On Sat, Aug 4, 2012 at 9:08 AM, Rob van der Hoeven <robvanderhoe...@ziggo.nl> wrote: > On Sat, 2012-08-04 at 13:18 +0200, Spitz, Richard wrote: >> > I love my orion based QNAP TS-109, and currently would upgrade to >> > QNAP >> > TS-119 if I would have the need, but QNAP isn't cheap. So maybe the >> > Plug variants mentioned on the page instead. >> >> I've been following this discussion with great interest, since I am in >> a similar >> situation. >> >> What is the real advantage of running Debian on a NAS? I'm presently >> using a >> NSLU2 under Debian for collecting and graphing energy data in my home. >> Now I >> need a NAS, whose primary purpose is central data storage and backup, >> while >> using a minimal amount of energy. I am concerned that running Debian on >> the >> NAS and make it take over the NSLU2's tasks might counteract the energy >> saving features of the NAS, such as disk spindown. >> >> Any ideas or experience on this? >> > > I'm currently using Debian Squeeze on a QNAP TS-119 (The old fan-less > model) for over a year now. My experiences are very good. The system is > officially supported by Debian. Installing went very smooth, and most > remarkably: I never had any serious problem even though i have a very > weird configuration (I'm running several Wordpress blogs inside Linux > Containers (LXC)). For me, converting my QNAP TS-119 from a dedicated > NAS device into a general purpose computer was definitively worth the > trouble. > > Here's a link to my hardware: > > http://freedomboxblog.nl/about/hardware/ > > Just like you, i too am interested in energy consumption. My setup uses
You are not alone. A while ago I read about this guy who had a webserver for customers and went from a Sparc box to a laptop and then to a Seagate Dockstar with external drive. And now it is being powered by solar arrays, which also charge the batteries for when sun is not out. I do not think I will has a setup that will use no grid power, but I am trying to be as efficient as I can. > about 11 Watt when idle. This could be reduced to 9 Watt if a more > energy efficient hard-disk is used. My current hard-disk uses 4.5 Watt I think my Dockstar + external drive -- my backup rig -- use up to 10W. I would like to get a fileserver that is as close to that as possible. > when idle. A few months ago i built a 23 Watt Intel desktop system for > which i used a wd5000azdx hard-disk that only consumes 2.1 Watt when > idle. I think that spinning down the hard-disk in a full Debian system > is challenging (impossible for my system that hosts several websites). > Advice: buy a hard-disk with low (idle) power consumption. > > Best regards, > Rob. > http://freedomboxblog.nl > > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-arm-requ...@lists.debian.org > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org > Archive: http://lists.debian.org/1344085684.3161.62.ca...@pentium.freedom.box > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-arm-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/CAHEKYV7=gzu6oz_ru5j-5+4areyq_jq9sqtqslueip7vr5k...@mail.gmail.com