I have a question about just how much you can do under myth with just one HD. If you have a 7200RPM ata133 HD assuming DMA is working right, it seems that you can really do a lot. For example I read a review that says if you have enough processing power you can record and software encode, watch a previously recorded show (decode) and transcode another separate recording all at the same time. It's perfectly feasible that a mid range processor could handle all this load, but how much could a typical hard drive really take? To record and watch at the same time, you need to be simultaneously reading and writing two separate streams. To transcode something on the same hard drive you need to be able to read and write another separate stream. So, in summary you have three steams, one both read and write going on, one reading, and another writing, all simultaneously. Question is, what is the limit of a typical HD? After what amount of load are the tasks going to start becoming difficult and the machine begin to have problems with playback? It ocurs to me that this is totally different than having any number of front ends reading the same recording from a backend, because the backend only needs to do one read to stream the data to all frontends. But what if you keep increasing the number of frontends connected to a backend, each asking to watch a different recording, so that now multiple streams are open? Which becomes the bottleneck first, the processor or HD (ignoring network bandwidth being a problem)? One thing that would be useful is if myth could use separate hard drives for separate tuners if multiple streams became a problem.
Raphael
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