This is just an FYI, ah screw it its a challenge!; I am working on a related project but it could be adapted easily for the IPCam crowd. (I am adapting it to be a car-media server, to share terabytes of music & kids movies/tv to tablets without nearly that much storage).
I am already doing something similar for recording 24/7 using another embedded linux box I have that also has esata, but it was much more expensive than the PogoPlug and is doing alot more than just being a file server (CuBox i4Pro).
Requirements: Familiarity with Linux and seeks adventure.
Here is the jist, you can pickup a 800MHz arm computer with a sata interface, usb, sd and ethernet off ebay for less than $12 called the PogoPlug: http://www.ebay.com/itm/331167370730
It has a SATA USM port on the top of it and for $99 you can get a 2TB drive that docks right into it: http://www.amazon.com/Seagate-Backup-Portable-External-STDR2000100 or you can opt for a larger drive of your choice and put it into an external USB enclosure.
You'll want a small SD card to install linux on, Performance is about ~25MB/s (~200Mbit) which is adequate for a couple dozen cameras.. install a minimal linux and run just FTP/NFS and configure your cameras to record directly to the camera and use some cron scripts to cleanup old recordings regularly.
this would be very low power, easy to hide and ultimately customizable camera file server.. Run your own NTP server and have all cameras time-sync every min, copy certain files to dropbox, issue URL commands to change profiles at dawn/dusk, setup monitoring to sms you if disk fills, a camera stops responding, etc.
Given the cost of the Pogo, only $12 freaking dollars or less its going to be hard to beat this for simple and cheap.. your cost to save recordings on a standalone server is almost entirely the drive you choose and perhaps an external enclosure.. Would work great if you want redundant storage and have some spare disks laying about, or put a smaller cheap disk in it for a few days of redundancy.
further reading:
http://blog.qnology.com/2014/07/hacking-pogoplug-v4-series-4-and-mobile.html
http://blog.qnology.com/2013/03/tutorial-pogoplug-e02-with-arch-linux.html
I am already doing something similar for recording 24/7 using another embedded linux box I have that also has esata, but it was much more expensive than the PogoPlug and is doing alot more than just being a file server (CuBox i4Pro).
Requirements: Familiarity with Linux and seeks adventure.
Here is the jist, you can pickup a 800MHz arm computer with a sata interface, usb, sd and ethernet off ebay for less than $12 called the PogoPlug: http://www.ebay.com/itm/331167370730
It has a SATA USM port on the top of it and for $99 you can get a 2TB drive that docks right into it: http://www.amazon.com/Seagate-Backup-Portable-External-STDR2000100 or you can opt for a larger drive of your choice and put it into an external USB enclosure.
You'll want a small SD card to install linux on, Performance is about ~25MB/s (~200Mbit) which is adequate for a couple dozen cameras.. install a minimal linux and run just FTP/NFS and configure your cameras to record directly to the camera and use some cron scripts to cleanup old recordings regularly.
this would be very low power, easy to hide and ultimately customizable camera file server.. Run your own NTP server and have all cameras time-sync every min, copy certain files to dropbox, issue URL commands to change profiles at dawn/dusk, setup monitoring to sms you if disk fills, a camera stops responding, etc.
Given the cost of the Pogo, only $12 freaking dollars or less its going to be hard to beat this for simple and cheap.. your cost to save recordings on a standalone server is almost entirely the drive you choose and perhaps an external enclosure.. Would work great if you want redundant storage and have some spare disks laying about, or put a smaller cheap disk in it for a few days of redundancy.
further reading:
http://blog.qnology.com/2014/07/hacking-pogoplug-v4-series-4-and-mobile.html
http://blog.qnology.com/2013/03/tutorial-pogoplug-e02-with-arch-linux.html
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