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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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Router died, replaced with gigabit, now have question
So a router on my home LAN died, and I decided to replace it and another it a seperate part of the house with gigabit switches. While I was at it, I got a gigabit NIC for my server as well.
As you can see from my .sig, I run a two MVP/ headless server setup. I really don't transfer large files around the network other than what Sage does. Is there any advantage to actually install the new NIC in my server? It'd be the only 1000 Mbit NIC in the house, so there would be nothing for it to 'talk' with at gigabit speeds. The switches are only functioning at 10/100 now, but I have them for the future when I decide to upgrade additional CPUs to 1000 Mbits. Any thoughts? matt
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Server: Ubuntu 16.04 running Sage for Linux v9 |
#2
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Server: i5-2405S (4 core @ 2.5 GHz), 8GB RAM, NORCO RPC-4220 4U case Tuners: 2 SiliconDust HDHomeRun , 2 Hauppauge HD-PVR Connected to 1 Pace700X and 1 TiVo Series 4 DVD Storage: 24 TB TV Storage: 11 TB (4x1.5TB for recording, 5TB for archive) Clients: 3 SageTV Extenders:5 |
#3
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OK, thanks. I was thinking that it's working now, so why mess with it. I'll have the card for now, and will toss it in when I get around to putting another in my main computer.
As an aside, here are the errors that you see when your router is slowly dying, and your MVP is trying to connect through it to the server: PHP Code:
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Server: Ubuntu 16.04 running Sage for Linux v9 |
#4
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Testing I did says that to exceed 100BT speeds with a 1000BT connection between PCs, they have to be fairly new and fast. And a PCI bus NIC for GbE will probably cap out at 500Mbps or so, if not encumbered by the disk speeds. I did tests with IOMeter which can test memory to memory speeds, no disks. Between two fairly fast PCs, I have achieved 800Mbps or so, with memory to memory, really big data block transfers, no disk I/O involved, and with two applications per PC pushing and taking data. That's not a realistic use case I say. So it does take some doing to exhaust 100BT with two modest PCs. Now if you have several blasting away and video streaming, that's a different story - congestion at the switch. Last edited by stevech; 07-12-2007 at 09:34 PM. |
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