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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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SSD Drive size for Client/Server
What size ssd would you guys recommend for either a client or server? I'm using a 30gb for my client and I started using my emulators again so suddenly it isn't enough to store everything. Not a big deal, but up until now 30gb was more than enough. I've still got 6gb free so no issues, but the roms take up quite a bit of room on my "extra" hard drive in the client. Similar situation with the server. I am looking to get a 60gb drive, but think I may want to up that to 120gb just to avoid any issues. I think 120gb may be the minimum drive I'd get when buying a new drive.
What do you guys think?
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SageTV Server: unRAID Docker v9, S2600CPJ, Norco 24 hot swap bay case, 2x Xeon 2670, 64 GB DDR3, 3x Colossus for DirecTV, HDHR for OTA Living room: nVidia Shield TV, Sage Mini Client, 65" Panasonic VT60 Bedroom: Xiomi Mi Box, Sage Mini Client, 42" Panasonic PZ800u Theater: nVidia Shield TV, mini client, Plex for movies, 120" screen. Mitsubishi HC4000. Denon X4300H. 7.4.4 speaker setup. |
#2
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#3
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I bet you could just buy a 32 GB flash or SDHC card and run the roms from there.
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Clients: 1xHD200 Connected to 50" TH-50PZ750U Plasma Server : Shuttle SFF SSH55J2 w/ Win7 Home, SageTV v7, Core i3 540, 2GB RAM, 30GB SSD for OS, 1.5TB+2x1TB WDGP for Recordings, BluRay, 2xHDHR, 1xFirewire SageTV : PlayOn, SJQ, MediaShrink, Comskip, Jetty, Web Client, BMT Having a problem? Don't forget to include a log! (Instructions for: PlayOn For SageTV v1.5, MediaShrink) |
#4
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I use 15GB system size, so I am NO help.
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Server #1= AMD A10-5800, 8G RAM, F2A85-M PRO, 12TB, HDHomerun Prime, HDHR, Colossus (Playback - HD-200) Server #2= AMD X2 3800+, 2G RAM, M2NPV-VM, 2TB, 3x HDHR OTA (Playback - HD-200) |
#5
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Good idea, I didn't think of that. I have a card reader built into the case too.
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SageTV Server: unRAID Docker v9, S2600CPJ, Norco 24 hot swap bay case, 2x Xeon 2670, 64 GB DDR3, 3x Colossus for DirecTV, HDHR for OTA Living room: nVidia Shield TV, Sage Mini Client, 65" Panasonic VT60 Bedroom: Xiomi Mi Box, Sage Mini Client, 42" Panasonic PZ800u Theater: nVidia Shield TV, mini client, Plex for movies, 120" screen. Mitsubishi HC4000. Denon X4300H. 7.4.4 speaker setup. |
#6
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I'd say 120GB minimum, but I'd be careful if you think there's a chance you might completely fill that space. You'll want to have a decent amount of free space to help out with wear-leveling and prevent performance degradation. The excellent Vertex 2 that Plucky is recommending can enter a state of severely reduced performance (that can only be fixed by a secure erase of the drive) if you manage to fill all the blocks and the spare area with largely incompressible data, which is a lot of what we deal with on our HTPC/DVR/Media Servers.
I was considering a 120GB SSD for my new server build until I realized that the system partition on my current server is already at 100GB. I'm pretty bad at controlling creep space-wise (an attempt at self-control through self-awareness), so I'm going with a 240GB SSD for my build. I think EP has the right idea, though. Why do you need to store your ROMs on your OS drive/partition? I've spent a great deal of time renaming, organizing, and folderizing my ROMs and I keep them on a separate partition so that I can wipe and reinstall the OS of my HTPC at will and not worry about the ROMs. If you were to go that route, you could probably get a 120GB SSD (which seems to be the sweet spot price-wise at the moment) and a 1TB HDD (I'm partial to the Samsung Spinpoint F3 1TB for ~$60) and get the best of both worlds (sweet performance and lots of space) for a heck of a lot less than a 240GB SSD. One final bit of advice on SSDs, get one from a good brand with a good controller. It makes a world of difference. Seriously. The 120GB Vertex 2 Plucky recommends would probably be my recommendation as well for best combination of price and performance. Regardless, I'd get something from Intel, Micron/Crucial (same company), or another brand that uses a Sandforce controller like that OCZ Vertex 2. Out of curiousity, do you use any multi-platform frontend as the interface to your emulator experience? I've been using Hyperspin on my HTPC, but I'm curious what others are doing. |
#7
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I wouldn't use an SSD in a client, personally... it just never really accesses the drive enough to make it worth it. As for the ROM's, I'd just stick them on the server, and share them to the client if space is a concern (though if you put in a cheap old 120GB HDD, you will have plenty of space for the OS and ROMs).
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Buy Fuzzy a beer! (Fuzzy likes beer) unRAID Server: i7-6700, 32GB RAM, Dual 128GB SSD cache and 13TB pool, with SageTVv9, openDCT, Logitech Media Server and Plex Media Server each in Dockers. Sources: HRHR Prime with Charter CableCard. HDHR-US for OTA. Primary Client: HD-300 through XBoxOne in Living Room, Samsung HLT-6189S Other Clients: Mi Box in Master Bedroom, HD-200 in kids room |
#8
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#9
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Server: XP, SuperMicro X9SAE-V, i7 3770T, Thermalright Archon SB-E, 32GB Corsair DDR3, 2 x IBM M1015, Corsair HX1000W PSU, CoolerMaster CM Storm Stryker case Storage: 2 x Addonics 5-in-3 3.5" bays, 1 x Addonics 4-in-1 2.5" bay, 24TB Client: Windows 7 64-bit, Foxconn G9657MA-8EKRS2H, Core2Duo E6600, Zalman CNPS7500, 2GB Corsair, 320GB, HIS ATI 4650, Antec Fusion Tuners: 2 x HD-PVR (HTTP tuning), 2 x HDHR, USB-UIRT Software: SageTV 7 |
#10
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Also, SSD can make a silent client too, which in itself almost makes it worth it.
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Clients: 1xHD200 Connected to 50" TH-50PZ750U Plasma Server : Shuttle SFF SSH55J2 w/ Win7 Home, SageTV v7, Core i3 540, 2GB RAM, 30GB SSD for OS, 1.5TB+2x1TB WDGP for Recordings, BluRay, 2xHDHR, 1xFirewire SageTV : PlayOn, SJQ, MediaShrink, Comskip, Jetty, Web Client, BMT Having a problem? Don't forget to include a log! (Instructions for: PlayOn For SageTV v1.5, MediaShrink) |
#11
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Trust me an ssd in the client helps quite a bit. I've used both and the performance difference is huge. Access time alone is worth it. I got a cheap kingston 30gb drive and it has been rock solid. I already have a spare drive in the client for the roms and it is an old drive (loud) and I'd like to go back to silent. The sd card idea should be perfect assuming the roms don't take up that much room. I'll have to look later today. I did have them on the server and the software I use doesn't like UNC paths. That is the only reason I had to move them to a local drive.
As for the server and my gaming rig I'll go 120gb or higher. My gaming rig only has a 160gb drive now (I've been lazy about installing my games) so I know that size will work for a boot drive. I'd have to get something huge to go ssd only on that rig. The server should be fine with 120gb as the OS partition is that big and hardly fills half.
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SageTV Server: unRAID Docker v9, S2600CPJ, Norco 24 hot swap bay case, 2x Xeon 2670, 64 GB DDR3, 3x Colossus for DirecTV, HDHR for OTA Living room: nVidia Shield TV, Sage Mini Client, 65" Panasonic VT60 Bedroom: Xiomi Mi Box, Sage Mini Client, 42" Panasonic PZ800u Theater: nVidia Shield TV, mini client, Plex for movies, 120" screen. Mitsubishi HC4000. Denon X4300H. 7.4.4 speaker setup. |
#12
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I've got an old laptop hardrive in my client, and it wakes from s3 sleep much faster than my tv turns on. Also, being a laptop drive, it too, is effectively silent.
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Buy Fuzzy a beer! (Fuzzy likes beer) unRAID Server: i7-6700, 32GB RAM, Dual 128GB SSD cache and 13TB pool, with SageTVv9, openDCT, Logitech Media Server and Plex Media Server each in Dockers. Sources: HRHR Prime with Charter CableCard. HDHR-US for OTA. Primary Client: HD-300 through XBoxOne in Living Room, Samsung HLT-6189S Other Clients: Mi Box in Master Bedroom, HD-200 in kids room |
#13
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Having said all of that I built the client in my sig all at once. It never had a mechanical drive, but the old client (now my server) is the one I'm referencing.
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SageTV Server: unRAID Docker v9, S2600CPJ, Norco 24 hot swap bay case, 2x Xeon 2670, 64 GB DDR3, 3x Colossus for DirecTV, HDHR for OTA Living room: nVidia Shield TV, Sage Mini Client, 65" Panasonic VT60 Bedroom: Xiomi Mi Box, Sage Mini Client, 42" Panasonic PZ800u Theater: nVidia Shield TV, mini client, Plex for movies, 120" screen. Mitsubishi HC4000. Denon X4300H. 7.4.4 speaker setup. Last edited by panteragstk; 05-02-2011 at 01:45 PM. |
#14
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The only fanart I ever end up seeing is banners, which are pretty small. Perhaps that's why I've never had a speed problem.
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Buy Fuzzy a beer! (Fuzzy likes beer) unRAID Server: i7-6700, 32GB RAM, Dual 128GB SSD cache and 13TB pool, with SageTVv9, openDCT, Logitech Media Server and Plex Media Server each in Dockers. Sources: HRHR Prime with Charter CableCard. HDHR-US for OTA. Primary Client: HD-300 through XBoxOne in Living Room, Samsung HLT-6189S Other Clients: Mi Box in Master Bedroom, HD-200 in kids room |
#15
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#16
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I'm using a 120GB Vertex2 on Server and 60GB Vertex2 on my main Client. Not sure how much difference it makes on the Client with local fanart caching but it is really quiet and responsive.
I really only run Sagetv/Playon/MyMoviesCollecitonMgr/Showanalyzer on my server with the fanart stored/shared on the SSD. I did notice that the Showanalyzer logs take up a lot of space so I make sure to delete them every few weeks. I think at one point there was about 16GB of analyzer logs... J |
#17
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Well, the fanart I use gets loaded faster than the repeat cycle on my remote, so any faster wouldn't gain anything...
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Buy Fuzzy a beer! (Fuzzy likes beer) unRAID Server: i7-6700, 32GB RAM, Dual 128GB SSD cache and 13TB pool, with SageTVv9, openDCT, Logitech Media Server and Plex Media Server each in Dockers. Sources: HRHR Prime with Charter CableCard. HDHR-US for OTA. Primary Client: HD-300 through XBoxOne in Living Room, Samsung HLT-6189S Other Clients: Mi Box in Master Bedroom, HD-200 in kids room |
#18
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If you run it on Vista or Win 7, an SSD will automatically align. Try and make sure your SATA ports/controller support TRIM, or that your drive has built in Garbage Collection, as most now do.
If you run on XP, you must manually align drive geometry to prolong flash life and enjoy speed-ups. I have tested aligned vs. non-aligned on XP, and it makes a huge difference. And, again, it will make the drive last far longer since it is one of the main things that can cut down on write amplification. Vertex drives use SandForce controllers. They tend to be great for stuff like this, but don't toss out drives with (especially) Samsung or Toshiba controllers. Samsung controllers are awesome, as are some Toshiba controllers. OCZ has great resources for aligning your drive if using XP and maximizing its overall life expectancy. I'm with the others - I would go 120GB, but don't format a full 120GB partition to install the OS on. Leave some extra, unformatted flash, maybe 15GB worth at least. The SandForce controller will look to it for "fresh" cells and it will lengthen the drive's life expectancy and keep it speedy. Sort of a "poor man's overprovisioning".
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Asus P5Q Premium MB, E6750, 4GB RAM, 32-bit XP Pro SP3, 3Ware 9590SE controller, 80GB 7.2K Laptop boot drive w/SuperSpeed Cache Utility & eBoostr, (1) KWorld ATSC-110, (1) 950Q USB, (1) 2250 tuner, (1) HD-PVR using USB-UIRT, (1) 1600 Dual card, (1) DVICO Fusion 5 Gold, (1) Hauppauge 1250, (1) Hauppauge 2250, 8 various storage HD's, NEC-based x1 USB add-on card, 2 outdoor antennas capturing 2 different OTA markets, Dish Network w/HD Receiver for HD-PVR. Last edited by Savage1701; 05-04-2011 at 12:05 PM. |
#19
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I opt'd to use a 64GB SSD for the boot disk and put all data on local or network drives. Haven't used half the SSD yet.
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#20
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So day before yesterday some moron decided to go across a median and take out a telephone pole and knock out my electricity. I have my htpc and server on a ups (each on their own) but for some reason my htpc will no longer boot. It thinks my ssd is corrupt. It can read it just fine, but it can't repair it and refuses to boot. WTF? Right after I fix EVERY issue I've ever had with sage v7 this happens. Not cool. So I copied all of the sage directory of the "corrupt" ssd so I can format and reinstall. Hopefully all of the experience with decoders and everything else will pay off and it will just work. Anyone got any ideas to restore this back to working condition without a reinstall?
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SageTV Server: unRAID Docker v9, S2600CPJ, Norco 24 hot swap bay case, 2x Xeon 2670, 64 GB DDR3, 3x Colossus for DirecTV, HDHR for OTA Living room: nVidia Shield TV, Sage Mini Client, 65" Panasonic VT60 Bedroom: Xiomi Mi Box, Sage Mini Client, 42" Panasonic PZ800u Theater: nVidia Shield TV, mini client, Plex for movies, 120" screen. Mitsubishi HC4000. Denon X4300H. 7.4.4 speaker setup. |
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