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    • 1
      1337
      last edited by

      At some point old tech just becomes too old.

      R710 for instance doesn't have pcie 3.0, doesn't have sata 3 on the cpu, doesn't have aes-ni instructions (big deal for encryption) and it's power hungry.

      I suggesting R720 with Ivy Bridge CPUs, E5-2600 v2, as the oldest tech that is still decent today.

      Then you have 22nm technology, 12 core CPUs, pcie 3.0 (means you have the I/O capacity for fast raid cards, pci based flash etc). You have sata3 on the cpu so you can use sata ssd to it's full potential. You're also on the last generation of CPUs that uses ddr3 RAM so you can load up the server with lots of GB for a modest price.

      notverypunnyN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • notverypunnyN
        notverypunny @1337
        last edited by

        @Pete-S said in HyperVisor:

        At some point old tech just becomes too old.

        R710 for instance doesn't have pcie 3.0, doesn't have sata 3 on the cpu, doesn't have aes-ni instructions (big deal for encryption) and it's power hungry.

        I suggesting R720 with Ivy Bridge CPUs, E5-2600 v2, as the oldest tech that is still decent today.

        Then you have 22nm technology, 12 core CPUs, pcie 3.0 (means you have the I/O capacity for fast raid cards, pci based flash etc). You have sata3 on the cpu so you can use sata ssd to it's full potential. You're also on the last generation of CPUs that uses ddr3 RAM so you can load up the server with lots of GB for a modest price.

        The performance jump from DDR3 to DDR4 might make it worth it for the 730. Depends on your use-case / workloads.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @Jimmy9008
          last edited by

          @Jimmy9008 said in HyperVisor:

          Interesting video. Thanks for that. Where do you get the rough number of nines figures from for various kit?

          Just rough calcs of what true HA is likely to do when you do "almost certain success of failover" combined with the failure rates assuming that their fail events are unrelated.

          It's all a little grey because there are loose numbers in there like the node recovery time. But say it is 6 hours on average. Take six nines and multiple that by like 1500, you start getting eight or nine nines.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @notverypunny
            last edited by

            @notverypunny said in HyperVisor:

            @Pete-S said in HyperVisor:

            @Dashrender said in HyperVisor:

            Assuming Moore's law holds, 7 years newer equipment, you're looking at 6 to 8 times faster gear.

            It doesn't hold unfortunately.

            Per core it's 15-20% faster per generation when there is a major technology shift. A lot less otherwise.

            So R710 is Nehalem Xeons.

            We have the following major generations:

            • R710 - Nehalem architecture, Xeon 5500 series, on 45 nm
            • R720 - Sandy Bridge architecture, Xeon E5-2600 v1, on 32nm - PCIe 3.0 introduced on E5-2600 v2 series.
            • R730 - Haswell architecture, Xeon E5-2600 v3, on 22nm - DDR4 RAM introduced
            • R740 - Skylake architecture, Xeon Scalable, on 14nm

            Expect cores on a R740 to be roughly 70% faster than R710 at the same GHz. It's a lot but not as much as you would think. Especially since clock speeds have gone down and core count has gone up.

            We've got a mix of 720 and 730 units in production and the 730s deal with the spectre / meltdown garbage much better than the 720s.

            I've heard from multiple places that there is a solid leap in the 3 series procs over the older ones.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • mroth911M
              mroth911
              last edited by

              this is my current scale setup.

              Screen Shot 2020-01-21 at 2.20.41 PM.png

              DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • DustinB3403D
                DustinB3403 @mroth911
                last edited by

                @mroth911 said in HyperVisor:

                this is my current scale setup.

                Screen Shot 2020-01-21 at 2.20.41 PM.png

                Is your goal to remove your Scale solution and implement something built in house?

                I feel like we've had this conversation here on ML in the past and you were wanting to setup a HA fleet for production rented VM space.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • mroth911M
                  mroth911
                  last edited by

                  No I don't want to replace scale. I just want to build something for testing. And or use if for my own in house stuff. The production is staying on scale.

                  DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • DustinB3403D
                    DustinB3403 @mroth911
                    last edited by

                    @mroth911 said in HyperVisor:

                    I just want to build something for testing

                    Okay, thank you for the clarification. To ask a followup, is a lab worth spending a few additional thousand on for SSD arrays? Or spending even more for more modern equipment?

                    I personally would just use what I had unless there was an obvious reason that I had to spend the money.

                    DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • DashrenderD
                      Dashrender @DustinB3403
                      last edited by

                      @DustinB3403 said in HyperVisor:

                      @mroth911 said in HyperVisor:

                      I just want to build something for testing

                      Okay, thank you for the clarification. To ask a followup, is a lab worth spending a few additional thousand on for SSD arrays? Or spending even more for more modern equipment?

                      I personally would just use what I had unless there was an obvious reason that I had to spend the money.

                      Alone these lines - I too am trying to understand the need for a HA or semi HA setup for a lab? That's a lot of build out for something that's just lab.

                      If the idea is to mirror production - well, this won't qualify for that either - you'd need another Scale so you can compare mostly apples to apples.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • mroth911M
                        mroth911
                        last edited by

                        @DustinB3403 true.. however I am trying to learn the technology . The problem I am have is trying to learn. Thats how Scale and all these other companies come in business. they take an idea and make it better.

                        I know everyone has they're opinions about money and what not. But at the same time... this is what fuels my desire in the tech industry. Is to learn new tech and keep evolving over time. Seeing what other best practices are and so forth and so on.

                        So it might look at a costly investment etc, and a lot of time wasted but that is your opinion. Its just like collection cars. this not only how I make money but a hobby for me too.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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