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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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#501
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I have a Adaptec 5085 that feeds an HP SAS expander that supports 24 drives, and it's quite fast. The expander can be had for about $150, or about the cost of 2 SATA PMP's. You can grow storage practically infinitely with these things... |
#502
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I'm a little concerned about support though. If an NVX goes down, I figure I can call up Netgear and get replacement parts as needed (even if it is expensive). But, if one of these goes down I assume that basically means I lose all my data on it. |
#503
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unRaid can survive a single disk failure with no data loss. Lose any more than a single disk, and you then only lose data stored on the lost disks. If any of your other components fail, you can replace them with off the shelf parts. For support, limetech (Tom) is quick to answer emails, and there is a very active and helpful forum (much like here). Only the disks being accessed need to be spun up, keeping things cool and quite. Edit: fixed link Last edited by brainbone; 02-01-2010 at 01:52 PM. |
#504
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#505
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It's apparently getting harder and harder to find cheap hard drives to put in these things. From what I understand, Western Digital drives used to work pretty well, after tweaking certain features. However, Western Digital apparently removed the ability to change the Time-Limited Error Recovery value to a more RAID-riendly value, presumably to get you to buy their RAID-friendly version of drives (which are quite a bit more expensive).
There's a cheap 2TB Seagate drive that's on Netgear's official compatibility list, which presumably means it's RAID-friendly, but it also has some of the worst reviews on Newegg compared to other 2TB drives. |
#506
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#507
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I think 1.5TB drives are the best price point right now (starting at about 7 cents/GB I think). I think 2TB (and oddly enough, 1TB) are closer to 8 cents or more.
__________________
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 |
#508
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But what always gets me is that going with a smaller drive just means you'll either need more (maybe many more) or to replace them sooner.
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#509
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2TB are cheap enough now that I think they're worth it. There's added cost to having more drives, be it a larger NAS, more RAID controllers, higher power consumption, etc.
I'm still curious about recommendations on drives. I've gone with Hitachi drives before, and had good luck with them, but it looks like they only have 7200RPM drives. I'm looking for low-power, cool-running hard drives. The WD Green drives would have been great if WD hadn't removed TLER functionality from them. I have a whole bunch of WD Green drives now and none of them have failed. In fact, I don't think I've ever had a WD drive fail on me. Seagate has a line of low power, 5900RPM drives. But, based on user reports, they don't sound very reliable. Samsung has the Spinpoint F3EG, which sounds somewhat promising, but I can't find any information on how well it works in a RAID environment. |
#510
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You'll always use up all the storage you have. However, even if in the end, you end up with 8 1TB drives, as opposed to 4 2TB drives, you've got better overall performance with the greater drive numbers.
__________________
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 |
#511
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If this is being delivered over Gigabit Ethernet, disk performance isn't a huge issue -- the bottleneck is the network. Now, if you had a 10Gb network, that would be a different story. |
#512
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Well, I was actually the one recommending just adding local storage to the already 24/7sage server, vice a NAS anyways, so network performance wasnt' an issue.
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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 |
#513
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my RAID
I use a Drobo. All my recordings go straight to 2 internal SATA drives for all recordings and live. And then all my ripped DVDs and archived shows play from the Drobo attached via firewire 800. Everything is shared via UNC paths -- all my pictures for SageTV screensaver mode are there, as well as, FanArt. The system is fast enough to play DVD's on my three Sage clients as everything is coming over on a gigabit network, one client which is over a belkin powerline HD adapter works really well, rather than wireless. I rip my DVD's on another machine and then copy them to the RAID over the network. The only real issue is that I cannot copy anything to the server via smb because it brings the server to a crawl for accessing menus in the Sage Clients. So I copy to the server using another program and the server load balances the lot for my clients and the copy tasks.
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#514
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Not necessarilly, newer/larger drives are usually faster than older/slower drives. My 4x1.5TB ReadyNAS is faster than my 8x250GB array in my server.
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#515
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Because of the lack of RAID support in consumer-level drives, I'm pretty weary to go with a ReadyNAS, QNAP, SS4200-e, etc. I don't want to go a couple years and then find it the NAS unusable due to issues with hard drive error handling.
So, I've been giving unRAID some pretty serious thought. However, I'm a little nervous about write speeds. It looks like I can only hope to get write speeds in the range of 15-20MB/sec. For those of you running unRAID servers, is that about what you get? That's not terribly slow, but it's about half what I'm looking for. Slow writes wouldn't be so bad if I was just going to use the NAS as a media file server, but I'd also like to use it for backups/images. Faster writes would be nice for those applications. |
#516
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Honestly, unless you are using commercial class gigabit switches and adapters, I don't think going to a higher class drive just to get higher write speeds is worth it. 20MB/sec is still plenty fast for just about any personal use. backups/imaging are really an unattended activity, so speed is not THAT important. conversly, for restoration and such, speed matters, but that's not a problem for most RAID/unRAID setups.
As for 'RAID Support' in drives. Just because they can't be specifically tweaked to work BETTER with a raid array, doens't make them incompatible with working in RAID. The performance might be a tad lower, but you're paying MORE than a tad less. i guess I'm in the camp of people who only pay for high end stuff if I'm going to need a high-end experience. For offline storage needs, it's just not that important.
__________________
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 |
#517
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That is true, across significant generation gaps, which I'm sure your 250's are from a couple gens ago... however, when looking at new a 1.5TB and a 2.0 TB, I doubt the performance difference is anywhere near as great.
__________________
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 |
#518
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#519
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You should not use Unraid directly for a recording drive in SageTV. Its better to record to a local drive,then archive/move the recordings to unRaid later, if you want to store HD recordings on unRaid. Quote:
With unRaid, data is not stripped across all drives. Only the disk being written to and the parity disk are used for any given write. All writes, except to a cache disk (if you have one installed), do read/write to the parity disk to recalculate parity, so you'll want to make sure the parity disk is as fast as possible -- but again, a cache disk can offset this penalty until later in the night, when you may not notice it. Last edited by brainbone; 02-07-2010 at 09:06 AM. |
#520
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ReadyNAS provides an HCL that includes "consumer" drives. Anything on the list they support.
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