|
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. |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
#1
|
||||
|
||||
Need NAS -- opinions welcome
Hello all,
I currently have a ReadyNAS X6. I want a 6-bay or more, hot swap device. Able to be upgradable, like the way readynas has the XRaid techology (don't know what it's really called in another brand. I don't really want to a DIY option. I know of some programs which allows you to accomplish the same thing with your current hardware. I've seen a company called QNAP (never heard of them) which are comperable to the readyNAS but a little cheaper. I've seen readynas Netgear RNDP600E, which seems nice. I'm either going to use my current ReadyNas as backup to the new NAS storage.
__________________
Server: HP AMD64 dual core running Win7 64bit (MCE disabled) with 4G memory Tuners: 2 PVR-500(disabled), 3 HDHR and 1 HDPVR Clients: 2 HD200 and 1 HD100 TV: 70" and 52" and 42" Media Storage: ReadyNas 8TB Recording media: 300GB + 200GB+ 250 GB Network: Gigabit backbone' Thanks to all the developers who work on SageMC, code, utilities and plug-ins to make SageTV better!!! |
#2
|
||||
|
||||
Why not a ReadyNAS Pro?
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
The OP seemed fine with the ReadyNAS Pro, but the QNAP TS-639 that he was referring to sounds pretty interesting too. It looks like it has more external ports (though, I question how likely they are be used) for $100 less than the ReadyNAS Pro.
Though, I'm curious, what are the compelling advantages of the ReadyNAS Pro over the ReadyNAS NV+ (e.g., RNDP600E vs. RND4000). Obviously the Pro has 6 SATA ports, compared to 4, but it's also twice as expensive. The Pro has dual gigabit ethernet ports, but it doesn't seem like that is terribly useful unless you have fairly expensive network equipment to support load balancing. The Pro apparently has a newer version of their X-RAID system. Is it quite a bit better? Is the build quality just quite a bit better, resulting in better reliability? Basically, I'm curious what you think ends up being a better deal after taking everything into account: one RNDP600E or two RND4000? And, I'm actually pretty interested in WHS, mainly because it seems to have some nice hooks in it to support backing up Windows boxes. At the same time, though I know WHS is based on Win2k3, my experience with Vista networking performance has been unpleasant enough to be skeptical of Microsoft. |
#4
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
If you run any apps on the ReadyNAS, like Squeezecenter, I know my X6 routinely shows it's lack of horsepower. Now as for Pro vs Pro Pioneer, that's tougher, it's got the same hardware obviously, but some extra software features enabled. For the $50-100 difference though I'd like to have SNMP and a few of the other features on the Pro. Quote:
Quote:
As far as backup goes, I've got my ReadyNAS set to automatically copy my SageTV install directory to itself, and also my digital pictures, essentially doing a nightly "backup" of each. And for full backups, I use Acronis True Image. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
Quote:
You can do incremental backups in True Image, but that's still a long way off from what Time Machine offers. I still have a bit over a spare terabyte on my server, with room for two more drives if I really want, but in the long run I think I do want to get some sort of NAS. As I've said before, though, the current prices astonish me. I'm hoping there will be a relatively nice QNAP or ReadyNAS product in that price range in 6-12 months. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
#7
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
I really don't know how the WHS "backup" stuff works. Quote:
|
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
|
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
|
#10
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
The other thing is last time I looked (admittedly a while ago) Drobo didn't report actual size or free space to the OS, it pretended to be a 2TB volume (regardless of how much space you actually had), and would simply "slow down" to indicate it was getting full. You had to go into an special app to see actual free/used space. |
#11
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
|
#12
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
__________________
Server: HP AMD64 dual core running Win7 64bit (MCE disabled) with 4G memory Tuners: 2 PVR-500(disabled), 3 HDHR and 1 HDPVR Clients: 2 HD200 and 1 HD100 TV: 70" and 52" and 42" Media Storage: ReadyNas 8TB Recording media: 300GB + 200GB+ 250 GB Network: Gigabit backbone' Thanks to all the developers who work on SageMC, code, utilities and plug-ins to make SageTV better!!! |
#13
|
||||
|
||||
The problem is iSCSI, while using etherenet, isn't at all like a NAS. It basically uses Cat5/6 in leu of a SCSI cable. To put it more simply, you can only connect one PC to one iSCSI target.
Infrant added iSCSI to the Pro, and I was rather excited until I did some more research. Frankly I don't see the use of iSCSI in the home environment. It would be kind of cool to have diskless PCs that boot off iSCSI targets, but that seems like the end of practical use. If you just want supplimental storage, I don't see it offering any benefits over shared drives, and the big downside of not being able to be shared between computers. And yeah, I kind of thought they might have fixed the volume size thing, but it left a bad taste in my mouth. Just seemed like a hack design. |
#14
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
__________________
Server: HP AMD64 dual core running Win7 64bit (MCE disabled) with 4G memory Tuners: 2 PVR-500(disabled), 3 HDHR and 1 HDPVR Clients: 2 HD200 and 1 HD100 TV: 70" and 52" and 42" Media Storage: ReadyNas 8TB Recording media: 300GB + 200GB+ 250 GB Network: Gigabit backbone' Thanks to all the developers who work on SageMC, code, utilities and plug-ins to make SageTV better!!! |
#15
|
||||
|
||||
Yeah, I went through the same "Wow! That's cool, wait, oh, that's not much use to me..." process
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
So with X-RAID (1), you can put in a 500GB drive and there's no redundancy, another 500GB drive creates redundancy and then the 3rd and 4th expand the space to 1TB and 1.5TB. Then if you replace them all with 1.5TB drives, you'll get 4.5 total. With X-RAID 2, the same thing happens, but you can replace only 2 of the 500GB drives with 1.5TBs, and you'll gain that extra 1TB of space right away. |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
I think jumbo frames would be important. I know I got a huge speed boost on my network when I enabled jumbo frames. Edit to add: And my computers are pretty fast, so I don't think I was running into CPU speed issues before that. I agree it doesn't seem like it should matter with fast computers, but it apparently does. |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
My NAS (a QNAP TS-409) works great as an archive, but it's too slow to reliably handle live recordings (and the network is theoretically subject to traffic slowdowns). So I use it as an automatic archive location, moving recordings to the NAS once they've been recorded. Since I use RAID 5, there's redundancy if one drive fails, and it's easy to expand with additional drives. I wrote about it here:
http://forums.sagetv.com/forums/show...951#post332951 The QNAP TS-409 can be found much cheaper than many of the newest NAS devices (and some of even the newest NAS boxes still aren't going to be fast enough for direct recording, so do some careful research if that's your intention). Last edited by TobyG; 05-09-2009 at 06:57 AM. |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
Stanger, if you're still watching this thread, what do you know about performance on the ReadyNAS Pro? From the reviews on smallnetbuilder, it looks like the ReadyNAS Pro line tops out around 40MB/sec for RAID5 write speeds, and only 25MB/sec for X-RAID2 write speeds. It seems like the X-RAID2 functionality is probably the big improvement the ReadyNAS offers over the QNAP NAS, and that 25MB/sec write speed concerns me a bit, as I would hope for at least twice that.
The QNAP TS-639 Pro doesn't really do any better. It seems to be roughly the same speed when it comes to RAID5 writes, and doesn't offer anything like X-RAID. Is there something about RAID5 that limits performance to 40MB/sec (and are smallnetbuilder's performance figures for X-RAID2 accurate)? What are the disadvantages to running RAID5 versus X-RAID2? I think you can still add disks to RAID5 arrays, right? Is it that you can't swap out individual old disks for larger new disks? |
#19
|
|||||
|
|||||
Quote:
http://www.readynas.com/forum/viewto...24038&p=141899 It can get kind of tricky getting the higher speeds because as you start going over 25MB/sec, especially trying to get over 50MB/sec, you run into the read/write speed of the disks in the "not-NAS" computer. What I mean is if you're copying a file to/from something like a ReadyNAS Pro (or anything with a really fast disk subsystem), and your machine has only single disks, then your "source" machine will be the limiting factor. Quote:
http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/content/view/30725/75/ I'm not finding their X-RAID2 benchmarks at the moment, but if they're only using 3 drives like I remember, I wouldn't be terribly surprised if their results are slower than with a "full" NAS. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
#20
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
Quote:
SNB's new test system really ought to be able to test gigabit NASes to their limits. But, even those tests still peg sustained RAID5 writes at around 40MB/sec. People on various forums report higher speeds, but sometimes they report speeds that aren't even possible, and other times they don't indicate whether they're using RAID5/RAID0/X-RAID/etc. I'm not in the market for a NAS quite yet, but hopefully by the time I'm ready for one there will be some more reviews. |
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Buying a new TV - opinions? | Tomahawk51 | Hardware Support | 3 | 03-04-2008 05:00 PM |
Opinions: HTPC Cases | [JiF]Mike | Hardware Support | 26 | 03-03-2008 03:01 PM |
new setup opinions please | mazakmaster | Hardware Support | 2 | 06-07-2006 09:58 AM |
Opinions please... which CPU to use? | davin | Hardware Support | 1 | 08-20-2005 01:52 PM |
TV output quality.. opinions? | zombie10k | SageTV Software | 26 | 07-18-2003 07:06 AM |