October 11, 201312 yr Hi, Does unRAID run on an MSI FM2-A85XA-G43? http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813130709 It's the cheapest board I can find with 8 x SATA6 ports. Positives? Negatives?
October 11, 201312 yr I can't think of any reason it wouldn't work, but don't know of anyone actually using that specific board. Positives: plenty of SATA ports; and 2 x16 slots Negatives: it's not an Intel board [i'm a die-hard Intel guy] Notwithstanding my Intel bias, I'd think this would be a very nice board for an UnRAID system.
October 11, 201312 yr ...cheaper: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813157329&Tpk=B75-M-Pro3 ...and intel based (in order to re-bias gary ) This is a very good board...even ESXi with vt-d will work on it with the right CPU. Cheapest IB CPU to go with this is: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819116889 Edit: OK..only 3x SATA-6Gbps...but with unRAID you won't see a difference if you're not going to build a system entirely based on SSDs
October 12, 201312 yr Cheaper ... still has 8 SATA ports ... AND it's an Intel ==> what more could you ask for !!??
October 14, 201312 yr Author Thank you very much for the replies. I greatly appreciate it. Unfortunately, the ASRock board isn't available here. Plus, would prefer 8 x SATAIII. Thanks again.
October 14, 201312 yr Availability is an issue -- but it really makes NO difference whether the ports are SATA-II or SATA-III unless you're using SATA-III SSDs. Rotating platter drives can't get anywhere near the SATA-II bandwidth, let alone SATA-III. So as long as you have a couple of SATA-III ports (for an SSD cache or two), the rest of the ports don't matter.
January 2, 201412 yr I was looking into the MSI FM2-A85XA-G43 as a possible replacement for my current Asus F1A55-M LX unRAID setup. I'm using it in a Supermicro SC846TQ 24-bay server rack. I have two Supermicro AOC-SASLP-MV8 SATA controllers in conjunction with 6 onboard SATA II ports. The motherboard has two PCI-e x16 slots, one PCI-e x1 slot, and a PCI slot. The PCI-e x1 slot is used by an Intel Gigabit NIC and the PCI slot has aa older 4-port SATA controller card, of which only two ports are being used. I tried giving up the x1 slot so I could use a Silicon Image SIL3132 2-port controller, but that means using the onboard Realtek 8111E NIC. The transfer rates I get with the Realtek are painfully slow compared to the Intel, which is why the MSI board is looking so attractive. It's got two PCI-e x16 slots (the controllers only need x4 slots so they should work fine) and three x1 slots. I have a feeling that the two x1 slots in the middle can't be used simultaneously (I have another MSI board and this holds true for that board), but I only need two of the three to work for my configuration. Micro Center has the MSI board for $75 with a $10 rebate and has an AMD A6-6400K CPU on sale for $70 with an additional $40 discount if purchased together, for a grand total of only $95 plus tax. The ASRock board that was recommended has two PCI-e x16 slots and eight SATA ports, so it would work with my setup, but it lacks the additional PCI-e x1 slot to use my Intel NIC, forcing me to use the onboard Realtek LAN, so I'd be no better off than I currently am. It would also cost me $125 with shipping from Newegg, so the MSI is by far the better deal for me. We just had a Micro Center open up about 30 miles from me north of Baltimore about a year ago so I'm thinking about heading there tomorrow if they have the items in stock. If I get them I'll post my results and let everyone know if it works with unRAID. Crap. I just checked and both the Baltimore and Rockville stores are out of stock. Oh, well.
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