After a long time i will show you the new storage management in OpenMediaVault. I split it into three sections:
- Physical disks
- RAID management
- Filesystems
Hopefully this will be the best solution to be open to add additional storage services.
After a long time i will show you the new storage management in OpenMediaVault. I split it into three sections:
Hopefully this will be the best solution to be open to add additional storage services.
OpenMediaVault is using the Debian installer d-i to install the core system. The install process is preseeded to reduce user interaction and to do not allow the user to choose incorrect settings. While testing i realized that the installation of GRUB fails when the following parameters are given:
In this case the installation fails with the message that it is not possible to install GRUB on sda. What? sda? I have choosen /dev/sde to install the core system. Why the hell is GRUB trying to install itself on sda?
Is this a bug or do i miss something?
The following options are used in the preseed.cfg file:
d-i grub-installer/only_debian boolean true d-i grub-installer/with_other_os boolean true
Any tipps or suggestions?
Update:
The bug also appears when using the latest Squeeze netinst ISO. A bug has been reported to Debian grub-installer package.
If you want to enable various codecs in FFmpeg that are not supported by the official Ubuntu package (e.g. H.264) then this short howto will help you to build your own package quickly. I’m using the official package sources to make it as easy as possible and to ensure to do not break something. Make sure you have the Multiverse and Universe repositories enabled.
Create a new directory
mkdir ffmpeg-unstripped cd ffmpeg-unstripped
Install some additional packages, especially the codecs you want to add to the FFmpeg package
sudo apt-get install build-essential libxvidcore-dev libx264-dev libfaac-dev libmp3lame-dev
Have a look into the debian/confflags file to find out additional packages that can be added also.
Next the packages required by the offical FFmpeg package are downloaded, also the source package itself.
sudo apt-get build-dep ffmpeg apt-get source ffmpeg
Now its time to build the package
cd ffmpeg-* fakeroot debian/rules binary
Finally we can install and validate the result. Before it is necessary to remove a previously installed FFmpeg package.
sudo apt-get remove ffmpeg sudo dpkg -i ../*.deb ffmpeg -format
Today i’ll give you a short impression about the new implemented feature: System statistics. I’m using collectd to collect the system statistics every 2 minutes, the graphs will be rendered every 5 minutes. I’ve choosen collectd because of its better performance and lower load than Munin. The WebGUI can be enhanced easily by plugins later. The ‘Time’ configuration page has also been refactored a little bit.
Here is a little life sign from OMV. The newest video shows you the installer live in action. After a short installation phase OMV can be used out-of-the-box.
Note, OMV uses the whole harddisk selected during the installation for the system OS. So if you’ll use a 1 TB volume for that you’ll waste 999 GiB of this disk for nothing. That’s fact, nothing will be changed in that way. No stupid OS/data partition solution as in FreeNAS will be supported, instead use a small HDD (maybe an older one) or better a SSD/DOM/whatever. Currently the OS requires about ~250MB in summary, but this may increase in future.