Low Powered SOHO Server?
meroo asks: "I am building a new home that is completely solar/wind powered. I need to conserve power wherever I can, but I don't want to leave all my tech toys behind. I need advice about building a low power, Linux based, file and print server. It should be scalable to more than a terabyte of storage (we are video artists) with at least four HDD bays for flexibility and data redundancy. I would like advice on processor/mainboard combos, low power HDDs and a distro with the best power management to bring this thing down to idle when we are not using it. The server will be accessed via our laptops (Mac OSX and Ubuntu), a future home theatre PC and visitors assorted laptops. I've been looking at using laptop components, miniITX and professional server solutions, but now I'm thoroughly confused. Has anyone on Slashdot been faced with this problem before?"
Those two things don't seem to go together. I'm interested what advice people come up with since video rendering is just about the most processor-intensive thing you can do on a computer.
Watch the Teaser Trailer for "The Lightning Thief" Her
is to accept that what you want to do probably does not fit into where you want to do it. then have a plan to turn the fridge and everything else off when you need to work...
Purchase a little dongle to test how much power your utilities consume while you plan this project. I'd much rather have empirical knowledge about power consumption on a given system rather than trying to piece together information from shottily written technical documents on the internet. My family owns one of these devices from http://www.seasonic.com/, and I recommend purchasing something from their S-12 power supply line. Supposedly they have the highest ratio of power drawn to power consumed by the system, and all of their gear is tagged "80 plus" for 80% efficient or better. Also see this article: http://www.silentpcreview.com/article261-page1.htm l.
If someone drops a fort on Will, he makes a reflex save.
Look at the Soekris boxes. They are low-power and quite powerful. THey are also tiny.
Use laptop hard drives (5400 rpm) in USB enclosures. They will run off of USB power.
Maybe use some of the Maxtor external Network Attached Storage devices. I belive these will allow additional USB devices to be attached and shared.
The only place you will need power is in the computer attached to the TV/entertainment center. You don't want video skipping during playback. With the newer codecs, the CPU is heavily taxed. My 800mhz laptop can play AVIs and MPEGs, but if I open a browser while watching vids, the video will skip really bad.
As far as desktops, look at a powerful central server with smaller VIA-powered clients.
Look at cross-wiring your fans for 5v vice 12v. That'll reduce the power draw.
Get the smallest power supply that will feed that box. No need for a 400w supply with only 150w worth of devices.
I'd rather you do it wrong, than for me to have to do it at all.
Thats rather out of the blue. In fact it seems to be completely off topic. If not, please elaborate.
feh, lots of things are pointless, this one too
Sorry, this was on the wrong thread. please mod me up to +1 to counter act my troll mod.
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If you only need streaming video, laptop HDs should work for you. If one does not have enough throughput, then set up each two drives as a RAID-0.
.5 A and 1.0 A power draw. Performance varies dramatically, and power draw only loosly corelates with performance, so you need to benchmark.
If you care about ever last bit of power, don't set up a RAID-1, and make sure you do your backups.
Also, to keep power consumption down, segment your storage, so power management can spin down drives that contain data you aren't using.
In general, the laptop HDs I use in my various projects very between
ICP Vortex RAID controllers are much faster, and more stable, than any others I have used before. Intel purchased the company, and it appears they may have since sold the division to Adaptec, so now you may not still be able to purchase them under the ICP Vortex name.
I work with US Navy AUVs so power efficiency it a good part of my work. You are going to run into problems as your storage batteries only have so many amp/hrs of capacity and depending on the type you use deep cycling may not be an option. The best options for power efficiency use embedded processors (yes running linux. I even have a tux sticker on the side of it) and solid state hard drives (expensive) that don't draw hardly any power until you read or write to them. Then again you don't exactly get video editing caliber performance from the setup. You're not going to get around the power draw of the file server. If you need a lot of hard drives mini-itx limits your expandability due to lack of PCI slots for controller cards and such. My take... improve your power generation and storage capability to provide the power to the systems. You're not going to get much out of a video editing server/system otherwise.
It sounds like you are going to be doing the majority of your work on you laptops and what you are looking for is a large file server.
VIA has some great micro/nano-ITX boards with power saving in mind. Many of which can run with out a fan. Combine that with a few 120g notebook hard drives (Toshiba has a 120g 4200rpm drive for under $200 on http://newegg.com/
Last I heard Ubuntu was still the king of powersave mode in Linux. Most of the people I know who have set up fileshares have used Samba.
Get a 1000mbps ethernet card for it and hook it up the the router. The low hard drive speed and power save functionality will likely give you a bit of latency, but once it starts pulling sequencial data, it should be fine. There was a great article about low power solutions, I think I saw a link to it on http://mini-itx.com/ and they had some storage arrays running under 30watts IIRC)
And let me commend you for your excellent drive. Energy conservation is a great field for both professional and financial improvement. With new integrated home systems like Solar Shingles and improved energy efficiency designs we can greatly reduce the growth demand on grid power.
-Rick
"Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
You didn't mention scale of your alternative energy. The last place we lived was totally solar powered,IIRC it was 2.6 kw in full sun, plus days worth of battery bank storage, and if that went out there was a big diesel genny but we hardly ever used it. For the owners of the estate, "them", and us,"the caretakers", we ran everything we wanted to run from freezers to fridges to multiple normal full tower computers to large screen TVs and dishwashers and vacuums and..you get the picture. The only way you could tell this wasn't a normal grid-only place (besides the solar arrays in the backyard) was when the grid power went down in the 'hood and we still had all usual power. Very, very *nice* then. You really appreciate it then, you can see that having onsite power production is just slick. It just depends on how much wattage you are installing with the PV and wind genny that determines your needs and wants with various gadgetry. If you have two panels and the smallest wind genny, well, a modest laptop or mini-itx system would have to suffice. 20-40 panels large with equivalent battery bank and a few thousand watt wind genny, you can go quite "normal" and run about whatever you might want within reason.
I did learn some tricks though, the primary one is timing for heavy loads. If you schedule your most demanding electrical loads for mid-day, between 11 AM and 1 PM, that is when you have peak power usually. Like, then is when you run the washing machines or water well for showers and watering the garden, etc. Stuf like that, common sense. You do learn to turn off excess lights or use compact fluorescents. In fact, the on/off switch is your friend, you can save an amazing amount by just being consistent in use and developing "muscle memory" for hitting OFF when you really don't need to run some gadget. "Idling" adds up quick! Arrange chairs so when you are reading you can get natural sunlight from a window. And have enough storage batteries! Nothing worse than be having a nice sunny day and be producing *too much* power and no place to put the excess. And those extra batteries will get your through cloudy days, plus they will last longer if you aren't "deep" cycling them. Shallow cycles make your batts last much longer, that and be sure to install a "desulphator" on the batteries.
With that said, have you been to solarpc.com? Off-grid puter experts of the low-watt kind.
www.infrant.com I know this will take care of the file server and possibly the print server. A friend of mine turned me on to this recently. It has now replaced my previous designs for a file server.
Use a laptop for the server, with USB 2.0 / Firewire external drives. Your limiting factor os going to be network bandwidth - the laptop is more than adequate. Using software RAID, you can mirror the external drives. When idle, the laptop (assuming you setup power management correctly) will be in a low power state. The external drives will spin down when idle. It's a very energy efficient configuration, but still able to provide full bandwidth on demand.
Can You Say Linux? I Knew That You Could.
... like the Pegasos motherboard. Put it in any roomy case with space for all those low-power HDDs. For your purposes, it sounds like you could pick an even less power-hungry G3 CPU over the standard (but still not so power hungry) G4 option.
Then there's the Open Desktop Workstation if you can't/won't build a Pegasos based box yourself.
It is a troll in the context of other thread, too.
Can't a Mac Mini be used for this? with a few external HD on firewire?
My own server is a machine from work that dies on the HLT instruction. So it cant run Windows.
It only has a cdrom drive (no hdd) and I use knoppix (knoppix 2 no-hlt). I download the script (from my site) that has all the config and there I have a firewall, dhcp server, webserver, print server and a couple o other things. My actual file server is another machine that runs windows xp and P2P software accessible by RDP so I dont need harddrives in my firewall.
Both machines have no fans on the CPU, and the power supplies are quite.
Replacing the boot drive with CDROM/USB also reduces power and makes it far more reliable.
"Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
Sun has a new 1U server out that is pretty slick. It uses 2.5" Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) drives that "offers IOPS performance increase and 58% power savings compared to today's 3.5 inch drive."
Additionally, this server uses up to two dual-core AMD Opteron CPUs which offer 1.9 times the performance of 2-way Intel Xeon servers at up to a 56% power and cooling savings.
The power supply is fairly forgiving: 90-264V AC (47-63 Hz).
I would also advise you to look at some of the telco-targeted servers that run off of DC.
Chris
Rainbow Power Company has some stuff that may be of interest.
http://www.rpc.com.au/
They're Australian, too.
What's On Your Network ??? http://www.open-audit.org/
Get a big-ass generic tower case with a good PSU.
Mobo/CPU
Get a Socket 478 ATX motherboard and find a Northwood Mobile Pentium on eBay for it. Some mobos support down-volting. I have one of these in an ASUS Pundit for home theater PC, it runs on 1.2V and is cool to the touch without fans. OR, get a supported ASUS mobo, the Socket 478-479 adapter and a Dothan Pentium-M. Get a mobo with built-in graphics or run headless. Clock it down, the fileserver won't need much CPU anyway - but it will be on and draw power 247 so any savings here will be helpful in the long run.
Disks
2.5" laptop drives won't get you to the terabyte range so get three 500 gig 3.5" drives and RAID-5 them. Linux software RAID won't expand easily so either invest in real RAID hardware, build the array large enough to not need expansion in the foreseeable future or use another scheme, like LVM + RAID. Keep copies of current and recent projects on your client computers - that's cheap and easy backup.
Network Filesystem
Samba. Only thing that will work fine with both Wintel and Mac laptops and other clients. For server-server communications I use NFS but in your case it would just be an extra thing to setup with no benefits.
NAS
OR, just get a big-ass NAS box with enough room in it. More money and less flexibility but much less hassle setting it up and less power consumption compared to the home-made linux server box.
BUT, if you also need mailserver, webserver, ftpserver, whateverserver down the line you might as well go with the full server or you'll need both the NAS and the server side-by-side.
Money for nothing, pix for free
SOHO's servers are a mix of xServes, Suns (B1600, v100, v240), and I think there's an intel system in there.
... on the low power requirements, we've got a bunch of Mac Minis lying about, but they're mostly used by the system administrators, (loghost, system monitoring, etc) not the folks doing heavy graphics manipulation.
Most of the power consumption comes from disks (many terabytes of solar physics observations), and there's a fair amount of CPU power needed for processing the data.
Now, if you're looking for recommendations for servers in London or http://www.nyctourist.com/soho1.htm>New York, I can't help you.
Oh
Build it, and they will come^Hplain.
Sorry, couldn't resist the Speedy Gonsalez reference.
I very much like the Via Epia platform. It is a basic Intel-clone platform. It's not screaming fast (1.2GHz last I checked), but it can run Linux and runs it well, and it doesn't need a lot of power.
I would suggest combining it with a 12V power supply from Mini Box and a battery equalizer so that you can run it off of the DC side of your RE system (so as to eliminate both the DC->AC and AC->DC overheads).
The board is a mini-ITX form factor, and as such, will fit not just a mini-ITX case, but also Flex-ATX, Micro-ATX and ATX cases. You can use the larger cases if you need more space for HDDs, etc.
The Epia MII-12000 is what I am using (I am on grid power, though). It has video, audio, USB, Firewire, PCMCIA, CF and ethernet all built in. For a server (keeping in mind that the ethernet will be the bottleneck), you can always add more storage to the system by firewire if you run out of space on the IDE busses (though I don't recommend going to USB).
There are three down sides besides the low clock speed that you should be aware of. First, it cannot boot from PCMCIA or CF.... probably not an issue for you. Second, it has only one PCI slot, so expansion can be a tad limited there. Third, video drivers (probably not an issue on a server) for Linux for the built-in hardware can be a bitch to set up.
www.wavefront-av.com
These are all very low power, no noise, takes minutes to set up (except if hacking them, of course :), Just Work.
Good luck!
-Henrik
I'm in a Unix state of mind.
Don't forget biomass as well (put that 'crap' to use. Plus yard waste). Plus you might want to consider an environmental control computer (now there's a geeky solution :).
All the rest is simply good house design, site selection, and a light budget.
Well, it doesn't have 4 drive bays (only two), but you could still put two 500GB drives in it. It only has 100-BaseT (two ports), and a 250MHz MIPS processor. So, depending on your preference for CPU power vs. electrical power, it might be worth looking at.
Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
I use a Linksys NSLU2 with OpenSlug firmware... low power, and a great file server, uses USB2 disks. It has USB ports and can run a hub, so you could easily plug in a printer
g
Agreed - he sounds like Gladys Skinner, when she's in the supermarket, and is picking on the bagboy..
Gladys Skinner: "I've changed my mind - I want it all in one bag, but I don't want that bag to be heavy!"
Squeaky-voiced teen: "I don't think that's possible."
Gladys Skinner: "What are you? The 'possible' police?"
what ru smokin???? he wants a terrabyte, are 12 laptop drives on a raid controller going to consume less than four 500gig 3.5 drives on a controller? and that little embebded you mention is cool but how is he hooking a raid array into it? on the otherhand i agree about the power supply. shop around
no sig today, come back tomorrow
"I am building a home that is completely solar/wind powered"
Whether or not this is feasible depends largely on your location. Wanna give us a heads-up as to where you are?
+++ATH0
low power soho server do not use a laptop as a server. do not use 2.5 inch drives unleess your going to buy one of those fancy new sun servers with 2.5" Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) drives. whatever nas/raid solution you do decide on you want to use as few drives as possible to conserve power. so think carefully about weather you want to stripe two 500gig drives or mirror or move to one of the raids that requires more than 2 disks. you need a router right? so now what do you need this server to do? does this server really need to be on 24-7? or is it just a big digital closest? get a router that has a built in print server like the ones from asus. i have one and its the print server and a ftp server useing a flash drive for super low power 24-7 access. this way the raid solution doesnt have to be on in order to access the printer. maybe someone has some info on the lowest power routers out there? figure out your raid level needs, server procccessing needs, and your bandwidth needs first. if the server is just a file server then there are a bunch of low cost nas solutions out there that use very low power proccessors and just do file server related tasks. I WOULD LOOK CLOSELY AT THIS AS PART OF A SOLUTION. this way you turn it off when not in use. if you need more proccessing power on the server then your going to have to first figure out your bandwidth needs to the raid array. many adapter based solutons require 64bit pci slots versus if you can get by with usb or firewire bandwidth from the raid then you can get an external raid array like one of these.. http://www.wiebetech.com/products/rt5.php http://www.fastora.com/product_index.php?doc_name= raid-300
http://www.lacie.com/products/product.htm?pid=1060 0
there are all sorts of low power front ends you could mate up to these i think. plus, that way you can work directly off the array from your laptop or connect it up to the server. maybe even just plug one of these into a asus/dlink/netgear storage router?? the question is the server has to be able to handle a terrabyte of storage i guess.
personnally i would look at the "home theater pc" thing seperately. but some people may argue to set up a htpc with the raid attached to it depending on use. if (like me) all you want to do is watch divix/xvid etc then get a lower power single drive device that you move data on to in order to play it on the tv. just think, do you need to have both the raid array and the htpc on at once?
if you want to use mini-itx and build your own then get a fanless one. i have been useing a mx266 from www.bcmcom.com it has sata, cf slot, dual nics, mini-pci for wireless nic, and the 1ghz eden proccessor. i have yet to run this board fanless though, but i think its possible with a aftermarket heatsink. whatever board you get boot it from compact flash. i think that will use less power but im not really sure. with mini-itx you get one 32bit pci slot so if you dont use a usb/firewire raid array then you may end up having to use that slot for a controller or adapter for the raid array.
baisicly you need to first put more time into visuallizeing your use patterns and needs.
no sig today, come back tomorrow
Why not colocate a server (or rent one) off-site? With a decent connection at home, you could back your laptops up over the network a few times a week (maybe use an external USB drive for dailies) and bang, you're done, and someone else can foot the power bill.
This space for rent.
I think that most posters missed the point. meroo wants to build an energy saving house that has hightech components. For warm water, for the heating in general, for electricity he has to find intelligent hightech solutions! And if his computing needs are big he just increases the electricity generation in the house. Be it solar or wind power, what he needs is a general concept I think. And I am sure he knows that.
So saying that he can't install powerful computing gear misses the point. Of course you can, meroo. Of course you should try to buy reasonable stuff, but in the end you need to have maybe one kW available for computing, at least during peak hours. That's perfectly doable with solar and batteries. And if later on this proves to be not sufficient, just scale up.
Heating of a five room house here in Switzerland easily consumes 8000 kWh of energy a year. In that light the power consumed by the computing equipment gets less important. 8000kWh a year is almost one kW of power, but all around the clock!
The easiest way to save energy in Switzerland is to insulate the house. This really cuts on heating energy needed. Buying a processor which uses 30 instead of 60W is peanuts, compared to that.
In general I really am fond of the rising interest in energy saving in the US.
Well, well
My wife and I are in the early stages of designing an off grid home that will be built on a mountain top in NE Tenneessee. We picked out the 47 acre location keeping the options for power generation in mind.
I believe planning for power generation will be much easier if the amount of power required to run the new home is calculated first, considering all options for heating, cooling, lighting, and your various household toys and then determine what power generation set up would be appropriate and or available. Start by looking at your current electric bill. Take the total kWhrs and divide by the days in the billing period, That will give you an idea how many kilowatts you use per day. If you currently have electric heat and you will be getting your heat a different way, then use a bill from like April or May, or October would be a fairly realistic estimate. If you use as many commonly available energy efficient devices as possible, there is less to worry about when an efficient device can not be easily found.
My wife and I are planning on building a semi subterranean home which will use a combination of wind and PV for electric generation, solar collectors for hot water, and a centrally located masonry furnace (wood) for heat in the winter. The goal is to utilize as many different renewable energy sources and as many energy conserving devices (Energy Star)as possible, while having enough energy available to use for those not so efficient devices that make modern life bearable, like the washing machine, dryer, and the dishwasher.
Planning in this way will probably result in having more capacity that=n is immediately needed, but that is better than not having enough capacity, which to me is an indicator of improper planning. Trying to find the most efficient computer system will be a waste of energy(yours). Its better to get an energy star monitor, and maybe a high efficiency power supply, than to worry about the efficiencies of all the individual components. Its even easier to adjust the overall energy capacity of your system upwards. While that "extra" capacity may seem expensive, it will be there long after that computer has gone to the dump, available for what ever new toys may come along.
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