of air. necrobobsledder posted:Umm, last I remember on OpenSolaris it was really VirtualBox and you shouldn't be using xVM anymore since development has stopped on it in favor of VirtualBox. VirtualBox is pretty close to VMWare Workstation in features and reliability, which is pretty solid. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_xVM posted:Sun originally announced the xVM product family in October 2007 as a broader product line. The brand at one time encompassed Sun xVM Server, Sun xVM Ops Center, and Sun xVM VirtualBox,[2] but the latter two products no longer use "xVM" branding.[1]
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# ? Mar 5, 2010 05:07 |
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necrobobsledder posted:Umm, every other review on Newegg says the fans are loud as gently caress. But really, if it's that loud I'll have to reconsider it for placement in the garage in a 12U enclosed rack. I'm not sure what a good set of fans to replace the Deltas would be considering airflow is a big, big concern with so many drives. It's a server chassis made for a datacenter. "Quiet" isn't on their mind. Delta fans are awesome fans, but I wouldn't put this in my house. Garage, sure.
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# ? Mar 5, 2010 07:50 |
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FISHMANPET posted:8 more ports: SuperMicro AOC-USAS-L8i or AOC-USASLP-L8i For anybody interested in this card, particulary movex, who already has one, I found a bracket online that will work for it. SuperMicro was stupid enough to use standard hole spacing, so all you need is a standard PCI bracket with tabs. Keystone Electronics makes one. You can get it from digikey for about 5 dollars shipped: http://search.digikey.com/scripts/DkSearch/dksus.dll?site=us&lang=en&mpart=9203 There are other places that have it cheaper per unit, but there are order minimums and they ship via UPS, so it costs way more for 1 of them. Digikey can ship via the postal service. But if you're doing something with a bunch of these, you can search all of Keystone's vendors here: http://www.keyelco.com/order.asp The part number to search for is 9203. If you dig around the Keystone site you can find mechanical drawings of the bracket. I compaired their measurements to my card and it looks like it should work. I'll post a trip report when I get it. FISHMANPET fucked around with this message at 09:01 on Mar 5, 2010 |
# ? Mar 5, 2010 08:40 |
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H110Hawk posted:It's a server chassis made for a datacenter. "Quiet" isn't on their mind. Delta fans are awesome fans, but I wouldn't put this in my house. Garage, sure. supster posted:I've read that it's possible to do with virtualbox - I'm not sure about vmware but I wouldn't be surprised if it was possible as well. Are there any other issues that come to mind? Running an entire server that's just running unraid seems so silly.
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# ? Mar 5, 2010 17:28 |
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necrobobsledder posted:It's a really low quality case that I wouldn't put in a datacenter unless I'm doing some crazy low-cost storage project is the thing, and there's a bedroom next to my garage, so I wouldn't want something so loud you can hear it easily outside the garage even. I just wish there was a better option for 12+ drives in a box for home users besides some rackmounted monstrosity like this, but given how much data it potentially holds, I'll have to treat it like a professional datacenter setup. Out of curiosity, what specifically is low quality about that case? It appears to be metal, metal, metal, some plastic, some Delta fans, and a power button? Plus, if your walls are so hollow why not insulate them? It will add value to your home and you will sleep better at night. And if you don't want a datacenter-esque case, why look at rackmounts at all? I'm sure you could build a really bitchin full tower with 12+ drives in it.
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# ? Mar 5, 2010 18:09 |
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Methylethylaldehyde posted:Welp, aside from the fact that opensolaris has some kind of bizarre bug with intel multiprocessor computers using the regular ata driver, my new media/noise box is doing very well. Yea that case is loud with all 6 fans running. I removed the 4 fans in the middle and replaced them with high-flowing 120mm fans (only 2) and left the two rear exhaust fans that came with the case in place. Quite a bit quieter and my WD Green Drives still only hang at around 36c
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# ? Mar 5, 2010 18:19 |
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H110Hawk posted:Out of curiosity, what specifically is low quality about that case? It appears to be metal, metal, metal, some plastic, some Delta fans, and a power button? Plus, if your walls are so hollow why not insulate them? It will add value to your home and you will sleep better at night. quote:And if you don't want a datacenter-esque case, why look at rackmounts at all? I'm sure you could build a really bitchin full tower with 12+ drives in it.
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# ? Mar 5, 2010 20:17 |
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necrobobsledder posted:I just wish there was a better option for 12+ drives in a box for home users besides some rackmounted monstrosity like this
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# ? Mar 5, 2010 23:50 |
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necrobobsledder posted:The thickness of the metal (merely "adequate") along with the flimsiness of the drive trays was mentioned in a lot of reviews I've read, along with the backplanes having the molex connectors hot-glued on there poorly. I know I shouldn't expect much for a $340 4u case, but I want to feel like my data is physically sound at least. The poster I quoted said that he could hear the fans in the next room over, and given how sounds bounce in a garage, it'd be awful. Once the top is on, it's not quite so bad, and I'll probably under volt the fans at some point to try and quiet them down. On the other hand, I'm putting it in the crawlspace under my house, and 8 inches of insulation should be plenty to keep it from driving me nuts. My case I guess was updated, because the molex connectors had these soldered on clamps that held them in place. I was able to shove them around quite at bit and none of them fell off. No hot glue to be seen.
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# ? Mar 6, 2010 00:20 |
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roadhead posted:Yea that case is loud with all 6 fans running. I removed the 4 fans in the middle and replaced them with high-flowing 120mm fans (only 2) and left the two rear exhaust fans that came with the case in place. FISHMANPET posted:Check this out, found it when I was considering that case. Just quoting myself again. As far as I can tell, if you're worried about noise with that case and you don't get this bracket you need to
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# ? Mar 6, 2010 00:37 |
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necrobobsledder posted:The thickness of the metal (merely "adequate") along with the flimsiness of the drive trays was mentioned in a lot of reviews I've read, along with the backplanes having the molex connectors hot-glued on there poorly. I know I shouldn't expect much for a $340 4u case, but I want to feel like my data is physically sound at least. The poster I quoted said that he could hear the fans in the next room over, and given how sounds bounce in a garage, it'd be awful. I'm not sure what you expect. Something like a SuperMicro chassis for apparently $1800* also sounds like a jet engine, the drive caddy's are a thin finger-bendable aluminum, and the backplanes tend to come with at least one or two dud/flaky ports per 4-8 bought. Thumpers have very sturdy drive caddy's, but are deafeningly loud. A Xyratex enclosure is certainly sturdy and "well built", likely not to be any dead ports, and screaming loud. Get ready with your credit card though, because it's going to cost you. If you want your data to be "physically sound" then it's time to get spendy on your RAID card (LSI only, really) and motherboard. If you want cheap or quiet you're looking at non-rack mount, and not dense. Get yourself some rack shelves and long SAS expander cables to link your chassis' together. * http://www.8anet.com/ShowProduct.aspx?pid=7259 , http://rdr.to/0mS , wtf $1800? Is there a motherboard/cpu/ram in that I am missing? I guess 3x1800W power supplies.
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# ? Mar 6, 2010 00:38 |
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H110Hawk posted:* http://www.8anet.com/ShowProduct.aspx?pid=7259 , http://rdr.to/0mS , wtf $1800? Is there a motherboard/cpu/ram in that I am missing? I guess 3x1800W power supplies. That's got 24 bays in the front and another 12 in the back. That case is
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# ? Mar 6, 2010 00:50 |
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FISHMANPET posted:That's got 24 bays in the front and another 12 in the back. That case is I think I linked the straight 24-bay one, the 24+21 cases though are my new favorite cases. http://www.supermicro.com/products/chassis/4U/847/SC847E26-RJBOD1.cfm
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# ? Mar 6, 2010 01:10 |
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That's a lot of Linux isos... but where's the space for the CPU / motherboard in that mess of hard drives? That'd be the one and only rack case you'd ever need for hard drives at home.H110Hawk posted:If you want your data to be "physically sound" then it's time to get spendy on your RAID card (LSI only, really) and motherboard. If you want cheap or quiet you're looking at non-rack mount, and not dense. I was just hoping for the quality of trays I see on the HP Proliant servers I've racked up before.
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# ? Mar 6, 2010 01:45 |
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I didn't want to post a new thread to ask this and I figure this is the most relevant thread to ask in. Is there a free software program you guys use to monitor the disk space on your file server? The system and the file server right now is running Windows 7 Ultimate. I know you can get the drive space to show up when you map the network shares but I don't want mount all of the shares. I've googled for windows sidebar gadgets (came up with nothing) and just programs but they're all shareware or seem a bit shady. What do you guys use?
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# ? Mar 6, 2010 09:13 |
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FISHMANPET posted:For anybody interested in this card, particulary movex, who already has one, I found a bracket online that will work for it. SuperMicro was stupid enough to use standard hole spacing, so all you need is a standard PCI bracket with tabs. Keystone Electronics makes one. You can get it from digikey for about 5 dollars shipped: I got this bracket, and it's perfect, except that it's completely retarded. The screws are threaded backwards, and I decided to ruin the threads by trying to push my existing screws in backwards. So... plan B I guess. I happened to have a full height bracket for a low profile wireless card laying around. Only the bottom tab matches up, but it matches up.
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# ? Mar 9, 2010 05:42 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 01:17 |
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I wonder what kind of HDDs you guys buy if you don't want to do RAID0 because the chance of malfunction is doubled. I have not had an HDD die on my hands during my (short) lifetime.
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# ? Mar 9, 2010 06:04 |