Okay, so that's a solution if you're connected to a standalone PCI card, which is great that works, I could use that in another build. But for space limited servers like my main rig, I can't add another PCI card. In the the drive is connected direct to the Motherboard, there isn't away to blacklist that and pass that through?

The simplest way would be to passthrough the entire SATA controller. But on my system the SATA controllers have indeed different IOMMU groups but all the same ID. So without knowing on which physical port the optical drive is plugged in, its hard to find out which controller I can passthrough...


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I've been trying to do this on Unraid 6.8.1 this week... I finally got it to work and thought I'd share my results. I'm able to pass through a SATA BluRay drive to Ubuntu and Windows 10 VMs, and I can read CD/DVD/BluRay. I haven't tested burning yet.

First I had to connect the drive directly to a SATA port on my motherboard rather than through my SAS HBA. It might be possible to pass it through the HBA but it wasn't working, and seemed like that might be adding an additional hurdle.

The DVD drive is currently attached to the on-board SATA bus and not a separate controller. The onboard SATA is also being used for all of my unraid drives. That' being said, the DVD drive is visible in the VM and device manager reports that the drive, the virtio SCSI, and virtio SCSI passthrough devices are all working properly. Looking at the address, children, and parent attributes of these controllers and my drive it looks like the VM sees the drive attached to the virtio SCSI passthrough controller as expected.

I tried the approach testdasi posted above, by modifying the controller to be a virtio-scsi passthru controller (even re-addressing it to match my optical drive's lsscsi address and swapping it with my network interface). Windows does indeed install the drivers for the passthru controller and assigns the optical drive appropriately and as usual all devices are working properly in windows but sadly media is still not recognized.

I've set up a lot of complicated things in unRAID as a relative noob to the platform including migrating a Win10 ESXi VM with hardware GPU passthru, setting up a reverse-proxy, deploying OpenVPN-AS with client-cert auth, and yet, optical media management seems to be taking (or wasting) the most time. I'm hoping that continued challenges with optical media and unRAID prompt the development of direct access support (Unassigned devices maybe?) or fully supported passthrough.

Hi there. I want to do something similar, but instead of passing through a single CD-Rom drive, I want to pass through a single SATA port, which is connected to an external bay, which will be using different hard drives (which is why I don't want to pass it by unique hard drive UUID, which is the alternate method).

You see, this server has an external hard drive connector bay that I have been using as a way to dock hard drives of service PCs I use to image the drive with Macrium Reflect. So passing through a hard drive by UUID when a new hard drive is less ideal than just passing a SATA port (which is what you do, but on an optical drive).

However, I'm using a Windows 10 vm to test this and I can't seem to pass the hard drive to it. I need some help: Where do you exactly paste this particular piece of text? Anywhere on the configuration XML? Or does it need to live in a specific place (let's say, inside the part of the XML? between the tags existing in there, anywhere else, so on and so forth?

I've been a long time fan of Psycho pass, I own all the English physical media of Psycho Pass there is to own, and now I'm really scratching my head over Season 3... I have been for a while. It seems Japan (duh) and Germany have gotten releases, but there's no way I'm coping with German anime prices and German subs...

Charles Bronson (Mr. Majestyk) is at his dynamic, heroic best in this suspenseful, action-packed mystery/western based on the best-selling novel by Alistair MacLean (Where Eagles Dare). With a powerful cast that includes Ben Johnson (The Last Picture Show), Richard Crenna (First Blood), Jill Ireland (Breakout), Charles Durning (Tootsie) and Ed Lauter (The Longest Yard). Breakheart Pass throws open the throttle for runaway excitement! At the height of the frontier era, a locomotive races through the Rocky Mountains on a classified mission to a remote Army post. But one by one, the passengers are being murdered! Their only hope is John Deakin (Bronson), a mysterious prisoner-in-transit who must fight for his life - and the lives of everyone on the train - as he uncovers a deadly secret that explodes in a torrent of shocking revelations, explosive brawls and blazing gun battles. Directed by Tom Gries (Will Penny).

At the height of the frontier era, a locomotive races through the Rocky Mountains on a classified mission. But one by one, the passengers are murdered! Their only hope is John Deakin (Charles Bronson), a mysterious prisoner-in-transit who must fight for his life, and the lives of everyone on the train.

It was obvious that Warner Bros. was hoping for Hall Pass to be the Farrelly Brothers' long-awaited comeback. Starring Owen Wilson, up-and-comer Jason Sudeikis, Christina Applegate, and The Office's Jenna Fischer, Hall Pass failed to become the box-office juggernaut that some of the siblings' other films became (see also: the massive $176m domestic gross for There's Something About Mary), but was their latest unfairly ignored upon release? Now that Hall Pass is available on Blu-ray and DVD, everyone who passed on the film earlier this year can find out if the Farrelly Brothers' latest is more Dumb and Dumber...or more Stuck on You. Find out what we thought after the jump, folks...

Following a disastrous engagement at a wealthy couple's home (wherein Fred serenades Rick with a song called "Big Mouth Billy Vagina" while a shocked group of onlookers watch on in horror), the Wives decide that they're going to take the advice of their mutual friend, Dr. Lucy (Joy Behar): they will both grant Fred and Rick a week-long "hall pass" that will essentially free them of the restrictions of marriage. If Rick likes staring at every woman that passes and Fred thinks he's still got game after all these years, the Wives figure it'll just be best to let them "get it out of their systems" by getting a week all to themselves, no questions asked.

Blu-ray image quality

Overall, we were impressed with the BD590's Blu-ray image quality, as it passed all of the most important test patterns and program material tests. As usual, the most-dedicated videophiles will still prefer the very slightly better Blu-ray image quality of the Oppo BDP-83, but the vast majority of high-definition movie fans will be perfectly satisfied with the BD590's Blu-ray image quality.

The BD590's performance on test patterns was largely solid. First off, it passed the two most important tests--the film and video resolution tests--that generally indicate the player will have no issues on the vast majority of Blu-ray titles. We did notice that the BD590 slipped a bit on the film resolution test, showing moire for a second, which is something we didn't see on our reference Oppo BDP-83. However, we didn't notice any issues in actual program material.

The LG BD590 also failed the chroma multiburst, as the most detailed section of the test pattern was darker than the rest. However, we couldn't notice any difference resolution or color in actual program material, so it's hard to ascribe much to the BD590 failing this test. Videophiles may also be interested to know that the BD590 does clip whites in "standard" mode, but movie mode passes all "whiter-than-white" signals without a problem.

The BD590 passed all our Blu-ray program material tests, giving it an edge over the competing Sony BDP-S570, which had some trouble with the video-based "Tony Bennett: American Classic" disc. However, the image quality difference between the two players isn't that large, as most movies are film-based and look nearly identical. We thought the difference between the BD590 and the Oppo BDP-83 was even smaller.

The BD590 failed some of our standard test patterns, but we didn't notice major issues in any of our test patterns. It's worth pointing out that though the BD590 did technically pass the 2:2 resolution test, it took much longer than the Oppo for its processing to kick in and eliminate the moire. Again, we'd give it a slight nod over the Sony BDP-S570 for doing a better job handling niche video content, and pure videophiles will prefer the Oppo BDP-83 if DVD image quality is a high priority. be457b7860

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