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HP Media Vault

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HP Media Vault
ManufacturerHewlett-Packard
TypeHome server
ProcessorBroadcom BCM4785
Frequency300 MHz
Memory64MB
PortsGigabit Ethernet
USB 2.0 (1 Front, 2 Rear)
Power consumption26 W (1 Hard Drive)
36 W (2 Hard Drives)
Dimensions11 cm x 24 cm x 33 cm

HP Media Vault is a line of home printer and file servers from Hewlett-Packard that run a Linux-based operating system.

First Generation

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Model Capacity Internal Drive Drive Tray
MV2010 300GB 300GB Empty
MV2020 500GB 500GB Empty
MV2040 1TB 500GB 500GB

The Media Vault's processor is a Broadcom BCM4785 MIPS-based system-on-a-chip running Linux and BusyBox v1.00-pre2 based firmware. It has 64 megabytes of RAM, one Gigabit Ethernet interface, and three USB 2.0 ports.

The capacity of the device may be expanded using the empty drive bay which can house an off-the-shelf Serial ATA hard drive. The maximum expanded capacity of MV1 (first-generation) devices is approximately 1.2TB due to memory limitations.

One of the advantages of the system is that if the primary drive is lost (which includes some system software which works in conjunction with the firmware) the system can be restored onto a replacement SATA hard drive using HP's nasrecovery software.

Since the device supports standard communications protocols (listed below), it can be accessed by Windows, Linux, Mac, and any other OS that supports the needed protocols.

Protocols

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Second Generation

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Model Capacity Internal Drive Drive Tray
MV2120 500GB 500GB Empty
MV5020 500GB 500GB Empty
MV5140 1TB 500GB 500GB
MV5150 1.5TB 750GB 750GB

The second generation of the MediaVault products is powered by an ARM9 Marvell Orion processor, and has 128MB of RAM. It has 1 Gigabit network connector, and 2 USB 2.0 ports. There are 2 internal disk bays which support any off the shelf SATA hard drive up to 1TB in size.[1]

Support

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Lee Devlin was the hardware architect for the HP Media Vault and he maintains an unofficial support site for the device.[2] The site includes information on hard drive replacement, restoring a previous snapshot of your pc, photos of the device internals as well as setting up a Firefly/iTunes Experimental server amongst many other articles.

There was also a Yahoo! group that offered support.[1]

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References

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  1. ^ "HP Media Vault Model Comparisons".
  2. ^ "HP Media Vault FAQ/Knowledgebase".