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Arbadacarba

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Everything posted by Arbadacarba

  1. Oh, and I menat to point you towards unBALANCE if in fact you are not running a Raid 0 Array underneath unraid
  2. Do you mean to say that you have a raid card with a raid0 configured? Or are you just assuming that the pool is raid 0? Raid 0 Specifically precludes this... In raid 0 pulling one of the disks completely breaks all of the disks... But I thought they all had to be the same size? RAID 0[edit] See also: JBOD Diagram of a RAID 0 setup RAID 0 (also known as a stripe set or striped volume) splits ("stripes") data evenly across two or more disks, without parity information, redundancy, or fault tolerance. Since RAID 0 provides no fault tolerance or redundancy, the failure of one drive will cause the entire array to fail; as a result of having data striped across all disks, the failure will result in total data loss. This configuration is typically implemented having speed as the intended goal.[2][3] RAID 0 is normally used to increase performance, although it can also be used as a way to create a large logical volume out of two or more physical disks.[4] A RAID 0 setup can be created with disks of differing sizes, but the storage space added to the array by each disk is limited to the size of the smallest disk. For example, if a 120 GB disk is striped together with a 320 GB disk, the size of the array will be 120 GB × 2 = 240 GB. However, some RAID implementations allow the remaining 200 GB to be used for other purposes. The diagram in this section shows how the data is distributed into stripes on two disks, with A1:A2 as the first stripe, A3:A4 as the second one, etc. Once the stripe size is defined during the creation of a RAID 0 array, it needs to be maintained at all times. Since the stripes are accessed in parallel, an n-drive RAID 0 array appears as a single large disk with a data rate n times higher than the single-disk rate. (wikipedia) So that would mean that your raid 0 array would be 20TB
  3. I would lower the split to keep types of media together... Assuming fairly large drives and the intent to let them spin down. I keep my drives almost single purpose so that once spun up, it can continue to perform the most likely next request. My movie disk for example may only spin up for a few hours a week, while my music disk is spun up about 6 hours a day.
  4. It's one array but separate shares... Each share has included and excluded drives. When I launch Plex the interface works from the cache/appdata folder, but when I want to start a movie it takes a few seconds while the drives spin up. Same thing with Music and Television shows etc. But once the music drive is spinning there is never a delay.
  5. Strangely you are doing the thing that started me down this path. My Server contained an Intel 660p 512 with Windows 10 on it that I used for my gaming machine with a GTX 1660 Ti passed through as well... I was able to get the intel to pass through easily enough and in truth did it a few different ways... What error messages are you getting? I initially did mine by manually assigning a non ... passed through (?) (VFIO?) Drive: <disk type='block' device='disk'> <driver name='qemu' type='raw' cache='writeback'/> <source dev='/dev/disk/by-id/nvme-INTEL_SSDPEKKW512G7_BTPY652201XX512F'/> <backingStore/> <target dev='hdc' bus='sata'/> <boot order='1'/> <address type='drive' controller='0' bus='0' target='0' unit='2'/> </disk> I actually did that in the GUI but I don't have a screen shot of what it looked like but: The only problem I had with that was that in the event of a unexpected server shutdown the drive would get screwed up and I would have to fix it.
  6. Funny enough, the docker I was trying to set on it's own IP was Heimdall... So now she has links for all the pertinent Cameras and tool.
  7. Check that your ports are not duplicated... Did you by any chance chage Plex's port from 32400 to maybe 80? so you would not have to use the port?
  8. Could it be a static DNS in the network config that kicks you out after a while?
  9. Vr2Io is exactly right: Settings - Docker Turn Docker off - Apply Host access to custom networks: Enabled Turn Docker On - Apply Figured that out today trying to do the exact same thing so that my wife doesn't have to input ports
  10. Would that happen if you had a share called lxc and had it set to the wrong "Use Cache Pool" setting?
  11. Does the Mikrotik show anything in the logs?
  12. This is where we are at the moment. Same problem, it was fixed and then promptly broken again. What are you trying to alias? Here's the other thread:
  13. Aaannnd Found It I guess the trick is not to read through the relevant thread, it's to read through ALL the threads.
  14. I'm not running a reverse proxy - I just want simple access from within my network so that my wife can quickly have links available for external cameras and the baby monitor... Plus give myself a launching point for all my internal servers and dockers. I am playing with the idea of putting many of my dockers on their own IP addresses so that they can be accessed by name and without having to enter port numbers. It seems to work, except that the advanced apps give errors on testing and if already configured they just do not show any live data.
  15. My own build includes 7 HDDs. I have ended up segmenting them by types of Data so that only one disk has to spin up at any given time. Disc 1 - 10TB - Television Disc 2 - 10TB - Anime, Audio Books, Comedy, Comics, Documents, E-Books, Graphics, Public, Software Disc 3 - 10TB - Music, Photos, Videos Disc 4 - 12TB - Movies Disc 5 - 14TB - overflow Disc 6 - 16TB - Backup Disc 7 - Unpopulated Parity - 18TB The advantages of not having all drives spin up when data is pulled from one category, and the fact that I can lose only 20% of my available storage. On the down side I have to move the largest drive into the Array every time I buy a larger drive... But I can live with that.
  16. On the one hand it depends on how irreplaceable the data you are housing on the server is... If you are just experimenting I would say turn OFF the Parity drive until you have added drives. On the other hand, If you are adding drives slowly over time and are worried about the data, then let it go ahead. I would try not to fret over parity sync using drive life... My system tends toward up times in excess of 100 days, but occasionally I do something silly and it ends up re-syncing parity... You just have to go with it. Arbadacarba
  17. Syslog server allows you to set your folder... Generally not the Flash Disk... Also it sets a Max file size and since it is only a text log you wouldn't get anywhere near 15GB... Or 1GB really
  18. Any chance you are running Shinobi? I've been fighting with this for a while and finally tried shutting Shinobi down... Suddenly it works.
  19. Considered wiring a Cap into the 12V rail at the plug for the Hotswap bay, but tried plugging a separate cable in for it rather than running it off the cable that I had in place... Seems to be holding now. Yay, time to start building the parity again.
  20. I end up with A LOT of external drives, and use SMART to determine when to retire them: Gives you a rough idea of how long a drive has been in use. Arbadacarba
  21. I looked through a bit above and didn't see a similar problem: I have been using my internal docking bay (with hot swap enabled on the Sata controller) to clone and resize various drives over the past few days, but I've run into a snag... If I plug any drive in it mounts on it's own and appears to have the same structure as the last one I used but if I try to look at the OS partition with Krusader it shows up as empty. I'm assuming a reboot will fix it, and I am due to install some hardware tonight, but I'd love to know if there was a way to reset Unassigned Devices without a reboot. jupiter-diagnostics-20220622-1900.zip
  22. That was my read as well... So even if I use a seperate cable it will not isolate the one drive from the external bays.
  23. The Power Supply is a beQuiet 1000W that is nowhere near the limits... Is there a way to see if the drive looses power? I wonder if using a separate line for the Parity drive might help... I don't think it should, if I'm reading the manual correctly, but maybe just moving it a little farther away... Worth a shot.
  24. The Power Supply is a beQuiet 1000W that is nowhere near the limits... Is there a way to see if the drive looses power?
  25. Yes, it's on a hot swap capable Sata connection I've been using this bay as hot swap for over 4 years... Though the Sata controller has changed a few times over the years. The current connection is on the NZXT Mainboard and the port is set to Hot Plug in BIOS. IOMMU group 5:[8086:43d2] 00:17.0 SATA controller: Intel Corporation Device 43d2 (rev 11) [7:0:0:0] disk ATA TOSHIBA MQ01ABD1 2D /dev/sda 1.00TB [8:0:0:0] disk ATA Samsung SSD 870 1B6Q /dev/sdc 2.00TB [9:0:0:0] disk ATA Samsung SSD 870 1B6Q /dev/sdd 2.00TB The Samsung Drives are my Cache Drives My Array is entirely connected to a Dell Perc 310: IOMMU group 18:[1000:0072] 06:00.0 Serial Attached SCSI controller: Broadcom / LSI SAS2008 PCI-Express Fusion-MPT SAS-2 [Falcon] (rev 03) [3:0:0:0] disk ATA ST14000NE0008-2J EN01 /dev/sde 14.0TB [3:0:1:0] disk ATA ST12000VN0007-2G SC60 /dev/sdf 12.0TB [3:0:2:0] disk ATA ST10000NE0004-1Z EN01 /dev/sdg 10.0TB [3:0:3:0] disk ATA ST10000VN0008-2P SC61 /dev/sdh 10.0TB [3:0:4:0] disk ATA ST10000VN0008-2P SC61 /dev/sdi 10.0TB [3:0:5:0] disk ATA ST10000VN0004-1Z SC60 /dev/sdj 10.0TB The First Drive is my Parity... The only differentce with the Parity drive is that it is mounted to a seperate plate from the other Array disks, and there is a short Sata extension cable connected... AND IT"S ON THE SAME POWER LEAD AS THE REMOVABLE BAY!!! (OK thought of that as I typed...)
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