Bozo said:
I could do a Spock joke here, but...
I don't know your precise needs, expectations, or situation there at the "factory." But, from what I gathered by skimming through the talk in this thread (the last time I was here) is that it looks like a SAN -- or possibly NAS -- should have been planned and built starting a couple of years ago. And, in those 1, 2, or even 3 years, y'all should have been adding the proper type of storage as needed.
I don't want to get into particulars, but, much of the stuff mentioned above would be a poor investment or simply a disaster.
There are a lot of questions to be asked about your needs (or perceived needs).
Bozo said:
The system needs to ba available 24/7. It is the repository for quality videos of our process taken in real time. The system will be on a UPS and I'm considering a battery on the RAID card.
A NAS device or a SAN (and its devices) needs to be left on 24/7. So, you need redundant power circuits (208-volt preferably, unless we are talking about 3-phase power) and redundant power supplies to everything possible. If there are any single powered devices, those need to go onto automatic failover power switches (which are powered by redundant power circuits).
The best solution for you could be either a SAN or NAS or even both!
A SAN fabric can be based on:
* InfiniBand (way fast and sophisticated, and likely way too expensive for you; IB could kill Fibre-Channel in the next 10 years)
* Fibre-Channel (copper and optical -- chances are you only need 1Gb F-C; 2Gb, 4Gb, and faster F-C is likely not needed and is quite expensive)
* iSCSI (block storage over Ethernet media using TCP/IP; UTP copper Ethernet media unless there's an actual need for fiber optics; any Ethernet switch or hub will work with iSCSI, but you
really need to have quality Gb Ethernet switches if you want to get any reasonable ROI and performance)
* AoE (basically iSCSI without the TCP/IP overhead)
There are many many questions to ask. I guess I could start off with one for now:
Bozo said:
The system needs to ba available 24/7. It is the repository for quality videos of our process taken in real time. The system will be on a UPS and I'm considering a battery on the RAID card.
So, I take it that nobody has a need to *edit* video on this storage device? Correct?
This is a compressed streaming video source, or maybe low-frame-rate video source (or both)?