Some Assembly Required

Once in hand, I had to decide on other parts.

The processor was a conundrum. Given that I was building a Windows Home Server, which has all manner of intriguing add-ins, I wanted some degree of CPU power. On the other hand, dropping $200 or more for a socket 775 Xeon seemed like overkill. So in the end, I picked up a Pentium Dual Core E5200, built on the 45nm Wolfdale die and running at 2.5GHz, for about $64.

Memory was no problem – I had a healthy supply of DDR 800 modules in house, so tossed a pair of 1GB Kingston Value RAM modules into the mix. Storage was a bit more problematic – I’d gotten used to having 2TB on hand. I also wanted to stay within  a modest power and thermal envelope. I also happened to have in the lab a pair of WD2002FYPS – the enterprise versions of Western Digitals GreenPower 2TB drives. So in went two of those.

Assembling all the parts into the Chenbro case proved quite straightforward. It’s divided into top and bottom sections, with the motherboard tray in the upper half, and the drive bays and PSU in the bottom half.

The drives screw into trays, which then slide easily into the drive bays.

Next Up: Software

Installing Windows Home Server requires either a CD drive or bootable USB key. I have a Samsung USB optical drive, so used that to install WHS. If you’ve ever installed Windows XP, the installation process for WHS is pretty straightforward.

All the systems in the basement lab are now running Windows 7 x64-bit versions – most running Home Premium, although I’m running Windows 7 Pro x64 on my production box and Windows 7 Ultimate x64 on the graphics test system.

The Windows Home Server connector software runs fine on Windows 7 (even 64-bit), provided you’ve got at least WHS Power Pack 1 installed. Power Pack 1 also solves the pesky data corruption issue that plagued the release version of WHS.

Later this year, Microsoft will ship Power Pack 3, which will enable better integration with Windows 7, including integration with Windows 7 libraries, better power management settings (such as wake up during backups, or LAN access) and better reliability.

I’ve been running the beta of Power Pack 3 over the past few days, and it’s been working without any issues, but most users should just wait for the final version to ship before installing it.

The X Factor Postmortem: Nothing’s Perfect
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  • webdawg77 - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    "so tossed a pair of 1GB Kingston Value RAM modules into the mix" for 2 GB total (table lists 2 GB of RAM twice). Unless, you indeed meant 2 x 2GB sticks (but different from the quote on the third page).
  • Jaguar36 - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    I'd love to see some power measurements on this setup. I'm looking for something similar so I don't have to leave my power sucking desktop on all the time.
  • piasabird - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    I like the idea of a networked applicance to store files you dont want to lose but many people may not have the funds for this kind of system. Seems like all a lot of people need is an extra PC like a cheap Dell Zion or $495 Dell Intel PC with a Celeron processor and a Drive or two (Depending how many files you actually use). I would find something on that order useful whether it is documents you need to store like Geneological (Family History) documents or Family photos. I cant imagine only having One computer and storing all my photos one one hard drive that could die any minute.

    I was just thinking of an alternative to this NAS concept. It would be an interesting idea to have a kind of family storage system that could store essential documents on multiple computers instead of having one central location to be used as a server. Then every time a computer would sign on to the network or once a day, each computer could sync up and copy the files back and forth. That way if you had say 2 computers they could share the shared files folders on both computers.
  • hnzw rui - Thursday, December 10, 2009 - link

    You mean something like Dropbox?
  • Devzero - Friday, December 4, 2009 - link

    There is actually a lot of software on the marked that accomplishes this task. In my opinion they are dived into two categories.

    First of you have the sync tools that range from rsync command line like to allway sync GUI appz. These can keep your folders in sync between multiple machines more or less in real time. I've installed openVPN on my laptops so I even get syncing when I'm away from home.

    The second tier of tools are more backup like tools like crashplan that you can set upp on multiple machines, and do backup between them. The pro of these kind of appz is that they can keep a backup all changes to a file, so if you should suffer a brain fart and do ctrl + a, del, ctrl + s, alt + f4 in your 2000 pages word document, you can always go back to the previous version.

    The best combination of functionality and security in my opinion is to combine the two apps, use allway sync to sync your files between computers, then set up crashplan on one central, always on machine that does online backup.
  • HotFoot - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    If all you're really wanting is back-up on the cheap, but could care less about all the convenience features, then probably the most sensible (but not very sexy) solution is an external HDD that you plug into once every month or two and update. Less than $100 will buy you a great deal of backup space for anything precious or irreplaceable.

    I do like your concept of taking advantage of multiple computers on the home network to backup important files. That still comes down to added security against a drive failure, and isn't exploiting other potential benefits or features something more sophisticated could offer.

    For myself, home servers or even network storage are as yet a solution without a problem. I do a mix of keeping important family photos and documents on a backup external drive and having duplication over a couple computers on my network. But then, I only have one HTPC. I could see wanting a server-based media storage solution if there was more than one entertainment centre where I'd want access to everything. For now, splitting front-end and back-end hasn't yet made sense for me. Of my friends looking at sophisticated home network storage/media server solutions, it almost seems like they are more looking to tinker than actually needing something. It's like their main desktop/gaming rig is as good as it's going to get and they want something new to play with.
  • mjfink - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    I agree with your first statement, external USB HDD (mirrored, if you really need that) are a great way to do backup. I also send my backups across the Internet for an offsite copy.

    However, I disagree with your 2nd statement. I'd be very upset if my server was removed tomorrow, and there's nothing that would easily replace it. I love not having to leave my main PC on for torrents, and having the reliability of a server to send out all the files/data that I keep on the network.

    Most of all it's the networking flexiblity. Full private DNS, DFS for share virtualization (which I use all the time, I want to present a consolidated share with all my shows/movies/etc in it, rather than shares from 3 different computers), an AD domain (which makes life so much easier when accessing data between computers)... It's not that the server solves a problem that didn't exist; it's that most people either don't have these problems (don't have enough computers), or, more likely, don't know that a server would fix these problems for them.

    Now, my quad core processor in my desktop rig? That's a solution for a problem that didn't exist. I can't choke that thing doing anything remotely productive; the newest processors are so fast that there's simply no application (besides games) that actually can take advantage of them!
  • kalster - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    For someone on a budget an Atom based system works well too. I built my system using the D945gclf2 (atom 330) and it works well. I haven't used it for any sort of media transcoding but for basic storage and streaming (without transcoding) the atom is a fine chip.
  • Devzero - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    My experience with NAS boxes is that they are horrible performers, especial for simple transfers of big files (ie movies). I would love to know how a WHS server like this performs compared to a modern home NAS solution in terms of raw power.
  • blaster5k - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    WHS can transfer files pretty much as fast as the hard drives on the machines involved in the transfer can handle. I've moved some big files at close to 100 MB/second. With a RAID/SSD configuration, you might saturate a gigabit connection.

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