On Sun, Feb 13, 2011 at 11:10 PM, Les Mikesell <lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 2/13/11 1:58 PM, Rudi Ahlers wrote: >> >> Sure, I understand what you're saying, but the question is: If they >> can do it with a cheap device like this, then surely one should be >> able todo it with a normal / server motherboard? Obviously they won't >> tell us their secrets, so I need to dig around to see how todo it >> myself. This particular device has a eSATA slave + eSATA Master mode. >> i.e. I can connect another device to this one and they both work >> together, and then when I connect the first one to my PC, I have 2 >> HDD's - i.e. a cheap JBOD implementation. > > If you are going to pass eSATA straight through, why would you want the other > motherboard involved at all instead of just using an external eSata enclosure? I'm trying to build a dense eSATA enclosure with say 16 or 24 drives :) > >> I'm trying to see if I can setup a Linux JBOD on a server chassis >> with say 16 HDD's or something, and then connect it to another server >> via eSATA - i.e. building a cheap scalable SAN. > > It might make sense to RAID a bunch of disks locally, and export the combined > device as iscsi. The 1GBE LAN is a bit slow. SATA can push 6GBe, which is 6 times faster than 1GBe. And, 6 ports on a LAN switch is a waste. Our 10GBe switches are saturated (all ports filled) and very expensive. So I'm looking at cheaper options, and thought eSATA could do the trick quite well. > >> P.S. You actually do get USB cross-over cables: >> http://en.kioskea.net/faq/342-connecting-two-computers-with-a-usb-cable >> - they work quite well. They're not as fast a gigabit but works very >> well for older PC's without LAN. > > I thought those were really implemented as back-to-back ethernet converters. Yes, probably. But they work over USB so it's very handy. > > -- > Les Mikesell > lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > -- Kind Regards Rudi Ahlers SoftDux Website: http://www.SoftDux.com Technical Blog: http://Blog.SoftDux.com Office: 087 805 9573 Cell: 082 554 7532 _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos