Darn. I wrote up a response to this thread earlier today and apparently never hit Post. I hate it when that happens.
Yes, they do.
* the entire
Storage Tower series - I have the Storage Tower IV currently
* the
Storage Rack - which I'm thinking about getting
* the
1U RAID Rack with MiniSAS - which just has a single 8088 to SATA breakout cable and is all-in-one for four drives (so you could stack a few of these instead of getting one big 4U rackmount thing, and adding the separate hotswap backplanes)
They also have a variety of
backplane and snap-in modules to make them all nice and hot-swappable, though since the regular cases are just piles of 5.25" bays with the needed Power Supply jumper board, switches, and whatnot, you could use whatever you want. StarTech, IcyDock, IStarUSA, and all kinds of other vendors sell simple hot-swap SATA backplane things that fit into 5.25" bays.
My current setup consists of:
* A
ST4 base unit (no extra multipliers or anything, just the box, PSU, and whatnot)
* Two
Disk Array 3SAs mounted in the four 5.25" bays in the ST4. This gives me 6 3.5" hot-swap bays. Those backplanes have some kind of built-in RAID support, I think, but I've never turned it on. They ship by default in regular SATA mode, and they have three discreet SATA ports on the back. There are bigger 5ST versions that fit 5 drives in 3 5.25" bays available too.
* An
8-port SF-8088 to SATA I/O adapter on a Centronics plate (mounted on the port provided on the back of the ST4)
* A
two-port SFF-8087 to SFF-8088 passthrough adapter mounted in my PC (and attached to my RAID card's 8087 outputs, because buying the cards with 8088 included costs a heckuva lot more than $49).
* Some SFF-8088 cables from Monoprice.
* A crapload of very short SATA cables from Monoprice.
*
Two of these to liberate the two extra SATA ports I have available in the ST4 but which I can't use because there isn't enough room in the box. The ST4 has two punch-out spots for these on the back, along with the Centronics punch-out spots.
* A crappy old two-8087 Highpoint RAID card, which has been surprisingly rock-solid, but which doesn't support RAID-6 and doesn't perform anywhere near as well under Windows 8.1 as it did with Windows 7 (my typical sustained throughput rates dropped from around 400MB/s to ~300MB/s or so, and it seems to be worse with random I/O as well, though I haven't tested it thoroughly)
In general, I'm very happy with the setup, and it has been running for years now. My issue is that... I'm maxed out in the case (using all 6 bays) and have been for a while. So now those two extra eSATA ports are connected to junky external eSATA drive cases with two more drives stacked up on top (for a total of 8 drives, using all of the ports natively available on my RAID card). That stinks, plus it is mega loud.
I replaced the two fans in the Disk Array 3SA back planes with Noctua fans, and they're much better now than how they shipped. But the ST4 still has a junky little tiny fan (almost certainly not needed with the Noctuas on the 3SAs, but I've never disconnected it) and a loud, crappy fan on the included PSU (which is custom looking and I'm afraid to work on PSUs if I need to unscrew them substantially). Its in the basement, so I don't really care much, but I would like it if it wasn't so loud.
I'm considering...
* Storage Rack DA (the only difference between the regular and the DA is that the DA has an extra bracket at the back for one more Disk Array 5SA if you want to use it, and they're they same price)
* A nice Zippy PSU. The Addonics PSU in the ST4 has (surprisingly) held up for a long, long while. I think it has been going close to 24/7 for... Four years? Five? I could look it up, but it is a long, long while. So, it would probably be fine, but for the exact same price (because they sell the Storage Rack without a PSU for cheaper) I can get a nice, high-quality Zippy one from Newegg, and it'll probably have a better fan.
*
Another one of these, with the Centronics bracket probably (though I think the Storage Rack has some regular PCI slot mounting spots so maybe not, I need to re-check that before I buy)
* The Intel thing I linked above.
* One Disk Array 5SA,
Snap In Pro backplane, or maybe a third-party hot-swap backplane of some kind. I've been moderately happy with the hot swap Disk Array things, once I replaced the fans. They work pretty well. The locking lever things are pretty fiddly though, so I might decide to go with some different ones if I can find ones that look decent. Not sure on this, as I haven't decided yet.
* A new RAID card that is better and has RAID-6 support
* Some
under-desk mounting brackets* and, then, later when I rebuild my money supply, some 8-meter SFF-8088 cables, so I can move the Storage Rack to another room from my office. I've measured it out, and could probably even pull it off with 6-meter cables, but they're so freaking expensive (and I'd need two).
That last piece is what has me peeved. I'm
extra peeved that my ASUS P8Z77-V Deluxe board was supposed to have the ability to
add in a modestly-priced Thunderbolt EX card aftermarket to add in Thunderbolt ports, but apparently ASUS got in a fight with Intel and they wouldn't certify it. Now it seems that Intel has backed down and has certified their next-gen
Thunderbolt EX II card, but they're not back-porting it and making it work with the Z77 boards (I think, anyway, the specs list only the Z87 boards and ASUS has been totally silent on the screw up on the Z77 Thunderbolt headers). Supposedly. I'm hoping someone tries one of these on the older Z77 boards and it works.
Pisses me right off. Part of the reason I bought this board, and not the competitors, was the possibility of upgrading to Thunderbolt for
this exact project.
So, I don't know what to do. My Laptop and Mac Mini both have Thunderbolt, so it would be convenient to use something like the
ATTO ThunderStream box instead of getting a new LSI or Areca SAS RAID card. If I did that, I could run it all over one cable. And if the Server itself ever goes belly-up (again) then I could just unplug the ThunderBolt cable from my Server, plug it into the Mini, and I'd be back up and running (slightly crippled since the Mini wouldn't support my internal TV tuner cards). Then instead of paying upwards of $800 for the two SFF-8088 8-meter cables, I could get a single fiber ThunderBolt cable and run it to the RAID box, and maybe upgrade that performance even further later on. At the very least, I wouldn't have to pay two gouging prices for two long SFF-8088 cables, only the one fiber ThunderBolt cable, and
that substantially eases the length-limitation and I could run the darn thing however I want.
But, I'd be getting doubly-gouged on the ATTO ThunderStream box, and I don't know how much I trust them compared to LSI or Areca (ATTO has a decent name, but I don't know much and the stuff has limited reviews outside of places like OWC). I don't know... That seems clunky, especially since the current ThunderStream is Thunderbolt 1 only, still.
I've been hoping that some kind of mythical version of that ThunderStream box (preferably in a 5.25" bay form factor with 8087 connectors internally) would come out for $500-700. That would be a bit more than I'd pay for a good LSI RAID card new. Then, if the new ThunderBolt EX II card is confirmed to work perfectly with (though not certified for) my ASUS board it could work... But I'm thinking that's not looking good (probably on either front). I had a bunch of high-hopes that Areca would sell a version of
the thingy they're using to power their ThunderBolt RAID-in-a-Box solution, but they're already on gen-2 and it's never appeared (I wonder if this too isn't caused by dumb Intel certification issues.)
It sure-as-heck isn't worth upgrading my otherwise-perfectly good (and rock-solid) server board just to get ThunderBolt, only to get gouged on the fiber ThunderBolt cables, and it
certainly isn't worth it for a $1300 RAID card thing in a box with a pair of ThunderBolt 1 ports slapped onto it.
Sigh.
But still... My idea above could work brilliantly. It'd let me immediately:
* Rid myself of the dumb external drive cases, which are loud, ugly, and have crappy-prone-to-failure power supplies (one of the two is only a hot-spare, so I can afford to lose both at once, but still)
* Give myself a ton of future expansion space
* I can quickly bump up to 10-12 drives and set up a RAID-6 volume
* I can do some of this in "phases". I don't NEED to replace the existing SAS RAID card now, if I want to do it on the cheap, and I don't need the Intel thing at all unless I'm going to more than 8 drives (which I don't plan to do immediately)