http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS9634061300.html
This could be pretty neat for SABnzbd.
$100 Dollar "Wall-wart" computer.
$100 Dollar "Wall-wart" computer.
Adaemox
SABnzbd+, Episode Butler, VDPAU, and Sick Beard Tutorials @ http://www.ainer.org
Ubuntu and Firefox Information at http://www.ainer.org
SABnzbd+, Episode Butler, VDPAU, and Sick Beard Tutorials @ http://www.ainer.org
Ubuntu and Firefox Information at http://www.ainer.org
Re: $100 Dollar "Wall-wart" computer.
ok, so the specs are:
*1.2 GHz single CPU (256Kb L2 cache)
*512MB DDR2 SDRAM
*512MB NAND Flash HD
*GigE
*USB2
Anyone got sabnzbd running on anything similar? What would be the bottleneck? Could it even handle the par2 repairs?
Thanks
*1.2 GHz single CPU (256Kb L2 cache)
*512MB DDR2 SDRAM
*512MB NAND Flash HD
*GigE
*USB2
Anyone got sabnzbd running on anything similar? What would be the bottleneck? Could it even handle the par2 repairs?
Thanks
Re: $100 Dollar "Wall-wart" computer.
Think the bottleneck would be the processor.. The processor is a Marvell sheeva processor. This processor is specially made for dvd players, mobile phones, TV's, Navigation products etc. etc. The 1.2 ghz can't be compared with a Intel Core with 1.2Ghz.Camelot wrote: Anyone got sabnzbd running on anything similar? What would be the bottleneck? Could it even handle the par2 repairs?
Re: $100 Dollar "Wall-wart" computer.
I am running a sheeva plug with debian squeeze and am quite please-d (hah!)
It has a lot of jobs currently, but most only require power for a certain short timeframe or have a low footprint, downloading with 600kbyte/s over an ipv6 sixxs tunnel with sabnzbd is between 40% and 60% system load
The tunnel might be to blame a bit here as well, when I moved the tunnel endpoint to my small plastic router it crumbled under the load, so your milage may vary with normal IPv4
Also it currently runs of a class 10 sdhc card, the downloads go to a rather slow 8gb usb stick and later I currently download them manually, a cronjob to push it somewhere bigger will be used later though.
A par2 check run is 65% load, but I guess my usb stick is limiting here as well, repair makes load go up to 90%+
An example repair:
took roughly 4 minutes, 700mb to be repaired
This processor is not made for TV or mobile phones, it's been crafted for NAS applications, there are already normal NAS systems with the kirkwood platform out there.
I didn't have a headless server running before as my old systems all drew too much power, the 7W this thing eats max. I can take, the power is just about right for tasks like sabnzbd
It has a lot of jobs currently, but most only require power for a certain short timeframe or have a low footprint, downloading with 600kbyte/s over an ipv6 sixxs tunnel with sabnzbd is between 40% and 60% system load
The tunnel might be to blame a bit here as well, when I moved the tunnel endpoint to my small plastic router it crumbled under the load, so your milage may vary with normal IPv4
Also it currently runs of a class 10 sdhc card, the downloads go to a rather slow 8gb usb stick and later I currently download them manually, a cronjob to push it somewhere bigger will be used later though.
A par2 check run is 65% load, but I guess my usb stick is limiting here as well, repair makes load go up to 90%+
An example repair:
Code: Select all
Repair is required.
2 file(s) are missing.
47 file(s) are ok.
You have 493 out of 515 data blocks available.
You have 52 recovery blocks available.
Repair is possible.
You have an excess of 30 recovery blocks.
22 recovery blocks will be used to repair.
This processor is not made for TV or mobile phones, it's been crafted for NAS applications, there are already normal NAS systems with the kirkwood platform out there.
I didn't have a headless server running before as my old systems all drew too much power, the 7W this thing eats max. I can take, the power is just about right for tasks like sabnzbd
Re: $100 Dollar "Wall-wart" computer.
This should work, even the Popcorn Hour's measly processor can do Par2 checking/reparing. I run Sab on a 6 year old 1.3ghz Centrino laptop, only consumes 10-15w of energy and runs perfect!
Re: $100 Dollar "Wall-wart" computer.
this would work well in my opinion, but what about unraring and par-ing.... that would be a real bottleneck