- Dec 1, 2003
- 880
- 1
- 81
So here is the situation: I'm setting up a security system for the office. We have 5 Axis M1103 IP cameras in the office and one in our office in Belarus. The server that runs Axis Camera Station which records the footage is located on premises. I will eventually set up the camera at our Belarus office to record here to, once the office is set up and I figure out how to do that.
The boss said he wants all the footage to be recorded to his house. We correctly have a Cisco RV082 at the office and what I plan to do is create a gateway-to-gateway VPN to the Cisco RV042 at his house and have the footage recorded on a QNAP NAS that is capable of iSCSI. All cameras are capable of H.264 encoding and we have a 5 megabit upload at the office so I don't think bandwidth will be an issue. What I want is for the server to treat the QNAP NAS as if it was a hard drive on the server that stores video footage.
I have no experience with iSCSI but from what I understand it allows for SCSI commands to be sent over TCP/IP and allows a NAS to act as if it was a hard drive attached to the sever. We ant the footage stored at the bosses house but we want to be able to review the footage on premises.
These are my concerns:
1) Will iSCSI add a lot of overhead and is this even possible to do over VPN and how much overhead can I expect with iSCSI and all the VPN protocols used?
2) Will jumbo frames reduce this overhead and is that possible over VPN?
3) Is this even practical or is there a better solution for recording to a remote location.
Thanks for your help.
The boss said he wants all the footage to be recorded to his house. We correctly have a Cisco RV082 at the office and what I plan to do is create a gateway-to-gateway VPN to the Cisco RV042 at his house and have the footage recorded on a QNAP NAS that is capable of iSCSI. All cameras are capable of H.264 encoding and we have a 5 megabit upload at the office so I don't think bandwidth will be an issue. What I want is for the server to treat the QNAP NAS as if it was a hard drive on the server that stores video footage.
I have no experience with iSCSI but from what I understand it allows for SCSI commands to be sent over TCP/IP and allows a NAS to act as if it was a hard drive attached to the sever. We ant the footage stored at the bosses house but we want to be able to review the footage on premises.
These are my concerns:
1) Will iSCSI add a lot of overhead and is this even possible to do over VPN and how much overhead can I expect with iSCSI and all the VPN protocols used?
2) Will jumbo frames reduce this overhead and is that possible over VPN?
3) Is this even practical or is there a better solution for recording to a remote location.
Thanks for your help.