Simon Mott - All about me

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2 Articles

Ethereum Mining with NVIDIA on Linux

by Simon

Bitcoin has been getting a lot of attention in the media lately; primarily due to its association with recent high profile ransomware incidents. Bitcoin was first introduced back in 2009 as a digital currency and has been steadily gaining traction since, increasing almost 140% in value so far this year!

Bitcoin however, is not the only player in the game; Ethereum is another popular digital currency, currently sitting at 2nd place in total market value and is getting a lot of activity on currency exchanges.

An incentive to help keep the underlying “network” up and running (for both Ethereum and Bitcoin, amongst others) is a piece of software which can be used to validate transactions on the network and issue rewards for doing so. This is otherwise known as Mining.

My current Gaming PC seems to grab me a reasonable amount of Ethereum Tokens on 2+ year old hardware. Certainly enough to make me want to play around with actually mining some.

Shoehorning Proxmox into mdadm RAID1

by Simon

My home server has always been somewhat of a Frankenstein’s Monster when it comes to hardware. Until about 2 years ago, it consisted of a large JBOD array of several different drive sizes with no kind of redundancy what-so-ever – for both OS and Data disks. That all changed though when I decided to invest in some 3TB disks and build a “proper” RAID array for my data; Which coincidentally was around the same time my data storage array lost a drive resulting in about 800GB of data-loss – I was unable to source a decent hardware RAID card at the time so I went with Software RAID (mdadm) instead.

The chassis which houses my home server happens to be an old X-Case model that has 10 internal bays, a couple of 5.25″ for Optical drives and a 5.25″ to 3.5″ caddy that seems to be designed for a floppy drive (it has a cut-out at the front for access). I use the floppy slot to house my OS disk and the rest are for my data disks which are all in RAID6 for redundancy. This gives me a total of 11 hard drives in this chassis in its default configuration.

When I rebuilt my server to make use of Proxmox, I put in a known-working drive as the OS drive; It was an old drive at the time but didn’t have much in the way of power on hours so I figured it’d last me a while. Here I am a few years later and the drive is still going, but SMART data is showing some figures that’re making me worried it’s going to start having problems soon so I set about replacing it.