Home server data storage.

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • pentium
    Badcaps Legend
    • Mar 2006
    • 2778
    • Canada

    #1

    Home server data storage.

    I'm shining up my wish list again.
    Anyways, I have always wondered what is the best storage type a server should use.

    -A RAID or Fibre Channel disk array


    OR

    -Multiple removable scsi drives crammed into a case.


    Say you want a storage plan that will give you a hard drive for each person who uses the server. You need hotswap and the ability to get fast data transfer.

    I looked into just getting several removable scsi drive bays but after bays, cables, drives and other parts it easily exceeded $150 ($50 for a 5-head ultra scsi cable?!)

    I then looked into disk arrays. There are quite a few proliant arrays out there that offer 4+ bays, Use RAID technology (connecting to server via pci card) and drives go for a dime a dozen.
    They looked good until I saw their prices and design. They almost always come in rackmount and I HATE rackmount and they are rather heavy making an ebay auction end at $50 but with shipping turn into $133.

    I already see some people have their home servers on this site. What option do you use and how good is it?
    Last edited by pentium; 01-20-2007, 04:54 PM.
    Find Nedry!


    Check the Vending machines!!

    <----Computer says I need more beer.
  • willawake
    Super Modulator
    • Nov 2003
    • 8457
    • Greece

    #2
    Re: Home server data storage.

    hahaha when you get older you will love rackmount
    the only probs with buying servers is be careful what is required for the installation a few absent components like rackmount rails and hdd caddy's can bump up the cost a whole bunch

    in the subject of home storage. coming from an office background i say do not trust the hdds for your storage. always have a second backup as well. even if you have a raid 1 or 5 or 10 whatever you still need another backup. probably a sata drive or two.

    but still that is not enough and i recommend to archive whatever data you are not using currently to dvdr.

    in my opinion that only can mean the most quality dvd blanks and not tape. i have shit experience with tape. in my case i trust taiyo yuden because the first cd blanks i burnt were those and they still work today. otherwise mitsubishi chemicals with their azo technology. the fact is though dont even trust that. reburn your stuff every few years or so.

    hopefully the blu ray or whatever will bring us the ability to burn adequate amounts of data to disk. at the moment it is just annoying to work out how to make everything split to many dvdrs.

    still i miss the days of 20gb hdds where i was forced to make folders and burn them to cd when they reached 650mb.

    now being spoilt for storage and especially with the adsl lines downloading huge amounts of crap things can get a little messy.

    when should you backup. well how much is it ok to lose?

    still if you want some good sata raid then maybe look into 3ware a few techs swear by that and their utilities.

    the most important when considering raid is how to get out of a drive or array failure. seems quite nice until you experience that. even one drive failing slightly and writing corrupted shit to the array and you are truly up shit creek without a paddle..........
    capacitor lab yachtmati techmati

    Comment

    • Topcat
      The Boss Stooge
      • Oct 2003
      • 16951
      • United States

      #3
      Re: Home server data storage.

      Avoid fibre channel like the plague. Backplanes and controller cards are nearly non-existent and extremely expensive when you do find them. Stay with SCSI 160 or 320. You can achieve the same thing from it and actually find large drives for them.

      A storm took out the Linux install on one of my servers, so thats how I get to waste my saturday, reinstalling and reconfiguring..... Critical data was saved, but the OS was totally hosed. The power was up and down so much, the UPS batts died, and the servers kept shutting down and powering back up.... Linux doesn't like that I see.... lol
      <--- Badcaps.net Founder

      Badcaps.net Services:

      Motherboard Repair Services

      ----------------------------------------------
      Badcaps.net Forum Members Folding Team
      http://folding.stanford.edu/
      Team : 49813
      Join in!!
      Team Stats

      Comment

      • pentium
        Badcaps Legend
        • Mar 2006
        • 2778
        • Canada

        #4
        Re: Home server data storage.

        the only probs with buying servers is be careful what is required for the installation a few absent components like rackmount rails and hdd caddy's can bump up the cost a whole bunch
        My alternative to racks:
        Shelves...lots of em

        Backup?
        I was planning to get two 25 gig tape drives from a guy who sells them nearby for cheap. I'm only using 50 gigs (Five 10GB drives) and the backups would only cover folders I want to keep safe. Whatever else is okay to be lost because it is usually just fluff that I have forgotten to delete or can be re-downloaded off the net. Hower if you recommend dvd backup...I have to shell out a few more bucks.

        even one drive failing slightly and writing corrupted shit to the array and you are truly up shit creek without a paddle..........
        Am I to assume that this is commonplace?
        Find Nedry!


        Check the Vending machines!!

        <----Computer says I need more beer.

        Comment

        • pentium
          Badcaps Legend
          • Mar 2006
          • 2778
          • Canada

          #5
          Re: Home server data storage.

          Avoid fibre channel like the plague.
          Okie dokie!

          Stay with SCSI 160 or 320. You can achieve the same thing from it and actually find large drives for them.
          My system can only use scsi. No onboard IDE.
          Last edited by pentium; 01-20-2007, 05:43 PM.
          Find Nedry!


          Check the Vending machines!!

          <----Computer says I need more beer.

          Comment

          • Rainbow
            Badcaps Legend
            • Aug 2005
            • 1371

            #6
            Re: Home server data storage.

            Originally posted by Topcat
            The power was up and down so much, the UPS batts died, and the servers kept shutting down and powering back up.... Linux doesn't like that I see.... lol
            With ext3 filesystem, this shouldn't happen.

            Comment

            • willawake
              Super Modulator
              • Nov 2003
              • 8457
              • Greece

              #7
              Re: Home server data storage.

              Am I to assume that this is commonplace?
              god i hope not

              The power was up and down so much, the UPS batts died, and the servers kept shutting down and powering back up
              uhuh well just shut them the fuck down until its over
              your telling me that windows likes that more?

              i am another disciple to the longevity of scsi drives. personally i go with 10.000 rpm rather than the 15.000 versions. even 10.000 is kinda much to my engineering mind. still there is not much point unless your controller support.

              but you are talking 50gb well just mirror daily to another computer with ide or sata drive. there are a lot of progs for that. i use the awesome backup magic running under windows scheduler for the final clean files only backup.
              capacitor lab yachtmati techmati

              Comment

              • Topcat
                The Boss Stooge
                • Oct 2003
                • 16951
                • United States

                #8
                Re: Home server data storage.

                Originally posted by willawake
                uhuh well just shut them the fuck down until its over
                your telling me that windows likes that more?
                Just shutting them down is kinda hard to do with client sites on them. I do keep backups religiously.... Well, whether Windows liked it or not, the win box is still running without a hitch, the *nix box is getting a reinstall.... Kinda self-explanatory there.... They were ext3 partitions.
                <--- Badcaps.net Founder

                Badcaps.net Services:

                Motherboard Repair Services

                ----------------------------------------------
                Badcaps.net Forum Members Folding Team
                http://folding.stanford.edu/
                Team : 49813
                Join in!!
                Team Stats

                Comment

                • willawake
                  Super Modulator
                  • Nov 2003
                  • 8457
                  • Greece

                  #9
                  Re: Home server data storage.

                  is that shit really pushing anything at all?
                  why not host them on the badcaps server in the datacenter?
                  i look at my company site and its like pushing 500mb a month. lol. wonderful clients heh.
                  capacitor lab yachtmati techmati

                  Comment

                  • Topcat
                    The Boss Stooge
                    • Oct 2003
                    • 16951
                    • United States

                    #10
                    Re: Home server data storage.

                    The win server moves a lot of data... Theres a second *nix box that does as well (wasn't affected). The one that died didn't have a whole lot on it. There's about a dozen sites running off the badcaps.net server, I really dont want to tax the actual server anymore. I have plenty of bandwidth, but the server itself is a nutless wonder....
                    <--- Badcaps.net Founder

                    Badcaps.net Services:

                    Motherboard Repair Services

                    ----------------------------------------------
                    Badcaps.net Forum Members Folding Team
                    http://folding.stanford.edu/
                    Team : 49813
                    Join in!!
                    Team Stats

                    Comment

                    • pentium
                      Badcaps Legend
                      • Mar 2006
                      • 2778
                      • Canada

                      #11
                      Re: Home server data storage.

                      but you are talking 50gb well just mirror daily to another computer with ide or sata drive.
                      Good luck, Excluding my only 130 gig drive, the biggest hard drive I own is only 20 gigs.

                      Back on topic...
                      I'm not asking what I should get for my needs or what backup I should use.
                      I am just asking what you use and what you would recommend for a home installation.

                      EG.
                      Don't use FC arrays because they are expensive and sometimes hard to find parts for.
                      Find Nedry!


                      Check the Vending machines!!

                      <----Computer says I need more beer.

                      Comment

                      • bgavin
                        Badcaps Legend
                        • Jan 2007
                        • 1355

                        #12
                        Re: Home server data storage.

                        For all my commercial clients, I keep GHOST images of their installed systems. This is a fast and reliable method of getting a dead system back online without a laborious rebuilding chore. I run it under BART-PE and it performs flawlessly.

                        One client backs up 140gb nightly, so I have a dedicated 2nd machine for this purpose. It also doubles as another domain controller, but is primarily for backup. The client brings an external USB drive onsite weekly to take a dump for offsite storage.

                        Most of my clients have a 2nd disk installed, and utilize my backup program. It is a wrapper for NTBackup and automates the daily backups, plus pushes a copy of the backup to another directory or networked machine.

                        The point made above about refreshing old DVD is a very good one. They die over time, and your data will die with them. This sux, but is also life in the digital fast lane.

                        Comment

                        • willawake
                          Super Modulator
                          • Nov 2003
                          • 8457
                          • Greece

                          #13
                          Re: Home server data storage.

                          Back on topic...
                          I'm not asking what I should get for my needs or what backup I should use.
                          I am just asking what you use and what you would recommend for a home installation.
                          if i was buying a server for home though i would be wary about getting anything branded. simply because proprietary parts can be very expensive or just plain unobtainium when the device is old. Typical with some of the rackmount units is that they usually have a lot of fans and are noisy for home use. The fans are usually proprietary and some units dont even allow to operate without fan positions populated and rpm sense being received. Some pedestal models do the same.
                          capacitor lab yachtmati techmati

                          Comment

                          Related Topics

                          Collapse

                          • omega
                            Troubleshooting of redundant F750E-S0 Dell PowerEdge Server
                            by omega
                            Hello all,
                            as a beginner electronics hobbyist, after a few years I would like to place another post on this Forum section, given that I did not succeed in finding any useful advice among the other posts.

                            Over the last years, I have been using a PowerEdge Dell Server with two redundant PSUs, namely the 750W F750E-S0 ones (aka 06W2PW). Unfortunately, last summer one of them failed (perhaps owing to an overheating), and the server had for working to take into account the other one only. Of course I opened and tried to troubleshoot the failed PSU, but each cap I tested seemed to...
                            02-09-2024, 03:34 PM
                          • Document Archive
                            HP ZBook 15v G5 Mobile server 15v Specification for Upgrade or Repair
                            by Document Archive
                            This specification for the HP ZBook 15v G5 Mobile server can be useful for upgrading or repairing a laptop that is not working. As a community we are working through our specifications to add valuable data like the 15v G5 boardview and 15v G5 schematic. Our users have donated over 1 million documents which are being added to the site. This page will be updated soon with additional information. Alternatively you can request additional help from our users directly on the relevant badcaps forum. Please note that we offer no warranties that any specification, datasheet, or download for HP ZBook 15v...
                            09-06-2024, 11:39 AM
                          • Topcat
                            Topcat's New Home System
                            by Topcat
                            Well this one didn't last long....

                            https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showpo...&postcount=872

                            We had some severe weather pass though late fall and it got jolted.....got through multiple surge protection devices and got the NIC. I stuck a PCIe NIC in it....but it just hasn't acted right since......but I've been limping it along. I decided it's time to start working up a replacement.

                            First up is the case.....this came from the shop I cleaned out last October. This is an Enlight built server case OEM'd for Intel....and rebadged by Nobilis.
                            ...
                            02-23-2023, 11:21 PM
                          • harp
                            Comparing FreeNAS, FTP server, SMB server, multimedia server...
                            by harp
                            I thinking about some central LAN file server, on where I can put some files from other devices, or access to them, and maybe play some movie without download...

                            I never study this, but when I see that freenas need few gigabyte of ram to recommended working, some wiered partition, I wonder if I miss somewhat in the midletime...
                            Also exist "turnkey file server", and other turnkey products that I can not distinguished what is major difference and how it perform - no experiance at all.

                            What is general difference between this products, and what be most useful...
                            01-04-2024, 02:44 PM
                          • Fireballcz
                            Windows 2016 server L2TP/IPsec VPN - two subnets
                            by Fireballcz
                            Hello, please how to properly configure VPN in this environment?
                            I have two subnets in two different (geographical) workplaces, connected via IPsec (thru gateway routers)
                            Main subnet: 192.168.11.0/24, gateway (router IP) 192.168.11.1, Windows 2016 server (VPN, DHCP, DC etc.) 192.168.11.3
                            2nd subnet : 192.168.22.0/24, gateway (router IP) 192.168.22.1 - just client computers.

                            I need to allow external (home office) users connect via VPN server (192.168.11.3) to the 2nd subnet (192.168.22.0/24) to their computers (via RDP).
                            I have no problems with VPN connection...
                            07-29-2022, 03:20 AM
                          • Loading...
                          • No more items.
                          Working...