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Hardware Support Discussions related to using various hardware setups with SageTV products. Anything relating to capture cards, remotes, infrared receivers/transmitters, system compatibility or other hardware related problems or suggestions should be posted here. |
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#1
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RAID suggestions wanted
Hi,
I don't see the Buffalo Terastation becoming easily available over here so I might as well build a system myself. This would be more expensive than the US pricing for the Terastation although I can get the price per GB down if I go for a larger system. As for controllor cards I'm looking at these two - obvious question is which one would you go for: 3Ware 9500S-8 Raid Controller Card Serial ATA150/133/100 8port with 0/1/10/5/JBOD (approx € 599) Promise [SuperTrak] SX6000 controller 6-channel Ultra ATA/100 RAID 5 Card with onboard processor (approx € 256) and it brings on the next question also: S-ATA or ATA? Also what limitations would I suffer if I plan to switch it off when not using. I'd use it to store DVD's, pictures and music. If I remember correctly Sage cleans up its recordings list when it looses access to a share. Does Sage have to reimport everything after libraries come back online? How can I switch it on automatically - can I send a magic network packet to enable to WOL? Your input is welcome! Jan |
#2
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Personally I would go for S-ATA: no difference in drive price these days, and a heck of a lot easer to cable than using wide ATA ribbons, or thick rounded ATA cables.
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Library files are only removed if the root library directory is accessible and the files cannot be found. WOL: depends on the network card/motherboard... Some require magic packets, some just wake up with normal network traffic (sometimes this is switchable in Windows's network driver details)... The magic packet can vary for different net cards: never managed to get it working myself (but didn't try very hard either!) |
#3
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3Ware. I have the Promise, and while it is a nice card, I don't get a warm fuzzy feeling about continued support from them. They are WAY behind on their Linux drivers, and this product has been on the market for at least 3 years, so I don't expect them to keep up the Windows releases much longer. Promise (I have learned) doesn't have a great track record for legacy product support.
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#4
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You might want to check out the other RAID-5 thread:
http://forums.sage.tv/forums/showthr...ghlight=raid-5 Basically, I've been a strong 3ware supporter (had a 6400, currently have a 7506-8), but since AMCC bought them their driver development has kind of stopped. The 9000 series was supposed to have OCE by now, but it may not ever happen now. What I would look at are the boards from Adaptec (the 2x10SA) and LSI. What to look out for: Stuff from Promise (don't trust them after their crappy Fasttrak) Highpoint Neither of which have hardware XOR (although I think the Supertrak does) And Broadcom/Raidcore - which had issues spontaneously dropping arrays, it may be fixed but it's just too much of a gamble with that much data/time IMO. |
#5
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I use 2 of the 3ware 12 port S-ata acards to support my 24 drive bays on my sage server raid arrays. The motherboard has an onboard promise controller as well. I concur that 3ware driver support is much better than the promise counterparts. Depending on your XP cd date (pre or post SP2) -- this makes a lot of difference during installation. My experience only...
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#6
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I also agree go Sata, newer technology with better cabling and faster throughput. Though for Sage purposes and IO demands PATA RAID5 array would work too. I'm currently using a 3ware Escalade 9500S-8 and Promise FastTrak S150 SX4. Both perform decently. However, if I was building today I'd look VERY strongly at an Areca instead of Escalade.
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#7
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Hi,
I'll go for 3ware then - as Nielm says drive prices don't make much of a difference these days unfortunately price of the controller does. Areca is PCI-X as far as I understand and I would like to try this on an EPIA board first so that wouldn't work. I see different opinions on OCE and the 9500 - has anyone tried? Not sure how I will set it up - originally I thought I'd keep recording on normal system drives - I have 2x 250GB for recording and 80 GB as a boot drive but used half of it for MP3. I would archive DVD, pictures, music and occasionally a TV recording to the RAID array so it would not have to wake up for every single recording. I'm a bit worried as how Sage would react when the array goes off-line but that will take some experiments. If I buy drives for the array as my DVD collection expands I can assume that is is less likely that they die at the same time but for this to work I'd need OCE to work. Case would be Coolermaster CM-stacker. One more question - how do a raid controller and WindowsXP power management play together? I know it can power down a system hard drive but has the OS the same control over RAID drives? Again - thank you all for your input. Jan |
#8
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Right now, unless you plan to completely fill the card, I'd don't think I would get a 3ware. If I were you, and if I were buying right now, I'd take a long hard look at the LSI or Adaptec cards mentioned above. |
#9
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__________________
Click here for Pic's & spec's of my SageTV Server & HTPC Client |
#10
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Of course on the bright side, (aside from missing features like OCE) they don't need to do any driver development
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#11
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Oh, yeah, and the USB2/Firewire front port cables may be a little short, depending on your motherboard layout. On mine they were reachable, but I was worried about them running under the PCI card overhangs without pulling. Last edited by src666; 03-12-2005 at 08:15 PM. |
#12
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I chose an alternative card: Adaptec 2810SA Controller. My reasons for choosing this card was the price point as well as a great history with Adaptec SCSI controllers for the past 10 years. The 2810SA has excellent driver support and supports OCE out of the box!
I am elated with my choice as there have been NO issues with my media server since going online late last year. I currently have 8 300gb Maxtor SATA drives online running RAID 5 (2.1TB). If you are looking for an alternative you "may want to consider" the Adaptec Series cards as I highly recommend them. Good Luck, Doug |
#13
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#14
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I decided to go for the Adaptec card - pricing is ok and it supports OCE. So I'm going in two phases: first 4 drives and then 4 more. I still need to check whether the spare mainboard I have supports PCI 2.2 else I need a new one. I don't think that is going to kill the overall cost picture. I haven't decided about the 4-in-3 cages - it doesn't look good to me in terms of heat dissipation. So there needs to be a benefit -hot-swap, active cooling, etc.- otherwise I think I'd prefer to give those drives plenty of room. Jan |
#15
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No, the 4-in-3 cages are not hot swap, just converters to fit 4x3 1/2" drives in 3x5 1/4" bays. As far as heat dissapation, they have a honking big fan attached to the front, that blows air back over the drives. I had a similar setup in my prior case, and it worked really well for 3x250GB Maxtors "stacked" in a cage. They were much cooler than the 40G WD that was the system drive, and wasn't directly cooled.
My only gripe about the 4-in-3 cage is that they used a sleeve bearing in the fan - what were they thinking? I have my 40G WD in the 4-in-3, and the rest in hot swap trays. But I'm going to have to replace the trays - they are pretty cheap, and don't keep the drives cool enough. I'm considering just giving up hot swap and buying another 4-in-3. |
#16
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__________________
Click here for Pic's & spec's of my SageTV Server & HTPC Client |
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