Hat's off to the Amahi Team
Posted: Tue Mar 22, 2011 3:00 pm
Okay, admittedly, on Saturday night I was pretty close to ripping my hair out trying to get some rather basic stuff to work, but now the fundamentals are there.
1) Fedora 14, working
2) Amahi 6, working
3) DHCP, enabled
4) Static IP's, assigned
5) PCI SATA card, recognized
6) 4.5 TB of storage, installed
7) Storage pool, created
8) Samba shares, sharing
9) VPN, operational
Pretty much all that's left is:
1) fixing the unbelievable slowness (adding a gig of RAM to the existing 512 mb) tomorrow
2) figuring out why the speed of samba transfers are very slow relative to the PCI bus (133 MB/s) and GigE (1 Gb/s)
3) figuring out how to move the greyhole landing zone off the small and slow IDE drive
4) getting the DLNA server to work (as soon as it's ready)
5) finding the slickest way possible to share files remotely and stream content. (SMB via VPN works, but is currently wicked slow)
6) adding a limited privilege user (so my friend can access my files but not f/u my server)
I consider the 5 problems pretty small relative to the 9 successes. For someone like me with no Linux experience, Amahi/Fedora was hard, but doable. Unfortunately, I have to deal with the swearing of my Linux enthusiast friends who keep asking, "Why is it on F@#$@#^ Fedora", a question for which I have no answer.
Beyond the quibbles, color me impressed.
1) Fedora 14, working
2) Amahi 6, working
3) DHCP, enabled
4) Static IP's, assigned
5) PCI SATA card, recognized
6) 4.5 TB of storage, installed
7) Storage pool, created
8) Samba shares, sharing
9) VPN, operational
Pretty much all that's left is:
1) fixing the unbelievable slowness (adding a gig of RAM to the existing 512 mb) tomorrow
2) figuring out why the speed of samba transfers are very slow relative to the PCI bus (133 MB/s) and GigE (1 Gb/s)
3) figuring out how to move the greyhole landing zone off the small and slow IDE drive
4) getting the DLNA server to work (as soon as it's ready)
5) finding the slickest way possible to share files remotely and stream content. (SMB via VPN works, but is currently wicked slow)
6) adding a limited privilege user (so my friend can access my files but not f/u my server)
I consider the 5 problems pretty small relative to the 9 successes. For someone like me with no Linux experience, Amahi/Fedora was hard, but doable. Unfortunately, I have to deal with the swearing of my Linux enthusiast friends who keep asking, "Why is it on F@#$@#^ Fedora", a question for which I have no answer.
Beyond the quibbles, color me impressed.