Results 1 to 11 of 11

Thread: a simple server

  1. #1
    Rear Admiral Upper Half Maarchk's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2000
    Location
    Where the east meets the west.
    Posts
    3,067

    a simple server

    Hello,

    I want to toss together a little server to hold my music, movies, and other things that i would probably be accessing or ftping in and out of while i'm on the road. Thus it will probably be on 24/7 and i dont want to create an amazingly high power bill. Is there any suggestions on whats very efficient?

    I have some 200 gb harddrives, but i was wondering, should i jsut get a slow cpu and toss in a lot of ram so it can do its thing?

    Thanks for your help,

    mark
    "The girl is crafty like ice is cold."

    "I left my heart in san francisco... And my liver at Moe's Tavern."

    A real friend is one who listens to you as much as they talk to you.

  2. #2
    Fleet Admiral hapoo's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2000
    Location
    742 Evergreen Terrace, Springfield USA
    Posts
    9,276
    if you just want it for simple file serving / ftp then you can run it off any piece of ish hardware you have laying around. Your biggest bottleneck is going to be which OS you choose to run. You can put a really small flavor of linux on there and it'll fly, or you can put a heavy OS that'll take more resources but offers more features.

  3. #3
    Fleet Admiral Jeffbx's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2000
    Location
    Michigan
    Posts
    9,405
    You don't even need a ton of RAM for a file server - 256 or 512 would be fine.

    I'd recommend picking up one of these & popping your 200GB drives into it:

    http://configure.us.dell.com/dellsto...2d31cel3&s=bsd

  4. #4
    Rear Admiral Upper Half Hiro's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2001
    Posts
    3,654
    Quote Originally Posted by Jeffbx
    You don't even need a ton of RAM for a file server - 256 or 512 would be fine.

    I'd recommend picking up one of these & popping your 200GB drives into it:
    http://configure.us.dell.com/dellsto...2d31cel3&s=bsd
    Jeffbx's suggestion would do you just fine. I'd probably use this time to learn Linux as that would be the best OS choice for this project. You could use Windows XP Pro if you didn't want to go the Linux route, but you will need more memory.

  5. #5
    aka the keg killer mechmike0034's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    Ala-effin'-bama!
    Posts
    2,738
    Langa Letter: A Complete Terabyte File Server For About $500:

    http://www.informationweek.com/showA...leID=183702383

    Interesting stuff...
    "The price of progress is trouble." (C. F. "Boss" Kettering)
    "50% of the American public has below-average intelligence. 70% of the American public now has regular access to the Internet. Do the math." (unknown)

  6. #6
    President, Cowboys Nation MikeD's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    In the 'burbs, west of D.C.
    Posts
    5,139
    Quote Originally Posted by Corsec
    Jeffbx's suggestion would do you just fine. I'd probably use this time to learn Linux as that would be the best OS choice for this project.


    Grabbed a few Dell OptiPlex's from an old employer of mine and just started building, tearing down, building, tearing down. Over time you'll get the hang of things.

    Don't always rely on the GUI route either. Get into the command line stuff as well.

  7. #7
    Commander zero2dash's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2000
    Location
    Fenton, MO - but I wish I was at the beach. ANY beach.
    Posts
    1,367
    Quote Originally Posted by mechmike0034
    Langa Letter: A Complete Terabyte File Server For About $500:

    http://www.informationweek.com/showA...leID=183702383

    Interesting stuff...
    ...and MechMike comes through with another awesome link.
    That's crazy...I can't believe I just saw a screenshot of an XP computer/Drive Management with 24 hard drives (the 4 physical drives split into 6 partitions each)...just...nuts. I mean I know it's easily doable but - I never thought I'd see a computer listing 24 hard drives.

    /then again I don't have much experience working with servers

  8. #8
    aka the keg killer mechmike0034's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    Ala-effin'-bama!
    Posts
    2,738
    Cheap servers: http://www.retrobox.com/rbwww/home/s...p?bin_id=world

    Just throwing things out...
    "The price of progress is trouble." (C. F. "Boss" Kettering)
    "50% of the American public has below-average intelligence. 70% of the American public now has regular access to the Internet. Do the math." (unknown)

  9. #9
    Admiral Airencracken's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    California
    Posts
    6,684
    mmm terminal...

    "I remember my first orgasm, I just wish someone was there to share it with me..."11-05-2003 05:33 AM - Topane
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. - Benjamin Franklin
    Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, & the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opiate of the masses. - Karl Marx
    Hell is other people - Jean-Paul Sartre


  10. #10
    Rear Admiral Upper Half Maarchk's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2000
    Location
    Where the east meets the west.
    Posts
    3,067
    Thanks all. I'll do some research with those links and hopefully come up with something good. 24 hard drives.. thats just sick. Its like a different hard drive of pr0n for every day in a month

    But no, thats not what my server is for... hehe.
    "The girl is crafty like ice is cold."

    "I left my heart in san francisco... And my liver at Moe's Tavern."

    A real friend is one who listens to you as much as they talk to you.

  11. #11
    wow. if you're looking for a cheap system with LOW power comsumption, VIA makes a lot of little boxes that run around 1ghz for $400 or so, complete. you can get a cheapo dell for less than that, but these via's are tiny and powerful. my boss picked one up from newegg.com. They've got lots of barebones kits for dirt cheap too.

    A good NAS software (with limited security, mind you) is freenas : http://sourceforge.net/projects/freenas/
    "NAS (Network Attached Storage) server supporting: CIFS (samba), FTP, NFS, RSYNC, SSH, AFP protocols, local and MS Domain authentication, Software RAID (0,1,5) with a Full WEB configuration interface. Fit on a 32MB Compact Flash or USB key."
    Find some free Comcast or Verizon on-demand movies to watch at home tonight:
    www.movie-cat.tv

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •