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Building a NAS Device w/ Embedded OS?

An Anonymous Coward asks: "I've been thinking about building a NAS device similar to the Quantum Snap Server Has anyone come across anyone else working on a similar project? One that at the very least uses a small integrated board and some sort of embedded OS? Ive seen several systems that run a full Linux OS and separate boot hard drives, but this solution seems a bit too bulky for whats really required. Something that features a FTP/HTTP/SMB interface would be pretty slick!"

3 of 27 comments (clear)

  1. How about Linux on a snap server by bihoy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I am actually interested to know if one could run linux on a NAS device. I would love to be able use use one as an Automated Backup Appliance. Preferably by running a pared down version of Linux with Samba and some scripts to automatically mount disks and backup their data to the disks on the NAS device.

    At present I use old PC's and throw a couple of 80Gb disks in them. Unfortunately this is a bulky solution that you can't just plop on somebodys desk.

  2. what's wrong with linux (or bsd for that matter)? by StandardDeviant · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If bulk is your thing, I'm sure you could find a small board that Linux (or certainly netbsd) will run on (example: embsd.org's board), and fitting a full-featured install of either of the above OSen onto a CompactFlash device from SanDisk (ide adaptors are available for not much, media is pretty cheap) isn't hard... Heck using the PCMCIA slot on that board, you could have (up to) a gig to play with via IBM's microdrive for the system "disk". This means that you'd be using an operating system with a much larger user community that whatever proprietary thing you went with, and not to be neglected, the free OSen would be, well, uh... free. ;-) SAMBA, netatalk, ftp, nfs, afs, coda, etc. all pretty much guarantee that your little *nix machine could talk to pretty much anything with a power cable. The embsd board has a PCI slot, so you could easily stick a raid adaptor on it, and with 3 10/100 interfaces you probably don't have to worry about network I/O... All in all, a pretty cheap solution: $255 for the board, $0 for the OS and software, maybe $300 for an ata100 pci board and a couple of big ass IDE drives... This would scale up to N many scsi drives / raid, blah blah... all while taking up way less space and pwr than a desktop (the embsd board also has a bios that allows serial-console-only admin of everything, a la the PC WEASEL).

  3. Why develop? Just Buy. by Crypt0pimP · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Disclaimer: I used to work with these guys.

    That said, it's a solid product, and they could use the support

    netzerver.com

    is an embedded linux on a single board system, capable of SCSI or IDE.

    I have one here in the home office. Speaks Apple, Netware, SMB, HTTP, etc. easy config, real reliable, real cheap.

    Quick and (not so) dirty, it works.

    --
    Striving to achieve a lower state of conciousness