Windows Home Server 2007 - How to automatically turn it on at 7pm and turn it off at 11pm

06
2013-12
  • burnt1ce

    In an effort to reduce my family's consumption on electricity, I would like to automate turning my home server on and off. what's the best approach for this using Windows Home Server 2007? Please list any hardware requirements

  • Answers
  • Bora

    Turning the computer on is the job of BIOS, since Windows is not operational, yet.

    So, depending on BIOS type, press Del or F2 or whatever the shortcut is to enter the BIOS on startup, go to Power Management and set the Wake on Alarm / Wake up timer to 7 pm everyday, if it is available.

    You can schedule the daily shutting down of the server in Task Scheduler. Set to run everyday at the time of your choice (here, 11pm). Choose as executable shutdown.exe /s /f.

    /s for shutdown,
    /f for force closing of running applications. Unsaved changes would be lost, as usual.

    I'd recommend you to test this before putting into "productive" use, especially the turning on part.

  • Jerry

    A typical home computer is at 300W or less. Are you aware that a 300W device consumes 7.2KWH a day if 100% loaded all day. So about $1.25 of electricity in a whole day. Elaborate efforts to modulate one small server is likely to have a very long ROI.


  • Related Question

    Copying windows home server backup offsite
  • Simon

    What ways are there to copy a windows home server backup to an offsite location?

    I'm talking specifically (and only) about the automated backup of my entire machine, and not the shared network folders.

    I am 90% working away from home on my laptop which has a 640GB drive so the shared folders are essentially useless to me. I backup every night, but if my house burns down or broken into the I'm in serious serious trouble !

    I'm really looking for some alternative way to back up my entire machine - which much not interfere with the reliability or speed by which my WHS backs up my laptop every night. Either a way to 'export' a complete machine backup from the server, or recommendations on non-conflicting software I can backup to a 1TB drive at work are what I'm looking for.

    Note: I believe that WHS uses its own completely proprietary backup and doesn't use things like any 'backup bit' or 'archive bit'. I just dont want to install some other backup software that will conflict.

    PS I'm now running Windows 7 and just realized that I should probably check out the backup functionality it gives me. I assume that won't conflict right!

    Edit: Thanks for the hosted solutions. I'd also appreciate ways to backup to an 'offsite' location that I control - like my office vs. my home. The hosted solutions I think will be too slow or expensive for my needs.


  • Related Answers
  • user4197

    Another alternative would be KeepVault. They seem to have better pricing.

  • IDisposable

    You should probably look into several things.

    First, regarding the use of shared folders, you can use Windows Live Sync to make any folder on your laptop (or elsewhere) get mirrored to the WHS's User folder of your choice. This will lead to bogus "File Conflict" messages because WHS can't replicate the open file .fslock that Live Sync creates (I've filed a bug report on this on the WHS Connect site). That said, though, the idea is that Live Sync will keep folders of your choosing mirrored no matter where you are. This will NOT give you historical backups, just current-version.

    Second, regarding a backup of the WHS itself. I recommend using the BDBB add-in to force WHS to duplicate backup-database files to multiple drives. This will make you resilient to a crash of the primary drive on the WHS server (the C: SYSTEM and D: DATA partitions). I've survived a crash of those twice while retaining my complete backup history.

    Third, if you want an offsite regular backup of the WHS server, you can use an external USB drive of sufficient size. When you plug it into the WHS server, you can opt to use it for system backups. It'll copy everything to the external drive and then tell you to dismount it. Now take that drive offsite. This is not a continuous backup, but it is better than nothing.

    Forth, you can use one of the excellent tools listed in other posts... Mozy, JungleDisk (my favorite), KeepVault and let things backup to the internet. This can be kind of expensive, and is very slow to recover from, but your data is very safe.

    Lastly, you can do my favorite thing. Using CrashPlan you can backup to some one else's machine over the internet. CrashPlan is awesome because you basically make an agreement with one or more people (like my father, brother and I) who all make backup space available to the CrashPlan program. It compresses, encrypts and stores my backups on all shared machines in our person "network", and each other machine on the network will store stuff on my machines. The way I use it is to have a big drive that I bought for my dad and my brother, installed it on their machines and setup CrashPlan. Now we can all survive a complete nuke-strike.

  • user4197

    JungleDisk for WHS will put your data in the Amazon S3 cloud with no subscription fee. You pay $0.15/GB/month for the storage. It's currently in beta.

  • Matt Simmons

    Since it's windows, it's conveniently partitioned off for you by drive letters.

    Have you looked into ntbackup, the built-in backup solution? It would be trivial if you could mount the remote location as a drive. At the sizes you're talking about, I sure do hope the "remote" machine is on the same network, because that will take a while.

  • JakeRobinson

    Mozy!!!!

    http://mozy.com/

    Block-level incremental backup: After the initial backup, Mozy only backs up files that have been added or changed, making subsequent backups lightning fast.

    Edit: Asus Web Storage as a WHS add-in.