TripKnot

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  1. Did you ever find a solution to this? I'm having the exact same issue. Old VM's have lost their network settings and new VM's show the network on creation screens only. Once created and go back to edit, networking is gone.
  2. A probable reason why you are having trouble finding an inexpensive board with the number of PCIe slots you require is the cheaper Intel chipsets have only a limited number of PCIe lanes available and thus a limited number of PCIe slots. In the case of the Asrock C224 board you linked, the C224 chipset is limited to a total of 8 PCIe lanes. So one slot in use will run at best at x8 and two slots in use run both at x4 and would also disable the third. Obviously this board would severely limit your H200's which run in x8. You want to find which chipset has enough lanes to support your needs first, eg C236 has 20 PCIe lanes. Then find boards with that chipset and other features you need.
  3. Does the ES in the ebay description denote Engineering Sample? These may not be final silicon.
  4. I couldn't find anything besides some QNAP units. You may be able to do something with this case: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811147131: or this case: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811129080 and 1 or 2 of one of these: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817999022 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817994147 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817994178 You may also need a HBA to provide more sata ports, power splitters to drive all the bays, and short sata cables. I'm not sure where all the cables can be stuffed in those tiny boxes and I would expect thermals to be an issue too. Good luck!
  5. Try editing your server appdata/crashplan/conf/my.service.xml file, around line 23 may say: <serviceUIConfig> <serviceHost>127.0.0.1</serviceHost> If necessary, change this to: <serviceUIConfig> <serviceHost>0.0.0.0</serviceHost> This makes crashplan listen to non host clients without the use of the ssh tunnel. Restart the Crashplan docker and the Crashplan-Desktop docker should now connect without issue. As this is less secure, once logged into crashplan, change the security settings to require a password to use the client.
  6. So what then is the difference between the G3250 and G3258 that causes a 660 passmark score difference, besides being unlocked? They are identical feature wise --> http://ark.intel.com/compare/83538,82723 The G3258 has faster passmark scores than every other pentium, even those clocked 400mhz higher, eg G3470. Granted the sample sizes are lower for some of these other pentiums and there appears to be some statistical noise, but its very odd that the G3258 is so much higher than other pentium chips. I really would like to know what accounts for this, besides being overclocked. Edit: Found this anandtech review of the G3258 http://www.anandtech.com/show/8232/overclockable-pentium-anniversary-edition-review-the-intel-pentium-g3258-ae They compare a G3258 (not OC'd) with a G3420. Same clock speed, but G3420 supports DDR3-1666 ram and G3258 supports only DDR-1333. The G3420 was a head by 1-3% for most tests, essentially identical except for some minor ram speed benefits. The G3258 has a 500 point higher passmark. The latest G3258 benchmark result claiming to be at stock 3.2ghz is 5137, if you believe that. https://www.passmark.com/baselines/V8/display.php?id=42648133658 I don't trust passmark scores for overclockable processors.
  7. The G3258 has an artificially high passmark because it is unlocked and a high proportion of this CPU's passmark scores are for overclocked CPU's. Most people running unRaid would probably frown upon overclocking due to corruption and instability risks. Several other pentium models may be more appropriate. You can get the G3450 stock clocked 200MHz higher than the G3258 for $73 ($3 more) or the locked G3250 at the same speed as the G3258 for $58 ($12 less).
  8. I see, I just have to add a VERSION variable with the version I want to install. Thank you. https://registry.hub.docker.com/u/needo/plex/
  9. On a related note, is there a way to downgrade the Plex version in needo's docker? Plex 0.9.12.3 has had some playback issues for me and I'd like to confirm if the last version improves or solves them.
  10. The difference in PCI-E configurations is solely due to Intel feature restriction. Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge have 4 more PCI-E lanes than Haswell. You lose a x4 PCI-E slot as a result. The X10SL7 sheds another slot due to the onboard LSI controller. I have the X10SL7 and will check for WOL settings when I get home in a couple hours. The I210AT controllers support it but the SM manual mentions nothing. Edit: There is no BIOS setting relating to WOL. However, according to an X10SLM manual here http://www.manualslib.com/manual/610162/Supermicro-X10slm-F.html?page=52 Wake-On-Lan is controlled by the JSTBY1 jumper. Most Supermicro manuals, including the X10SL7, call this jumper "Standby Power Header". According to the Wake-On-Lan wiki, WOL requires standby power to keep the network interface on. By this fuzzy logic, so long as JSTBY1 is enabled providing standby power, WOL should also work. This is far from a definitive answer, but as garycase mentioned, I would be surprised if WOL was not a feature.
  11. The X10SL7 is a nice board. But don't try to combine it with an I5/7. They don't support ECC ram and hence will not work with this board. Only Celeron/Pentium/i3/Xeon v3.
  12. Probably nothing except take a screen shot of your drive assignment just in case you need it. I myself upgraded everything a couple weeks ago from an AMD platform to an Intel, and everything worked without issue on the first boot. No reassignment required, no plugin issues. Seriously the easiest upgrade I've ever performed. unRAID is fairly hardware agnostic. unRAID 5 --> 6 was a bit more involved though.
  13. Your ideal board would be the ASRock E3C224D4I-14S which gives you 14xSATA ports while keeping your PCIe slot open but its an extended ITX board and I don't know if it will fit in the Q25. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813157486 If that doesn't fit, the ASRock E3C226D2I might be your best bet with a separate 2 port SATA card: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813157466
  14. E3-1275v3. I know the iGPU will go unused, but it was half price through a friend who works at Intel and it was the only E3 v3 available.
  15. I caved and purchased the X10SL7. I did not try with the original rev15 IR firmware, but can confirm the rev19 IT firmware works flawlessly with the 3TB WD Reds. Edit: Not sure if posted elsewhere, but here is the IT firmware link: ftp://ftp.supermicro.com/Driver/SAS/LSI/2308/Firmware/IT/