Show Us Your Servers - 2016 Edition


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Welcome to the Servers 2016 thread!
 
If you want to show your fellow Neowinians what your server looks like, this is the place to do it.
 
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Last year's Servers thread is here.

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  • zhangm pinned this topic
  • 3 months later...

Has no-one shared theirs this year? I'll start, I recently built a new NAS, but I need a UPS, any recommendations that I can get in Australia?

 

img_0861.jpg

More pics and specs, and build vlog: http://smithydll.id.au/blog/2016/03/25

 

The video card is for GPU pass through to Windows 10 which I am using as a virtual HTPC. It's amazing what you can fit into a miniITX form factor now.

  • 2 weeks later...

My FreeNAS box.  

 

AMD Sempron 140, ASRock 880GM, 8GB RAM, Syba 4 port SATA card, Transcend 8GB USB drive (for booting), ICY Dock 4 bay...this thing is 5 years old now.  Jesus...I'm getting old. :(

 

I have two big volumes.  The main volume has 4 3TB Reds in the ICY Dock totalling 10.7TB.  I have a small volume with a mixture of 5 hard drives (various sizes) located in the bottom HD caddies ... they total somewhere around 8TB I think (yea...I'm gonna have to put a bigger drive in the mix eventually).  My desktop/HTPC/notebook computers only see "see" the big volume.  My bedroom HTPC's Kodi streams media from this box.

 

Every Friday night at 9...a cron job runs rsync to mirror data from the Reds to the mixture of hard drives in the bottom cages.  So if one of the Reds fail...I still have the data on the mix drives.  If one of the mix drives fail ... the data on the Reds will not be affected.  I then of course have all the data on the desktop, HTPC, notebook ... so if the whole FreeNAS failed ... I wouldn't lose anything.  Now, if house burned down...that would be a whole different story though important items are stored in the cloud.  I would lose all my movies, TV shows and the music not on my iPods though. :(  Of course...if the house burned down I'd be worrying about more important stuff (like if my dogs got out)...haha.

 

This thing is heavy.

 

Rk0u04M.jpg

 

 

meDao8t.jpg

 

 

INN4Dd5.jpg

Lots of cables.

4 hours ago, smithy_dll said:

@jjkusaf How much power draw have you got? Is that a SATA HBA card? Do you run any jails on FreeNAS?

Worried about the PSU ... so am I. :)  I'm guessing I'm ~3 (probably more) amps over the PSU specs during bootup and the rsync cron job.  The bottom 5 hard drives spin down after 1 minute and stay spun down until Friday's rsync job or next boot sequence...so majority of the time the PSU isn't being stressed.  It has been fine in this particular configuration for about a year and a half (when I added the 4 Reds and Icy Dock).  No burning smell yet.  I have contemplated putting in my old PC Power & Cooling 750W (which came out of my desktop) which gives me about 25 amps more on the rail ... but yea it is 10 years old.  Which would go first ... the overstressed or grandpa PSU...haha.    

 

No HBA card.  It is just a cheap 4 port SATA card for the Reds.  No jails either.

  • 7 months later...
  • 4CxbqFxVnstmA unpinned this topic
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Time-reversal symmetry means that the same physical laws can describe a system whether time moves forward or backward. This has made it difficult to explain why irreversible behaviour appears in the large-scale world even when the underlying rules do not require it. Dr Andrea Rocco, Associate Professor in Physics and Mathematical Biology at the University of Surrey, described this contrast: "One way to explain this is when you look at a process like spilt milk spreading across a table, it's clear that time is moving forward. But if you were to play that in reverse, like a movie, you'd immediately know something was wrong – it would be hard to believe milk could just gather back into a glass. However, there are processes, such as the motion of a pendulum, that look just as believable in reverse. The puzzle is that, at the most fundamental level, the laws of physics resemble the pendulum; they do not account for irreversible processes. Our findings suggest that while our common experience tells us that time only moves one way, we are just unaware that the opposite direction would have been equally possible." The study focused on open quantum systems, which are quantum systems that interact with a surrounding environment. This environment, often described as a heat bath, can exchange energy and information with the system. The researchers used this framework to study how a direction of time might appear even when the underlying physics does not enforce one. A key part of the analysis involved the Markov approximation. This is a simplification used in many models where the system is assumed not to retain memory of its past states. The idea is that changes depend only on the current state, not on earlier history. This is commonly used when studying thermalisation, which is the process where a system settles into equilibrium with its environment. 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The study further showed that standard frameworks used in open quantum systems, including quantum Brownian motion and master equations like the Lindblad and Pauli forms, could be written in a time-symmetric way. These equations are typically used to describe processes that look irreversible, such as dissipation and thermalisation, but the results suggested they can also be interpreted as allowing evolution in both time directions. Thomas Guff, Research Fellow in Quantum Thermodynamics, said: "The surprising part of this project was that even after making the standard simplifying assumption to our equations describing open quantum systems, the equations still behaved the same way whether the system was moving forwards or backwards in time. When we carefully worked through the maths, we found that this behaviour had to be the case because a key part of the equation, the "memory kernel," is symmetrical in time. 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