Sunday, January 3, 2010

Raid Storage Server Redesigning Network, Server And Storage For Animation Studio?

Redesigning network, server and storage for animation studio? - raid storage server

Hello,

I have a small animation studio of 11 people, we have 12 computers and some laptop computers that are connected by a network on the LAN.
The animations themselves are often very large, but our history and art can sometimes up to 500 MB, 1 GB in size, but is mostly in the range of 200 MB per file. You need to be transmitted over the LAN for storage.

For the storage we have established a 1.5 TB NAS RAID array. We also do weekly backups to a remote storage unit. I am not at all happy with the way you have everything set up, which only ten PCs to a LAN-based storage and backup link.

We are 20-25 people to play on our next project, starting in February 2010. I hope that my network and storage systems and the transition to a server configured for permits to start the safety and security.

I was wondering if anyone recommendations on the type of Ethernet cable, servers and storage and backup systems that we had to analyze.

Thank you --

2 comments:

bsharp03 said...

Well, it really depends on what kind of system you use. If you have Mac, then you need a Mac server.

But if you use Windows, the following would also be cheaper.

I want to buy on 2 servers in your local store, make sure to run these servers, Server 2003 or later.

On the first server, I configure Active Directory, permissions and user accounts. For the second server, you can use them as your file server.

You can also subscribe to online backup services to secure data. In the first two days, it could kill your bandwidth, so you can start this weekend, but after that should be good to go.

With respect to the cable should be fine with the purchase on eBay and change CAT5e or CAT6

Crash said...

What exactly are you satisfied?

How to meet your storage needs, this configuration seems to be quite useful.

With regard to the Ethernet cable, has little to fear - could both CAT5e and CAT6 Gigabit Ethernet, without solving all the problems, I would be more concerned about the switch. If you consume problems with slow file transfers, network transfers files or large amounts of user time, would the next step will be to a specific SAN (Storage Area Network).

Most NAS devices are supported for access by users, many Active Directory support (Microsoft) and Open Directory (Apple). You can also configure a server for general use with software like Freen, and it will use to manage user rights more efficiently.

As for backup, remote backup is a week is sufficient for disaster recovery - if you're afraid to reverse any changes to files, you can select a NAS file system supports snapshots of the system can return to CIt changes on a daily or even hourly (in addition to its remote backup).

Post a Comment