We are still unfortunately waiting for the memory to arrive from crucial, *sigh*, so in this part I will cover what the “extras” are and the installation of them.

Parts list:

  1. Chenbro ES34069
  2. Jetway JNC92 Motherboard
  3. Jetway SATA II Daughterboard
  4. 2GB Transcend Flash Memory Module
  5. 4 x Samsung Spinpoint 1TB
  6. 2GB Low profile Ram (When it arrives)

The Case

Chenbro ES34069Chenbro ES34069 "guts"

The Chenbro ES34069 case has 4 ‘hot swappable’ SATA 2 HD caddies, optional card reader, internal PSU.

PROS:

Good quite case, has all the required features, even some extras such as LED’s for the network interfaces, nice and compact, with the hot swap being a major bonus

CONS:

I’d have to say the price, this case weighs in at £200+ which is a bit hefty for a case.

The proprietary PSU adapter, I’ve not had any issues with the PSU’s power adapter, but by the looks of things it is bespoke to Chenbro, so I doubt getting a spare/replacement is going to be easy.

The USB header, and optional Card reader, this is more a ‘con’ of this build, as the motherboard used only has 2 USB headers, one of which is being used by the USB storage for the operating system, meaning you have the choice of either using the front facing USB or the optional card reader.

Inaccessible backplane, now this for me was the kicker, the Daughterboard comes with some finely crafted 90 degree SATA cables, which would of been perfect, if I had been able to actually access the backplane to attach them, I could not for the life of me find a way to get to the backplane without causing irreversible damage to the case itself.

The Motherboard

The Jetway JNC92 Motherboard comes with an Intel Atom Dual core 330 processor, the reasoning behind this will become clear later on, however you can opt for the cheaper single core processors if you wish.

Jetway JNC92 Motherboard, CN1 Sata Daughtboard, Transcend 2GB "SSD"

As the picture shows I have opted to use a Transcend 2GB USB module which attaches directly onto the motherboard, this will be used to store the freeNAS operating system

The SATA II Daughterboard has onboard hardware RAID support 0, 1, 0+1, and 5 RAID options across the 4 ports, I am still debating using the hardware RAID over Software RAID for the following reasons.

Yes I know Hardware raid is much much faster however as I understand it due to the XOR logic used in the hardware processor, using hardware raid essentially locks you into using a particular manufacturers hardware, which if this line is discontinued by the time something goes wrong is a serious issue when trying to recover data, this is where software raid shines as it is code based, and will run from any x86 capable hardware, and lets face it, it is not as if we are lacking CPU power in this build!

PROS:

Cheap and cheerfull motherboard

Powerful dual core CPU (Not like we’re going to be playing Crysis here, but for the use it is intended this CPU has ample power)

Expandability, this HAS to be the biggest selling point for this motherboard, you do not have to use it for any one thing in particular, I will shortly be looking at using this motherboard with the 3 x Gigabit daughterboard for building a hardware network monitor, think IDS, man in the middle machine goodness!

CONS:

Heatsinks, or their rotation they are top to bottom, where as the case I am using as most cases now has the airflow front to back, this is a minor con, but the heatsinks should be orientated for the best airflow.

USB headers, the Transcend USB module is designed to lock into the plastic socket you useually find on your USB headers, this motherboard does not have the sockets just the raw pins.

More images

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4 Responses to “Using freeNAS for Disaster Recovery – Part 2”
  1. techlife says:

    I just finished building the exact same system as you over the weekend with different drives. I went with an IDE Flash module for the OS drive cause that leaves the 2 onbaord sata ports for 2x laptop drives (one mounted where the case supports, and there’s an addon that converts the cdrom slot into another 2.5″ drive mount).
    I also saw your post on FreeNAS forums about the Marvell controller – FYI, you’ll pull hair out trying to get that damn thing to work. There’s a lot of talk I’ve read on the net about how that Marvell controller is garbage. Grab a Promise SATA300 TX4 controller instead and junk the Marvell. I spent waaaaay too much time spent installing OpenSolaris, Openfiler, and FreeNAS over and over again, trying to get at least some sort of NAS working, and that Promise controller card was a sigh of relief. Native support in FreeNAS, and it’s not much bigger than the Jetway addon card. I was up and running with a zfs raidz1, iscsi targets and smb shares in less than 30mins. Cheers!

  2. SweeneNZ says:

    Hi, Did you resolve the RAID issue? I am keen to here how you enabled the RAID Driver so it was visible in the Web interface as it is not clear in the FreeNAS Forum. I am currently running a FreeNAS on version 0.69 as the only drivers I can get for the Promise RAID Controller are for version 6 of FreeBSD and are looking for alternatives and I like the look of the Jetway RAID controller. Thanks. -Derek.

  3. Buzz says:

    @SweeneNZ

    I’m afraid not, even without defining hardware RAID and each device reporting itself as SATA/SCSI I could not get this resolved,

    I’ve been looking at building an alternative cut down CentOS 5 deploy, however this ran into the same issues due to the kernel level drivers, I have a bug report in with redhat and a tirade of things to try, my current schedule however due to the time of year has prevented me from making progress.

    Looking more like the new year at this point, the hardware is currently sat in my serveroom awaiting time to build it.

    Cheers

    Buzz

  4. Mark Briggs says:

    Hi

    I have just bought EXACTLY the same setup as yours (Jetway JNC92 Motherboard & Jetway SATA II Daughterboard), I am running FreeNAS from a 1GB Transcend Flash drive and all works fine but I cannot get FreeNAS (0.7.1) to recognise the disks attached to the Jetway SATA II Daughterboard! Truth is I don’t particularly want to use the Hardware RAID features of the board (am happy with the software RAID options within FreeNAS) – but I do obviously need to see the disks attached to the Jetway Daughterboard within FreeNAS.

    Any help would be greatly appreciated.

    Thanks,

    Mark

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