On Sun, Jan 2, 2011 at 3:11 PM, John Robinson <john.robinson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Please could someone suggest a cheap PCI-E SATA card with 4 internal ports? > > I currently have 6 motherboard SATA ports and a 5-drive hot-swap chassis, I > am thinking of adding a second 5-drive hot-swap chassis to my case and would > need another 4 SATA ports to drive it. > > Other requirements: known to work with RHEL/CentOS 5 kernels, even if it > means installing a driver with DKMS or whatever. You can also get a SAS card, and an overpriced mini-SAS to SATA cable. The LSI SAS 1068e chip is quite common and well supported by Linux. You can buy LSI-branded cards, or from another OEM that uses the same chip. Intel makes such a card, and I just read that IBM does as well, the ServeRAID BR10i LSI SAS3082E-R. Covered in detail here: http://www.servethehome.com/ibm-serveraid-br10i-lsi-sas3082e-r-pciexpress-sas-raid-controller/ Such a card will actually give you a total of eight SATA ports, but you obviously don't have to use them all; you can get away with only buying one of the SAS to 4-SATA port fanout cables. I grabbed two of those IBM BR10i cards off of ebay for about $50. Unfortunately, I didn't pay close attention to the listing, and mine came without PCI brackets. But so far I've tested one, and it works just fine. > Doesn't have to be PCI-E x1 because I've a spare x8 (logical)/x16 (physical) > slot, but I don't know if anything cheap's going to be anything other than > PCI-E x1. v2.0 (5GT/s) would be nice though. If you're using a typical consumer-grade motherboard, watch out that the PCIe slot supports things other than video cards. For whatever reason, particularly on micro-ATX boards, the PCIe x8/x16 slots often won't work with anything other than video cards. Trying to use something else (e.g. a RAID card) will, at best, prohibit the machine from booting, or at worst, cause very subtle random problems. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-raid" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html