I have an old computer running CentOS 5. I need to add an SATA drive to it, but it doesn't have any ports, so I need an add-on card. The board only has a 32-bit PCI slot. Any recommendations on cards/brands that work well with CentOS? I don't need any raid capabilities, I just need a couple of SATA connections. Thanks, -- Bowie
Bowie Bailey wrote:> I have an old computer running CentOS 5. I need to add an SATA drive to > it, but it doesn't have any ports, so I need an add-on card. The board > only has a 32-bit PCI slot. Any recommendations on cards/brands that > work well with CentOS? I don't need any raid capabilities, I just need > a couple of SATA connections.Nothing specific, but I would strongly recommend a well-known brand, like LSI. Note that I'm saying this because we had a box that was a JBOD, with mini-SAS cables coming out of the back, and they were hooked into an Highpoint RocketRaid. It was older - more than six years, and two years ago, they already just didn't care - I had to find the source code, do a hack to it so that it would compile, then recompile on the (rare) occasions that we upgraded the kernel.... You really, really don't want to have to worry on every yum update.... mark
On 07/27/2015 05:06 PM, Bowie Bailey wrote:> I have an old computer running CentOS 5. I need to add an SATA drive > to it, but it doesn't have any ports, so I need an add-on card. The > board only has a 32-bit PCI slot. Any recommendations on cards/brands > that work well with CentOS? I don't need any raid capabilities, I > just need a couple of SATA connections. > > Thanks, >Hi, Sil3112 or Sil3114 based should work //Zdenek
On 07/27/15 10:06, Bowie Bailey wrote:> I have an old computer running CentOS 5. I need to add an SATA drive to > it, but it doesn't have any ports, so I need an add-on card. The board > only has a 32-bit PCI slot. Any recommendations on cards/brands that > work well with CentOS? I don't need any raid capabilities, I just need > a couple of SATA connections. >. i hope certain others will excuse my reply to you OT post. instead of a pci slot board, i purchased a board that is an ide/pata to dual sata converter. card connects to ribbon cable dip connector on main board, giving 2 sata connections. works great. an inet search for 'ide/pata to sata converter' will give plenty of hits. card i purchased; http://www.startech.com/HDD/Adapters/IDE-to-SATA-Adapter-Converter~PATA2SATA2 card is available thru many computer accessory suppliers which one will find with web search of "ide/pata to sata".> Thanks,welcome. -- If Bill Gates got a dime for every time Windows crashes... ...oh, wait. He does. THAT explains it! -+- in a world with out fences, who needs gates. CentOS GNU/Linux 6.6 tc,hago. g .
On 7/27/2015 12:29 PM, g wrote:> > On 07/27/15 10:06, Bowie Bailey wrote: >> I have an old computer running CentOS 5. I need to add an SATA drive to >> it, but it doesn't have any ports, so I need an add-on card. The board >> only has a 32-bit PCI slot. Any recommendations on cards/brands that >> work well with CentOS? I don't need any raid capabilities, I just need >> a couple of SATA connections. >> > . > i hope certain others will excuse my reply to you OT post. > > instead of a pci slot board, i purchased a board that is an ide/pata to > dual sata converter. > > card connects to ribbon cable dip connector on main board, giving 2 sata > connections. works great. > > an inet search for 'ide/pata to sata converter' will give plenty of hits. > > card i purchased; > > http://www.startech.com/HDD/Adapters/IDE-to-SATA-Adapter-Converter~PATA2SATA2 > > card is available thru many computer accessory suppliers which one will > find with web search of "ide/pata to sata".That's not a bad idea. I'll have to take a look at the case and see if I have room for something like that. -- Bowie
On 7/27/2015 8:41 AM, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote:> Nothing specific, but I would strongly recommend a well-known brand, like > LSI.Normally, I'd agree, especially if this was for a high performance server, but I don't believe LSI has any plain SATA adapters, just SAS HBA's that support SATA, and most newer ones require pci-express 4-lane slots, older ones were PCI-X 64bit, its been along time since they had anything suitable for 32bit PCI For a 32bit parallel PCI 33Mhz slot, the SiL stuff previously mentioned is probably the best choice. cheap, and they work well enough, even if they aren't at the bleeding edge of performance (you can overwhelm 32 bit PCI with a single 1.5Gbps SATA transfer, nothing can get around that). here's a typical SiL card. http://www.amazon.com/Adapter-Converter-Silicon-Sil3114-Chipset/dp/B008BZB29E (note that vendor ships from Hong Kong) here's a US shipper, http://www.monoprice.com/Product?c_id=104&cp_id=10407&cs_id=1040702&p_id=2667&seq=1&format=2 -- john r pierce, recycling bits in santa cruz
On Mon, 2015-07-27 at 11:06 -0400, Bowie Bailey wrote:> I have an old computer running CentOS 5. I need to add an SATA drive to > it, but it doesn't have any ports, so I need an add-on card. The board > only has a 32-bit PCI slot. Any recommendations on cards/brands that > work well with CentOS? I don't need any raid capabilities, I just need > a couple of SATA connections. > > Thanks, >Have you considered this http://www.startech.com/HDD/Adapters/Bi-Directional-SATA-IDE-Adapter-Converter~PATA2SATA3 I'm using the PATA2SATA3 and am well pleased. They also have a uni-directional (meaning it adapts in one direction - data flows both ways of course) one if that meets you needs. HTH, Bill
On 7/28/2015 12:26 PM, Bill Maltby (C4B) wrote:> On Mon, 2015-07-27 at 11:06 -0400, Bowie Bailey wrote: >> I have an old computer running CentOS 5. I need to add an SATA drive to >> it, but it doesn't have any ports, so I need an add-on card. The board >> only has a 32-bit PCI slot. Any recommendations on cards/brands that >> work well with CentOS? I don't need any raid capabilities, I just need >> a couple of SATA connections. >> >> Thanks, >> > Have you considered this > http://www.startech.com/HDD/Adapters/Bi-Directional-SATA-IDE-Adapter-Converter~PATA2SATA3 > > I'm using the PATA2SATA3 and am well pleased. > > They also have a uni-directional (meaning it adapts in one direction - > data flows both ways of course) one if that meets you needs.I considered that one, but it looks like it needs to plug directly into the IDE connector, and there isn't enough room to have a 2" device plugged in there (2U case with a horizontally-mounted IDE card). I decided on one that plugs directly into the SATA drive instead. http://www.startech.com/HDD/Adapters/25in-and-35in-40-Pin-Male-IDE-to-SATA-Adapter-Converter~IDE2SAT2 Thanks for the suggestions, everyone! -- Bowie