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How to set up central shared server at home?

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    #21
    Originally posted by Joeman View Post
    What sort of power consumption are they using?? given that in a home server environment, they are likely to lay unused whilst we're all at work, are these boxes draining the power grid for no reason??
    With typical home pc's and their 300watt+ PSU's, im reluctant to leave one on 24/7 as a home server.
    From HP QuickSpecs

    Power Supply:

    150 Watts Non-Hot Plug, Non Redundant Power Supply
    I only have one 2 TB disk in mine so far, but that 150 Watts will do 4 disks. As for leaving it on for 24 hours a day, I recently found out that the old servers I have here consumed rather a lot even when switched off, so have put them on power strips with a master switch, so essentially I am ahead of the game at the moment.
    Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.

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      #22
      Originally posted by Joeman View Post
      Get one of those plugs with a built in timer to reset the power every night at 3am.. Thats what i do with my dodgy old router that seems to hang occasionally, it turns off a 3am, and back on at 3:02.
      it's raided though - not sure an immediate power off is a good idea! Gives me an idea though - cron!!

      Having said that as another poster said - since I've got things connecting to it it seems not have to totally gone to sleep...

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        #23
        Originally posted by Joeman View Post
        Get one of those plugs with a built in timer to reset the power every night at 3am.. Thats what i do with my dodgy old router that seems to hang occasionally, it turns off a 3am, and back on at 3:02.
        If it's just a case of needing to restart the NAS, then the 410 allows you to schedule a restart, shutdown or startup. I would expect the 412 to do the same.
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          #24
          Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
          If it's just a case of needing to restart the NAS, then the 410 allows you to schedule a restart, shutdown or startup. I would expect the 412 to do the same.
          Checked, it does, but over night is when it rsyncs to Crashplan, and its got 2.5TB to do - I'm doing my entire collection of stuff - gonna take a while!

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            #25
            Originally posted by Sysman View Post
            £249. That's roughly what I paid for one with 4GB RAM but no disk at Christmas. WHS2011 cost about 40 quid but I already had it.

            It's a nice piece of kit. Jury still out on the WHS2011 side, but it's certainly doing the streaming and backups (off to external USB disks) nicely. There is the catch that there's a 2TB limit on the size of backups. Thus far it does a nice job of backing up Windows clients too, and you can create a USB boot stick to restore those clients (tested - it's a doddle). Despite the product description you only have limited functionality with Mac clients though.

            2GB is the minimum RAM for WHS2011, 4GB is fine, but I'm going to max mine out to 8GB.

            Oh, one tip. Unlike Windows Server 2008, when you install WHS2011 it overwrites Disk 0; it creates a 60GB partition for C: and the rest of that disk for D:. You don't get the choice of aiming it at another disk.

            According to the license, you aren't supposed to promote it to a domain controller (it won't let you - I tried ), enable any roles that the initial installation doesn't enable, and you shouldn't make it a member of a domain either. However a bit of searching soon shows you that folks are doing that sort of thing
            Well, £149 once you've received the cashback
            Think when I got two of them before xmas they were £240 each.

            I have 8gb in each of mine Crucial 8GB (2 x 4GB) DDR3 1333MHz Memory Kit CL9 1.5V | Ebuyer.com (was £25+vat when I got it, is non-ECC but still works fine as far as I can tell)
            One is running WHS 2011 and the other ESXI for playing with VMs.

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              #26
              I'll second the Synology offerings - got a 411+ii, with 12Tb of disk in it. The management console is brilliant, it acts as a shared drive for all my machines, and iTunes server, streams all the movies you can handle to my SmartTV and also manages some video cameras around the house. Great bit of kit.
              World's Best Martini

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                #27
                I use an old laptop stuck on a docking station as my home server. 2002 Compaq laptop that's useless for anything else these days but is still good enough to be a basic file and iTunes server. I treat it as a server with built-in UPS! I have an external USB drive with mirrored drives to provide some hardware tolerance.

                I use Windows Live Mesh as my syncing tool for documents, works very nicely on my Mac and means I have multiple copies of my most important stuff. Updating on the fly from anywhere with an internet connection is key for me,

                I back up the USB drive to a second USB box (single drive) once a month to make sure I don't lose all my media files. I keep this hidden away in my garage, detached, to give a bit of DR capacity in case of fire or theft.

                VPN is turned on and my ISP gives static IP addresses so I can get to it from anywhere if I really need to.
                Last edited by craig1; 27 January 2012, 14:33.

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                  #28
                  I might repurpose my old desktop when i get a new machine and stick WHS or a flavour of linux on it.
                  While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'

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                    #29
                    Originally posted by craig1 View Post
                    VPN is turned on and my ISP gives static IP addresses so I can get to it from anywhere if I really need to.
                    Static addresses where I am seem to be reserved for business lines, which don't come cheap. However my IP address only changes maybe once or twice a year. The dynamic DNS function on my old router never worked, so I got used to changing the DNS entries manually. The most recent change was when I replaced the router - a new router MAC address triggers a fresh IP address for dynamic address users.

                    I have a launchd job on my Mac which checks the IP address at regular intervals and writes it to a file on Dropbox, so I can get at it from anywhere I have that installed. When I get around to it I'll enhance that to send me an email when the address changes.
                    Last edited by Sysman; 27 January 2012, 16:10.
                    Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.

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                      #30
                      Originally posted by Sysman View Post
                      Static addresses where I am seem to be reserved for business lines, which don't come cheap. However my IP address only changes maybe once or twice a year. The dynamic DNS function on my old router never worked, so I got used to changing the DNS entries manually. The most recent change was when I replaced the router - a new MAC address triggers a fresh IP address.

                      I have a launchd job on my Mac which checks the IP address at regular intervals and writes it to a file on Dropbox, so I can get at it from anywhere I have that installed. When I get around to it I'll enhance that to send me an email when the address changes.
                      I use Zen for my internet. They give either 1 or 8 static IP addresses as part of the standard contract. I'd thoroughly recommend them as an ISP.

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