That's no good.  How did a power outage corrupt the data?  Didn't the NAS
shut down?

I don't have backups of a lot of my data like TV shows and Photos - the RAID
IS my backup.  I know that's poor network design, but unless I can afford
twice the NAS I need it's all I've got.

-----
Brian Weeden
Technical Consultant
Secure World Foundation


On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 4:57 PM, Robert Martin Jr. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

> Also, something to consider is that the readynas, although touted as a
> redundant data device is not without occasional catastrophic problems. I had
> a power outage that outlasted the UPS and data got corrupted beyond repair
> although none of the hard drives were flawed. My second 500GB drive had no
> partition data after the power outage and I was unable to recover it using
> various utilities on XPPE, Hirens Boot CD, etc. Luckily I had hard backups
> of about 80% of the movies and shows. I was 2 weeks from the end of my
> warranty and they upgraded me to the NV+ since the NV is no longer
> manufactured. It was assumed that the firmware was corrupted but when I
> received the NV+ and installed the drives, the same problem recurred and was
> not an issue with the nas, but a data loss on my drives. Neatgear will do
> data recovery in cases like this but is fee based and probably not cheap.
>
> lopaka
>
> Brian Weeden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Right now I'm using the
> TwonkyMediaServer to serve content from my HTPC to
> my D-link DSM-520 and it works beautifully, as long as the whole browser
> election thing isn't disrupting the entire network.  Would I be able to
> install that on the ReadyNAS?  Or would I need an actual full windows
> install?  The 520 is listed as supported on the Infrant Wiki but I found
> the
> D-link media server software to be horrible and the Twonky one much
> better.
>
> The ReadyNAS NV+ with no drives is about $900 on Newegg as a "sale" price.
> They are $1,050 on Netgear's site.  Figure you need another $1200 for 4 1
> TB
> drives.  Pretty pricey for just a plain box, could build a full windows
> home
> server for that much.
>
> I have been using IP addresses to map all my shares for a while now as
> well
> and it works fine, except for random network-wide drop outs which I am
> pretty sure are related to browser elections.
>
> -----
> Brian Weeden
> Technical Consultant
> Secure World Foundation
>
>
> On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 4:15 PM, Robert Martin Jr.
> wrote:
>
> > Thankfully I bought my ReadyNAS NV while Infrant was still in charge.
> Now
> > that Netgear owns them they raised prices on everything without actually
> > improving any of the technology. I paid $550 2 years ago and got
> upgraded to
> > an NV+ about a month ago when my NV started having problems. They cost
> twice
> > as much now ???
> >
> > It generally works very well as long as you're using supported hard
> > drives. I serve media to 2 Xbox media centers, 2 computers and one
> network
> > DVD player (Avel Linkplayer2)
> >
> > I have run in to similar issues with the name resolution, so I only use
> IP
> > addresses when mapping drives and shares. I have no MAC experience so I
> > can't be much help there.
> >
> > I also have a DLink DSM-G600 but although it works well as a standard
> NAS,
> > the media server is not recognized by my network DVD player. The XBMCs
> can
> > use it fine by just mapping the shares. I believe the DSM-G600 only
> supports
> > a 500GB drive though, although some users have higher capacity drives
> > running fine.
> >
> > lopaka
> >
> > Brian Weeden
>  wrote: I've posted here before about
> > this problem and really haven't solved
> > anything yet.  For those that haven't heard my ranting before, the issue
> > with the Windows on a peer-to-peer network and browsing.  If you have a
> > server that is actually managing a domain, that server will maintain a
> > list
> > of which computer name is associated with which IP address on the
> network.
> > So if I tell my machine to connect to "media" the domain server says "oh
> > that's actually 192.169.0.4" or whatever.  If there isn't a domain
> > controller (ie the network is just peers) one machine will maintain the
> > browser list of all the mappings.  If something happens, the computer
> will
> > force an election and the new machine will be the browser.
> >
> > Sounds great in theory but my experience it has been absolutely
> horrible.
> > Over the last few years I have had off and on problems, ranging from
> > simple
> > annoyances like not being able to see any machines listed under "My
> > Network
> > Places" to massive network slowdowns and inability to transfer even 20MB
> > files due to browser elections dropping connections.  I have tried many
> > solutions with the current being to change the registry in all my
> machines
> > save one to never maintain the browser list and disabling the browser
> > service as well.  The one machine which is my media server has that same
> > registry key set to "always" and has the service running.
> >
> > But recently I've found another issue - my wife's MacBook has started to
> > participate in this whole mess.  A couple of days ago I was going
>  through
> > the event viewer trying to figure out why the network had gone to hell
> and
> > saw an entry saying that the MacBook had denied access to an IP and
> forced
> > an election.  Getting the MacBook to stop doing that is beyond my
> limited
> > OSX knowledge.
> >
> > So, now I'm looking for solutions.  I need to rebuild my HTPC / media
> > server
> > and wanted to see if I could find a solution in that.  I really want to
> > (try) and cut down on the power used so I was thinking of replacing the
> > whole thing with a NAS box and a small set top like an Apple TV or
> D-Link
> > box.  I was doing some research and noticed that all these NAS solutions
> > support different filesharing protocols, like CIFS, SMB, AFP, NFS, etc.
> > What's the different between these and the normal protocols that are
> used
> > when you share a drive within Windows?  Do they result in more efficient
> > use
> > of the network bandwidth?
> >
> > Why are the ReadyNAS boxes so darn expensive (almost $1000 on Newegg for
> > diskless NV+)?  What are other good options?  I need something that will
> > support at least 3 TB of storage (ie 4x 1TB SATA drives) in RAID 5 and
> > preferably something can I can daisy chain another to to hit my goal of
> 6
> > TB
> > (ie 4x8 1TB SATA in RAID 5).
> >
> > Aside from setting up a domain controller, can anyone think of other
> ways
> > to
> > help with my problem of the master browser issue and overall poor
> network
> > performance?  Would running a Windows Home Server box help at all?  Or
> > would
> > a *nix server be better?  I have some experience with *nix (specifically
> > Ubuntu)?
> >
> > -----
> > Brian Weeden
> > Technical Consultant
> > Secure World Foundation
> >
> >
>
>

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