![]() With seven drives, six remain available for storage. What you call RAID5 ZFS calls "single parity", or raidz1. One of the restrictions is that ZFS needs direct access to your disks, having a RAID controller in between will mean ZFS can't do its job. This comes with restrictions, and it's good to learn about those before you commit. The strength of ZFS is that it is quite good at data integrity. Introduction to ZFS may help with the concepts of pools and vdevs. The resources section has some good starting points for inexpensive hardware, I like and It wouldn't be that uncommon, FreeBSD is a little picky about supported hardware. Beyond that, it's possible FreeBSD simply doesn't "like" your hardware. I'll just admit ignorance to the boot issues you're facing. With 2 i don't remember exactly but it does'nt boot or hang after some seconds. If i select 1 then it will boot but i got the kernel error. But both of them without any description. The CD will boot correctly and let me choose between 2 options'. ![]() I try then the USB stick again on my i7 system and it work.Īfter some changing in the Bios without succeed i burn the ISO to a DVD-R (don't have a CD-R). Obviously I would have formatted it during the installation of Freenas. And if i try to select the boot device by pressing F10 during boot the USB stick isn't available (but available in the Bios)!!! If i don't use F10 and let it boot than the Ubuntu OS on the 16GB CF card will start. Even if selected directly as boot device in the Bios. As system disk i use a 16GB CF card with IDE2CF card adapter instead of the 2GB CF card i use with Openfiler.īut in this way, and i don't no why, the USB stick didn't boot. Detach all my 7 Raid 5 Hard Drive to avoid data loss during the test. after this test i plug the flashed USB stick (ISO) into my server. then i test it by connecting to the WEB interface from my Ubuntu PC, all fine. on another PC with an Intel MoBo, i7 processor and 8GB ram i try it and can install the Freenas system on another USB stick I was hoping this configuration would allow me to upgrade to better processors at least in the near future, but it seems I'm stuck with either a 2.66 ghz core 2 duo or the 2.93 ghz core 2 extreme.- i flash the ISO file to an USB stick (8GB corsair) with Ubuntu's balenaEtcher I understand from Intel's website the e6850 is not on the supported cpus list, but was curious if I just plugged it in and changed the fsb setting to 1333 in the bios if it will work/be stable. ![]() I would love to upgrade to the new 3.0 ghz e6850, but knowing that it has a 1333 ghz fsb, vs the 1066 fsb built into the motherboard, is this even an option for me? Or do I have to get a new motherboard like the bad axe 2 D975XBX2 to support the new cpu? Thermaltake Silent 775 CPU Cooler With Heatpipe Cooling Technology for Intel LGA775 Processors(Standard)ĬORSAIR XMS2 1GB (2 x 512MB) 240-Pin DDR2 675 (PC2 5400) 4-4-4-12 Dual Channel Kit(Standard) Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 2.4GHz Conroe FSB 1066MHz 4MB L2 Cache 65nm LGA 775(171) Intel BOXD975XBXLKR Socket T (LGA 775) Intel 975X ATX Intel Motherboard(Standard) Rev AAD27094-305 Hi, I own an ABS Ultimate X9 with a 2.4 ghz conroe e6600, and the motherboard is a 1st generation bad axe D975XBX motherboard, configuration details are as follows:Īntec TruePower 2.0 550W Power Supply(Standard) ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |