My buddy and I have a little gaming club basically and we host LAN parties about every 3 months or so. I have a Ubuntu box setup to host all the ISO's, patches, MODS, and what ever else is needed.
My current Ubuntu rig is:
Asus A8N32-SLI MB
AMD Athlon64 FX San Diego 4000+ 2.4ghz
2 gigs of ram
WD 320GB Black Drive As primary basically is the OS drive
2 -WD 500gb Black drives using the onboard Raid in stripping mode. It is software raid or fakeraid from what I understand about onboard raids.
I just upgraded my gaming rig so I now have the parts from my old rig at my disposal.
Old gaming rig parts are:
Asus M2-Crossfire AM2 MB
AMD Athlon 64 X2 AM2 2.6ghz
2 gig ram
I also have 2 80gig 10,000rpm raptor drives laying around and need a home.
Here are some of the options I am considering. Also the network we have setup is a gig network and the primary roll of the ubuntu box is to serve files.
My first thought is to migrate the Ubuntu box to my old gaming rig and buy an actual raid card. Using 1 of the 80 gig raptors for the OS Drive and buying another 500GB drive and setting up a raid 5 setup and using this as a backup solution at home as well.
My next thought was setting the old gaming rig back up for gaming with the 320GB drive and having it setup for an extra computer for other people to use in case someone wants to bring a friend that doesn't have a good enough pc to run some of the newer games. Than resetup the current Ubuntu box with the new drive configuration I just mentioned.
With that being said my buddy and myself have a sick facsination with trying get our gig network to serve up data as fast is possible.
Would upgrading the Ubuntu box to the faster rig give us any benefits in speed or performance network wise? I am thinking no, as HD speed seems to be the cap holding us back right now and since it will be the same HD's being used no matter what box is used. Unless there is something I am overlooking. Also would I see any benefits in speed or performance if I bought a hardware raid and strippped both my 80 gig raptors for the OS drive? If I am overlooking any other ideas through them out here cause I am kinda learning as I go here anyways.
My current Ubuntu rig is:
Asus A8N32-SLI MB
AMD Athlon64 FX San Diego 4000+ 2.4ghz
2 gigs of ram
WD 320GB Black Drive As primary basically is the OS drive
2 -WD 500gb Black drives using the onboard Raid in stripping mode. It is software raid or fakeraid from what I understand about onboard raids.
I just upgraded my gaming rig so I now have the parts from my old rig at my disposal.
Old gaming rig parts are:
Asus M2-Crossfire AM2 MB
AMD Athlon 64 X2 AM2 2.6ghz
2 gig ram
I also have 2 80gig 10,000rpm raptor drives laying around and need a home.
Here are some of the options I am considering. Also the network we have setup is a gig network and the primary roll of the ubuntu box is to serve files.
My first thought is to migrate the Ubuntu box to my old gaming rig and buy an actual raid card. Using 1 of the 80 gig raptors for the OS Drive and buying another 500GB drive and setting up a raid 5 setup and using this as a backup solution at home as well.
My next thought was setting the old gaming rig back up for gaming with the 320GB drive and having it setup for an extra computer for other people to use in case someone wants to bring a friend that doesn't have a good enough pc to run some of the newer games. Than resetup the current Ubuntu box with the new drive configuration I just mentioned.
With that being said my buddy and myself have a sick facsination with trying get our gig network to serve up data as fast is possible.
Would upgrading the Ubuntu box to the faster rig give us any benefits in speed or performance network wise? I am thinking no, as HD speed seems to be the cap holding us back right now and since it will be the same HD's being used no matter what box is used. Unless there is something I am overlooking. Also would I see any benefits in speed or performance if I bought a hardware raid and strippped both my 80 gig raptors for the OS drive? If I am overlooking any other ideas through them out here cause I am kinda learning as I go here anyways.