-
Tiger MetaLAN with FCP systems
I hope to lure people to the SANetworks forum on Cow with this post, but I belive to have found the least expensive, easiest to use SAN system on the market for FCP users that work in every format except uncompressed HD (and 2K).
I heard about MetaLAN on the AJA Kona forum from Lance Bachelder. He said that he was successfully using MetaLAN on 7 FCP edit systems doing ProRes422HQ with no issues. I had looked at MetaSAN, with it’s fibre channel connectivity, but this was too expensive, and like everyone else, I wanted something that was not expensive, that could be used for just 2 or 3 editors, and was easy to setup and use.
I looked at MetaLAN in great detail at NAB2008, and decided to give it a try. It took several days of embarrassing phone calls to get the system up and running (they said it was so easy at NAB), but I got it working, and IT ABSOLUTELY WORKS.
This is what you need to build a MetaLAN shared storage system –
A MAC (like a MAC Pro, not an old G4)
Big disk drives (like any drive array you see advertised on these Cow forums – you can use ANYTHING YOU WANT !!!!!)
A Small Tree managed Gigabit switch (about $2000)
A Small Tree 4 port ethernet card (under $700)
some ethernet cables
MetaLAN server software ($549 and a FREE eval !)
MetaLAN client software ($249 per edit system – free eval !)
Some knowlege of networks, or a network guy to help you.Thats it. Thats your expense. The most expensive part is the MAC and the hard drive array, and if this project fails for you, you still have a nice MAC and drive array for a standard FCP edit system. This is how I was able to do these tests (in case everything failed).
MetaLAN is HARDWARE AGNOSTIC, which means that you can use anyones hard drives, and anyones managed Gigabit Ethernet switch. I used Small Tree, because they are a small company, and were willing to get on the phone with me to help set it up (I never did it before this test). Small Tree was great to deal with. If you are working with a computer guy that knows what the words “link aggrigation” means, then he can help you. If he doesn’t know (or you don’t know), then you better find someone (or a dealer) that can help you with this. I didn’t know how to do this, and was shown by Small Tree at NAB. It took me 15 minutes to learn how to setup these menus.
Once you setup the simple network, using the standard Gig E ports on your MAC (I used the second ethernet port on the MAC – the first ports were being used for the internet) – you do this “link aggrigation” trick with the “server computer” – which is just a normal MAC Pro (not a server running OS-X server). This link aggrigation trick uses the Small Tree 4 port ethernet card in the server, to run FOUR Gig Ethernet lines to the managed Gig E switch, so you get a 4Gig bandwidth – same as fibre channel. You connect your MAC’s (using the 2nd ethernet port on your MAC) to the same switch (any port you like). You load the MetaLAN server software on the main computer, load the MetaLAN client software on the FCP edit systems, and the drives that are on the “server” computer mounts on all the edit systems. It’s amazing. You then go into FCP, select System Settings, choose the shared volume, and start editing.
Thats it. I have 2 edit systems running right now with this (doing DVCProHD, and uncompressed 8 bit Standard Def from a Digi Beta), and added a third system late this afternoon, which we will start digitizing from tomorrow.
As long as all the menus are setup correctly (there is no “easy install” manual, so you have to ask a lot of questions), it all works, its cheap, and it’s easy. If you are not willing to suffer thru this by yourself, a qualified dealer or a qualified computer guy that knows networking can do this for you. This is not a “plug and play” system, like a firewire drive. I believe that everyone that is selling “turnkey” ethernet based SAN systems is basically doing what I just described. You can save a lot of money, by doing it yourself, and not getting trapped into propriatary hardware.
Bob Zelin