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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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Problem with Network Attached Storage, HDHR3Prime, and SageDCT
I am trying to set up a new NAS and am able to record to it using the HDHR3 Prime, but live video freezes every second. Playback of the recording is smooth.
Memory usage of SageDCT climbs to fill available memory after about 10 minutes. Stopping, then Starting SageDCT resets memory usage and if I cancel the recording it stays constant. With little or no networking knowledge, I am throwing my nearly octogenarian soul at the mercy of the true and valiant Sages for help. I picture those bits sent from SageDCT during the freeze periods collecting in memory and then copied in bursts to the NAS without ever being purged. Is this simply a network speed issue, or is there something more insidious going on? Edit: Network speed test to NAS directory reported 90 Mbps
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Server: Intel i5-11400 @4.4GHz 6 cores Windows10 Pro, Sage 9.2.6.976, Comskip Donators Capture: Fubo/TVEverywhere/ChannelsDVR/OpenDCT_0.5.32_x86. Storage: 120gB SSD, 4tB HD on Server Network: gB Lan Playback: FireStick 4K miniclient Tech Level: Hobbyist Last edited by hb4; 10-20-2012 at 07:28 PM. |
#3
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This afternoon I raised the Write Buffer setting in SageDCT until I could record three HD streams and watch one stream on my Buffalo Linkstation Network Attached Storage device, with the settings shown below. SageDCT memory was hovering around 70MB. I tried changing Async and RTP Buffer, but this is the only one that helped. I assume this reflects the slow speed of my LAN; I have the NAS plugged into one of two bridged ports on my Sage Server box.
I then discovered that only two of my recordings were showing in Sage so I did some more tests, ultimately raising the Write Buffer to 132K but could never repeat the steady state condition; doubling the Write Buffer for each test and cancelling the test when SageDCT memory reached 200MB of memory use. Comments, suggestions? SageDCT 10-23.jpg
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Server: Intel i5-11400 @4.4GHz 6 cores Windows10 Pro, Sage 9.2.6.976, Comskip Donators Capture: Fubo/TVEverywhere/ChannelsDVR/OpenDCT_0.5.32_x86. Storage: 120gB SSD, 4tB HD on Server Network: gB Lan Playback: FireStick 4K miniclient Tech Level: Hobbyist Last edited by hb4; 10-23-2012 at 06:28 PM. |
#4
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Open resource manager and look at network utilization. If your NAS has a similar utility it would be good to take a look at that too. Is the NAS setup as RAID 5 or 6? If so, it could be the parity calculation which is hampering write speed. Is the network Gigabit? How fast are the drives in the NAS? |
#5
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For the last three tests this afternoon, it got up to 200MB and climbing. Tonight, it climbed to 525Mb after which I cancelled the three HD recordings. Memory use froze at 518Mb with no recording until I started a new recording after which memory use gradually lowered to about 50Mb.
With three streams recording and one playing network adapter speeds were: Throughput (Send) ~55Mbps Throughput (Receive )~40Mbps And averaged right around 100Mb, which implies to me that I'm not running on a Gb link. Network adapters and NAS are Gigabit but reporting 100, Bridge is reporting 1 Gb, cabling is Gigabit; The switch is 100MB; - I'd hoped that by connecting the NAS into the bridged 1Gb NIC that get the higher speed, but it doesn't look like it. The other NIC is connected to the switch. Here's the spec on the NAS. No Raid. 2TB Drive Interface SATA 3 Gb/s LAN Interface Standard Compliance IEEE802.3ab / IEEE802.3 / IEEE802.3u Standard Data Transfer Rates 10 / 100 / 1000 Mb/s Connector Type RJ-45 Number of Ports 1 USB Interface Standard Compliance USB 2.0 Connector Type A type Number of Ports 1 Data Transfer Rates Max: 480 Mb/s (High Speed Mode) Protocol Support Networking TCP/IP File Sharing CIFS/SMB, AFP, HTTP/HTTPS, FTP Management HTTP/HTTPS Time Synchronization NTP Other Dimensions (W x H x D) 1.78 x 6.89 x 6.15 in Weight 2.5 lbs Power Consumption (Watts) 17 W (Average) Power Supply AC 100-240V 50/60 Hz
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Server: Intel i5-11400 @4.4GHz 6 cores Windows10 Pro, Sage 9.2.6.976, Comskip Donators Capture: Fubo/TVEverywhere/ChannelsDVR/OpenDCT_0.5.32_x86. Storage: 120gB SSD, 4tB HD on Server Network: gB Lan Playback: FireStick 4K miniclient Tech Level: Hobbyist Last edited by hb4; 10-24-2012 at 12:17 AM. |
#6
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#7
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EDIT> I'm running the test this morning and now the Realtek reports 1GB link. I set it up to record three HD streams and watch one; choosing HD streams that wrote the largest files to the NAS. Comskip was working on one of the streams. SageDCT memory grew to 200Mb at which point I stopped and started the service via SageDCT config. The Realtek card hovered around 100Mb for this part, and it seemed that when the card throughput was high, SageDCT memory grew and vice versa. Once the service restarted, Comskip was no longer working any of the streams and SageDCT has been holding at around 45Mb for the last few minutes. The Realtek card is now reporting around 95Mbps. Seems like Comskip caused SageDCT memory to grow; at least those are the parts of the elephant I can see. No changes made to Network topology or NIC card setup, W7, SageDCT, or Sage since last night.
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Server: Intel i5-11400 @4.4GHz 6 cores Windows10 Pro, Sage 9.2.6.976, Comskip Donators Capture: Fubo/TVEverywhere/ChannelsDVR/OpenDCT_0.5.32_x86. Storage: 120gB SSD, 4tB HD on Server Network: gB Lan Playback: FireStick 4K miniclient Tech Level: Hobbyist Last edited by hb4; 10-24-2012 at 12:08 PM. |
#8
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My experience with NAS boxes has been an interesting one. I have done tests with Freenas, Ubuntu, Openindana, Server 2008, and Server 2012. The interesting part is I noticed a pattern with Windows Vs. Others. On both 2008, and 2012 with a Software RAID setup, I have no problems recording over the network, from my Win7 SageTV box. If I try to record to a Linux Software RAID, or OpenIndiana exposed via CIFS/SMB, I get studdering and failed recordings. Playback is fine for existing recordings etc. All of these shares on the *nix systems don't have any issues with other things, like file copies etc..., but when it comes to real time video recording, there is problems.
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Mike Janer SageTV HD300 Extender X2 Sage Server: AMD X4 620,2048MB RAM,SageTV 7.x ,2X HDHR Primes, 2x HDHomerun(original). 80GB OS Drive, Video Drives: Local 2TB Drive GB RAID5 |
#9
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#10
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Either way, I wanted to test like setups, so I did RAID5 across the board since I started with a RAID5 way back in the mid 2000's when drives were more expensive.
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Mike Janer SageTV HD300 Extender X2 Sage Server: AMD X4 620,2048MB RAM,SageTV 7.x ,2X HDHR Primes, 2x HDHomerun(original). 80GB OS Drive, Video Drives: Local 2TB Drive GB RAID5 Last edited by mikejaner; 10-25-2012 at 10:58 AM. |
#11
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Parity calc feels cheap because you are doing it on a powerful PC with more than enough resource headroom. When it's done on an underpowered NAS box (many are ARM SOC optimized for power consumption), the story is much different. Quote:
Last edited by babgvant; 10-25-2012 at 11:20 AM. |
#12
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I didn't read his second post that he was using a Buffalo NAS, I thought from his first post it was a PC based NAS. My argument is, it's not expensive as a software RAID on any Mid to High end PC you would have purchased in the past 5-7 years (What I should have said instead of "todays processors"). In my case it was a spare motherboard and case populated with $25 of ram and a $60 processor two years ago. Quote:
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Mike Janer SageTV HD300 Extender X2 Sage Server: AMD X4 620,2048MB RAM,SageTV 7.x ,2X HDHR Primes, 2x HDHomerun(original). 80GB OS Drive, Video Drives: Local 2TB Drive GB RAID5 Last edited by mikejaner; 10-25-2012 at 12:29 PM. |
#13
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I agree that PCs make good NAS for this reason, and many current gen stand-alone devices are essentially PCs w/ x86 CPUs. |
#14
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The spirit of my original post is that I suspect a Windows to *nix (buffalo) SMB issue or a network issue. There is just something weird to me about how poorly streaming video gets written in a non MS share.
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Mike Janer SageTV HD300 Extender X2 Sage Server: AMD X4 620,2048MB RAM,SageTV 7.x ,2X HDHR Primes, 2x HDHomerun(original). 80GB OS Drive, Video Drives: Local 2TB Drive GB RAID5 |
#15
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Just an update; I installed a Netgear 8-port gigabit switch and connected the NAS, tuners, ReplayTV (Poopli/WIRNS for all those shows that my Sage setup misses), wireless access point, Sage Server, and cable from router.
Didn't have time to do much testing before I left town for a week, but did notice a few things after I started three HD streams and viewed one: The NIC port reported over 100Mb for the first time. With three comskip operations allowed, memory started to climb towards 400MB, but after I allowed only one it never got above about 50Mb. I'll do some more testing when I get back. I think my setup probably represents the level of technology to which an average non-IT professional user might take SageTV, i.e, consumer level NAS, switch, and router and W7 - rather than a Server and PC-based NAS and router. I'm using the HDHR3, an HDHR, HDPVR (that is fussy), and OTA. Overall, I am amazed at how well Sage does with all of this and really appreciate the folks on this Board that contribute their expertise. The only thing I can see that would make me switch is if Comcast went to copy once on all channels and forced me to use the HDPVR for everything. The Prime and SageDCT is the best!
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Server: Intel i5-11400 @4.4GHz 6 cores Windows10 Pro, Sage 9.2.6.976, Comskip Donators Capture: Fubo/TVEverywhere/ChannelsDVR/OpenDCT_0.5.32_x86. Storage: 120gB SSD, 4tB HD on Server Network: gB Lan Playback: FireStick 4K miniclient Tech Level: Hobbyist |
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