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Maske5
18-07-2005, 21:09
Hi Oleg!
I know you are not a fan of this topic. However, since energy is expensive it would be a good way to save some. I would be glad, if you built in such a feature in your firmware (Hdparm?).

Maybe in the next version?

Oleg
18-07-2005, 21:30
Ghm. What is the price for one kWh in your locale?

wireless
18-07-2005, 22:17
Ghm. What is the price for one kWh in your locale?
It's perhaps more of a noise issue ;)

Anyways, my suggestion to TS would be: find a working example of spinning down a usb hdd on a linux system (spindown initiated by the OS, not by the hdd itself) and then ask for a port here.
I've searched myself and finally I decided I could live with the noise :P

Maske5
19-07-2005, 18:26
Ghm. What is the price for one kWh in your locale?
I don't know exactly. But the point is, in my home country we try to save energy where possible. :) I have got an ASUS WL-HDD running with your firmware. I do not use it as an USB device. It is connected by LAN to a DVB receiver.

petgun
19-07-2005, 20:49
hi,
I second that request...but not only to save energy cost..

I have got an ASUS WL-HDD running with your firmware. I do not use it as an USB device. It is connected by LAN to a DVB receiver.
same to me. After 6 month continuous error free operation (Toshiba 2,5" 60GB HD) the HD finally crashed without any warning! I have to think these cheep Notebook devices don't like continuous operation...I think I have to buy special devices designed for e.g. BladeServer which are specified for 24/7. Therefore I exceptionally second hdparm and/or Wake-On-LAN.

cu,
peter

Oleg
20-07-2005, 07:56
think I have to buy special devices designed for e.g. BladeServer which are specified for 24/7.

Actually IBM BladeServers use generic laptops drives (Toshiba IIRC). No special drives are available.

petgun
20-07-2005, 11:49
Actually IBM BladeServers use generic laptops drives (Toshiba IIRC). No special drives are available.
maybe that IBM use generic laptop drives for their BladeServers, but I am pretty sure that are special 24/7 designed 2,5" HD's around...imo Fujitsu...can't find the link at the moment but I keep on searching....

insomni
16-02-2006, 12:51
It's perhaps more of a noise issue ;)
Anyways, my suggestion to TS would be: find a working example of spinning down a usb hdd on a linux system (spindown initiated by the OS, not by the hdd itself) and then ask for a port here.
I've searched myself and finally I decided I could live with the noise :P

Sorry to make this my first post in here, but reading the forums i realised that i just read about this over at http://en.magenson.de/2005/12/16/nslu2-linux-usb-harddrive-spindown/ - note however that this is against a 2.6 kernel

Ade
17-02-2006, 19:54
If you're using a WL-HDD then hdparm is available. You can find it as a download if you do a search of this site or you can install it via ipkg.
I use hdparm -S 240 /dev/discs/disc0/disc in my post-boot script to give a 20 mins spindown time.

gwl
17-02-2006, 23:36
It is possible to spin down usb hdd's in the nslu2...
2 ways: one with a kernel patch, and another without...
look here: http://www.nslu2-linux.org/wiki/FAQ/SpinDownUSBHarddisks

I tried the scsi-idle without kernel patch on the wl500g...
but I didn't get it to work...

Did anyone else try it?

Lionking
24-02-2006, 07:47
Oleg,

I would also appriciate if you can integrate the HD spindown feature. Not everybody is an linux expert to do this by themself. It would help us very much and maybe also fix some enviroments, where it is not working.

Many Thx
Andi

LarsAC
24-02-2006, 14:27
Spinning up/down drives too often is not a good idea for HDD lifetime as well. However, USB cases for HDDs are not vented very well and excess heat may lead to damage.

Any long-term experiences about running 3.5" HDDs for 6-8 hrs per day (spin down for the remainder of the day) in a USB case ?

Lars

romank
09-03-2006, 19:04
I'm using icy box with a 160GB hardisk since a half year also with thttpd and php also with the rrd-tool and have no problem.

pash
28-09-2006, 18:40
Hi,

i think spin down is useful. My Hard disk is used maybe 4h in a week and the access is randomly. Is this feature in firmware so hard to handle? Can somebody tell me why? :)

gwl
28-09-2006, 21:48
Hi,

i think spin down is useful. My Hard disk is used maybe 4h in a week and the access is randomly. Is this feature in firmware so hard to handle? Can somebody tell me why? :)

same here... I have to manually turn it on/off...
which is anoying... and kills the concept of "wireless"...

I tried several things, but never managed to get hd to enter standby.
if it is possible on the nslu2... then it should also be possible on the wl500g...