All,

Let me start by saying I am NOT a computer scientist and do not fully understand all of the mechanisms involved with the complex systems we play with now days. So take everything I say with a grain of salt, and PLEASE feel free to correct me, since I want to know if I have something wrong.

John Andersen wrote:
On 12/31/05, Larry's Club Cars <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Newbie here.

I have a 100Mb LAN.
I plan to have 1 Myth backend and 2 frontends.

Assuming that the 2 frontends are running simultaneously.
How much of the 100Mb LAN will be used?

Very good question. But your question does not include enough information as the answer depends on the bit rate of the recorded content. I will use my system as an example since I have two frontends and a backend just like you (I convert roughly to megabytes since that is what I think in):

I record my content at 4400kilobit/second, which I understand is something like half quality DVD. I usually have two 4400kilobit/second or ( (4400 / 8) / 1000 = .55 ) .55megabyte/second streams running across my ( (100 / 8) * .8 = 10 ) 10megabyte/sec LAN, for a consumption of about 1.1megabyte/second of a 10megabyte/second network. (The .8 reflects real world utilization versus specification throughput of the network. Yes I know that certain special built applications can get the full 12.5megabyte/second throughput, but for general network applications I think 80% is a safe number. Even at 80% utilization it would seem you are doing REALLY well or the network is only being utilized by a single application.)

Which leads into the next interesting question: what do you want to do with your content? This question usually dictates your requirements for recorded bit rate. I wanted a flexible platform agnostic format that would be easy to archive to a format that would be platform agnostic once in archived format. I also wanted to minimize the number of encodings to preserve the end result content quality as much as possible. Therefore I choose MPEG2 hardware encoders that record my content at 4400kilobit/second. This creates about 2gigabyte/hour of recorded content. This fits an average two and a half hour movie or three average one hour length TV episodes sans commercials nicely on a DVD-R for archival. The DVD-R plays nicely on almost every device I have put it in and is easy enough for the family members (besides me :-) ) to manipulate.




According to my quick glance at gkrellm, I'm pulling
600 to 800k bytes per second across lan from my backend
to my laptop.

I've pulled two streams over the cat5 100mb lan with
no problem what so ever.


Interesting response, but still not super helpful as we do not know the content bit rate.



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