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On the basis of what piece of iron to build a home server?
For quite a long time, the question of replacing the current solution based on Asus RT-N16 with Tomato firmware with something “normal” has been brewing for many reasons, but the most basic one is defective Linux.
The last straw was the inability to use the G729 and iLBC codecs for Asterisk, because for their implementation, an FPU is needed and no one has assembled them under MIPSEL, which does not have an FPU.
What my server does:
- home network router (distribution of the Internet to everyone and everything)
- http, ftp and samba server
- IP-PBX
- in the future, a media server (the ability to play 1080p via HDMI, but not critical)
What should be required:
- ease of setup networks via the GUI (for this parameter, Tomato suits me completely and completely)
- no exotic - the main software should be assembled for this platform without dancing with a tambourine
What
would you like:
- a quiet small solution on
ARM ATX let it be)
Actually, I look at RP, but how is it with my requirements?
What irons do you recommend?
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I have such a home server. The kit is of high quality, network gigabit, distributes the Internet via Wi-Fi, put the second HDD inside, does not make noise, does not heat up, takes up little space, not ARM, so any operating system to choose from, even native, as the media server works confidently including FullHD, has bluetooth and irda for screwing the remote. Minus - the issue price is about $ 500 with delivery. RP - played for a week and sold, very thoughtful, although the video is confident, but everything else is darkness.
Personally, in my xbmc media center, all the noise from hard drives is the most. As an option, you can look at the side of the Raspberry-Pi. But if I wanted to without a tambourine, I would take something on miniITX, like this hotline.ua/computer-materinskie-platy/asus-c60m1-i
ps: ARM and without a tambourine, it’s hard to believe in it))
I looked at such a case myself, but the toad is choking.) I built it on ru.asus.com/Motherboards/AMD_CPU_on_Board/E35M1M/
I have a MiniITX built on a dual-core Celeron G. The case, however, is not as pleasant as the zapimir, especially in terms of installing hard drives, but this case can accommodate 3 three-inch hard drives and one full-format CD / DVD drive. I have two dvuhterabaytnik there, programmatically combined into a RAID-1.
As for software and functionality, however, there are some disagreements - I use AltLinux 6 for samba-file-cleaning, debugging Apache / PHP / MySQL and a media server. I don’t consider the Guy network setup to be fundamental, because it is done once. Asterisk and ftp did not try to collect / install / configure on this server; FTP is definitely in the box. For routing, you can install a network card in addition to the built-in one and configure iptables. MiniDLNA was assembled after installing a dozen devel packages from the regular repository - it took about an hour to fuss. The rest of the functionality is all out of the box. Of course, in nature, for such a platform, the choice is much wider than on a router - just look and choose.
What I would like:
- a quiet small solution on ARM
I would build based on Celeron G5x0 + MiniITX motherboard (I personally like ASRock products lately), there are very nice MiniITX server cases with removable baskets for screws like hard.rozetka.com.ua/chenbro_es34169/p158901/
But here already it depends on the budget, plus the desired number of screws, there are different media centers :)
SuperMicro has very good atomic boards for example: www.supermicro.nl/products/motherboard/ATOM/
And from the cases it's not bad like this: LIAN LI PC-Q25B Black Aluminum Mini-ITX
In addition to RP, you can also take a budget netbook, on Atom or even on ARM NVidia Tegra. For the money it will turn out inexpensively, silent and energy efficient.
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