Thought I would take a minute to share a good solution to the +10-machine render farm limit imposed by XP/2000. Other than the price of Windows Server and CALS required, it is conceptually wack to install a huge, bloated OS to basically function as a simple file server for distributing texture maps and writing animation frames.
As a faster alternative to the painfully slow Buffalo style NAS devices, Linux is a great option but if you are anything like me, the learning curve is a little steep given most of us want to spend our time creatively, not as a system admin. We tested several distros but found a super simple Linux OS called NASLite2 (http://www.serverelements.com) which literally takes about 10 minutes to install and setup, only uses about 5 megs of space, almost no RAM and will run on just about any old piece of hardware you have. And it cost $30
We installed it on an old dual AthlonMP 1800 with a gig of ram, added a $300 6-port hardware Sata RAID card, a bunch of 400GB Sata drives in a RAID10 configuration and basically have 1.2 terrabyte FAST file server for what one of those Buffalo drive NAS things cost and it literally blows it out of the water in performance. Bechmarking it puts sequential reads at about 120MB/sec and sequential writes at about 80MB/sec. Fast enough to also serve project files, models, etc. to our small group of artists.
It is an excellent option I would recomend to anyone struggling with the BS 10-connection limit on their XP systems who don't need the expense or hastle of a full-blown server. Cheers.
As a faster alternative to the painfully slow Buffalo style NAS devices, Linux is a great option but if you are anything like me, the learning curve is a little steep given most of us want to spend our time creatively, not as a system admin. We tested several distros but found a super simple Linux OS called NASLite2 (http://www.serverelements.com) which literally takes about 10 minutes to install and setup, only uses about 5 megs of space, almost no RAM and will run on just about any old piece of hardware you have. And it cost $30
We installed it on an old dual AthlonMP 1800 with a gig of ram, added a $300 6-port hardware Sata RAID card, a bunch of 400GB Sata drives in a RAID10 configuration and basically have 1.2 terrabyte FAST file server for what one of those Buffalo drive NAS things cost and it literally blows it out of the water in performance. Bechmarking it puts sequential reads at about 120MB/sec and sequential writes at about 80MB/sec. Fast enough to also serve project files, models, etc. to our small group of artists.
It is an excellent option I would recomend to anyone struggling with the BS 10-connection limit on their XP systems who don't need the expense or hastle of a full-blown server. Cheers.
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