
IP before VM or VM before IP?Ĥ) The initial question was somewhat pretty straightforward. maybe I should have been a little more specific in what kind of responses I was looking for.ġ) I am aware that a static IP for a server is a best practice.Ģ) The question I posed wasn't about should I have a static IP or allow my machine to pick up an IP assigned by a DHCP server.ģ) "Also, certain services need the IP address to be able to start, so that needs to happen before some other things can happen." doesn't actually answer the question about in what order things are brought up in FreeNAS. Jails: running 1 iocage jail (Plex) using danb35's script:Īdditional NIC: MELLANOX 10GB CONNECTX2 - MNPA19-XTR Take a look here: A post with Links to useful threads Vdev-1 = 4 x 6 TB drives in RAID-z1 (4 WD Gold drives - WD6002FRYZ)īoot pool: 1 vdev with 2 x 40 GB notebook drives in mirror (2 drives total - FUJITSU MHW2040BS) Vdev-0 = 4 x 6 TB drives in RAID-z1 (4 WD Gold drives - WD6002FRYZ) Vdev-1 = 6 x 4 TB drives in RAID-z2 (6 Seagate Exos drives - ST4000NM0115) Vdev-0 = 6 x 4 TB drives in RAID-z2 (6 Seagate Exos drives - ST4000NM0115) Vdev-1 = 6 x 4 TB drives in RAID-z2 (6 Seagate Desktop drives - ST4000DM000-1F2168) Vdev-0 = 6 x 4 TB drives in RAID-z2 (6 Seagate Desktop drives - ST4000DM000-1F2168) HBA: LSI/Broadcom SAS9207-8i, 6Gbps SAS PCI-E 3.0 HBA - flashed to IT Firmware: 20.00.07.00Ĭonnected to: two 6Gb/s 24-port 3.5" mini-SAS expander backplanes (80H10024001A0) 128 GB of 16GB sticks Samsung brand PC3-12800R, DDR3 Registered ECC Processor: Intel Xeon E5-2650 V2, 2.6GHz 8 Core (16 thread)

System board: SuperMicro Motherboard X9SRL-F, LGA 2011/Socket R, IPMI For a home NAS, this chassis is huge, able to hold 48 data drives and two boot drives with a couple spaces internally for non-hot-swap drives. The three pools in this one system represent the three NAS systems I had before the consolidation. I have even put together some hardware just to test things out a time or two.įor a while I had three systems, all at once, at home but I am making some hardware changes right now and only one NAS is online. I made some mistakes along the way, learned some and I try to share some of those lessons learned experiences here in the forum. This is the 8th FreeNAS unit I have built for home. I only used Telnet to test internet access, i.e ping by IP (routing check) and host name (DNS check).This one was built in 2018, but I reused the name from a previous build. If you changed the username during its first startup, it was only changed for web access, linux/DD-WRT login is always root.
Dd wrt v24 usb storage windows 7#
On Windows 7 Network Map, PCs from Router 2 network appear connected through a Bridge, as opposed to Switch for devices on Router 1 network.Ī quick tip for those new to Linux and struggling to access their DD-WRT router over Telnet. Does not ask for a password, will use the configuration on Wireless pages.

Status -> Wireless -> Site survey to Join a network. I am only using 1 physical wireless interface on both routers for this setup, no virtual ones. Preamble = Short (read in some article on the net, not sure if it’s needed or not). Router (Router 2), LAN & WAN (LAN would probably work too, since WAN is disabled).Īdvanced Wireless Settings. Setup - Advanced Routing, operating mode: WAN Connection Type = Automatic configuration - DHCP. Both internet and local network are now working. TP-Link TL-WR1043ND, same version, regular firwmare (8MB), later Router 2.ĭespite routers run on Broadcom and Atheros chips, it was possible to configure them to cooperate. Asus RT-N12, DD-WRT v24-sp2 build 14896 (08/07/10), mini image (4MB firmware size), connected to the internet, later being referred to as Router 1.
