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New Linux system 4x Octal Core Xeon's 256GB RAM
Thought some of you might find this interesting (and some might not)
Just built a new workhorse server. Basic specs are below.
And as a bonus, a quick set of pictures from the setup.
Dell R910
4x X7650 2.26GHz 8-core Xeon CPU's w/ HT (64 threads)
256GB ECC/REG RAM'
3x 146GB 15k SAS 2.5" hdd's
45x 1TB SAS 3.5" drives
Supermicro SAS2 JBOD enclosure (24 drives in front, 21 drives in the back)
2x LSI 9280DE SAS2 RAID controllers
CentOS 5.5 x64
Simpleviewer pics of new server
Last edited by James; 07-20-2010 at 05:26 PM.
Crusader for the 64-bit Era.
New Rule: 2GB per core, minimum.
Intel i7-9700K | Asrock Z390 Phantom Gaming ITX | Samsung 970 Evo 2TB SSD
64GB DDR4-2666 Samsung | EVGA RTX 2070 Black edition
Fractal Arc Midi |Seasonic X650 PSU | Klipsch ProMedia 5.1 Ultra | Windows 10 Pro x64
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That's pretty cool, James. What apps is it going to run? One large database?
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Great White Shark
Ivy i5-3570K|ASRock Z77E-ITX|Bitfenix Prodigy
16 GB Corsair Vengeance DDR3-1600|Antec TruePower Trio 550W
MSI R6850 PE/OC (860/1100)
Ivy i7-3770|Intel DZ68DB|ThermalTake V9 BlacX Edition
32 GB G.Skill Ares DDR3-1866|Corsair AX850
Zotac 1060 Mini 6GB|Dragonfly 1.5 USB DAC
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Sort of. It's a data processing box. Large data sets in excess of 100GB apiece. Some larger than 500GB. Some smaller ones too. It's made to be "the" processing box. I.e. we can run multiple jobs on it without slow downs.
So it needs not only the RAM and CPU's, but also fast disk access. As it stands right now, the arrays are close to pushing 1GB/s. Having some issues with write caching with Linux though (my thread in the OS forum).
Overall I'm pretty happy with the box, but I haven't fully stress tested it yet.
Last edited by James; 07-21-2010 at 09:15 AM.
Crusader for the 64-bit Era.
New Rule: 2GB per core, minimum.
Intel i7-9700K | Asrock Z390 Phantom Gaming ITX | Samsung 970 Evo 2TB SSD
64GB DDR4-2666 Samsung | EVGA RTX 2070 Black edition
Fractal Arc Midi |Seasonic X650 PSU | Klipsch ProMedia 5.1 Ultra | Windows 10 Pro x64
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Old School OCer
Sweet, but can you overclock it
The Money Trap = Intel i7 930 | Corsair H70 | ASUS P6X58D-E | 3 x 2GB G.Skill DDR3 2000 6-9-6-24 | EVGA GTX 580 DS SC | OCZ Vertex 2 90GB SSD | WD VelociRaptor | Klipsch ProMedia | Cooler Master HAF 932 | Antec TPQ-1200W | Dell U2711 2560 x 1440 27" | Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit | APC RS1500
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Snarky Quorums
They really need to make RAM smaller, that takes up WAY too much space.
There is the theory of the moebius. A twist in the fabric of space where time becomes a loop.
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Hammerhead Shark
 Originally Posted by OS-Wiz
Sweet, but can you overclock it 
You don't need to .
Seriously though, that is one loaded box.
Antec Three Hundred Two | Intel DP67BA | Intel 2600k | Corsair CWCH60 | CORSAIR Vengeance 16GB (PC3-12800) | PNY GTX 580 | Samsung 830 256GB SSD | WD RE4 2TB (WD2002FYPS) | Asus Xonar DG Sound | LG Blu-Ray Burner | Windows 7 Ultimate x64
Work:
Macbook Pro 15" Retina Display | 8GB Ram | 256GB SSD | Mac OS 10.8
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 Originally Posted by MrDigital
They really need to make RAM smaller, that takes up WAY too much space.
No doubt! Cheaper would be nice too. The box is rated at 1TB RAM capacity maximum (64 x 16GB DIMMs). If you wanted to actually get the 1TB of RAM, it would have cost over $100,000 just for RAM.
Crusader for the 64-bit Era.
New Rule: 2GB per core, minimum.
Intel i7-9700K | Asrock Z390 Phantom Gaming ITX | Samsung 970 Evo 2TB SSD
64GB DDR4-2666 Samsung | EVGA RTX 2070 Black edition
Fractal Arc Midi |Seasonic X650 PSU | Klipsch ProMedia 5.1 Ultra | Windows 10 Pro x64
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I remember that mainframe memory cost about $100k per megabyte in 1980.
It was a big purchase for my "home" computer I had in a rented garage.
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Quick, install Quake before they start using it for productive applications!
<--Jealous.
Insert ancient Sharky sig here
[
Prince Vindir of the OC Crusaders
Holding Boundaries and Breaking Barriers
]
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Mako Shark
Anyway you can run Cinema 4D on that beast? I saw it run on an eight socket Nehalem-EX system, I've never seen it run on a four socket.
Gotta love Supermicro. I was pretty disappointed with their range of Boxboro-EX systems. They're all four-sockets with only four DIMMs per socket. They need to offer some two and four socket fat memory systems (256GB and 512GB) and maybe an eight socket system too. I suppose you can do 512GB with their systems, but it requires that you use hyper-expensive 16GB DIMMs. Even in a system that expensive, I'm guessing most people would much rather use the much less expensive and more available 8GB DIMMs.
Maybe they will, they just brought out SBB and new Itanium systems, so maybe they're just the first rollout.
What RAID level are you running on the 1TB drives? Are they broken down into multiple arrays?
EDIT. I really like the idea of placing the DIMM slots on separate cards. I'm guessing this allows you to jam more slots in less board space. Apple needs to return to this with it's Mac Pro, four DIMM slots per CPU just isn't enough in a burly two socket workstation.
Last edited by Nater; 07-29-2010 at 09:17 PM.
Q6600 @ 3.6GHz (Tuniq Tower 120) - DFI Lanparty LT P35-T2R - 8GB Corsair DDR2-800 - eVGA GTX 275 SC - SoundBlaster X-Fi - Western Digital VelociRaptor 300GB - Seagate 7200.10 750GB (2) - Western Digital 1.5TB Green (2) - Western Digital 2TB Green - WINDy-Soldam MT-Pro 1700 - Antec Signature 850W- HP LP2475W (H-IPS) - Samsung 204B (TN) - Alienware Ozma 7 Headphones - Windows 7 Ultimate
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We are running RAID6 on the 1TB drives. 1 array of 24 drives, 1 array of 21 drives.
Crusader for the 64-bit Era.
New Rule: 2GB per core, minimum.
Intel i7-9700K | Asrock Z390 Phantom Gaming ITX | Samsung 970 Evo 2TB SSD
64GB DDR4-2666 Samsung | EVGA RTX 2070 Black edition
Fractal Arc Midi |Seasonic X650 PSU | Klipsch ProMedia 5.1 Ultra | Windows 10 Pro x64
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Old School OCer
For those that haven't used RAID 6:
"RAID 6 extends RAID 5 by adding an additional parity block; thus it uses block-level striping with two parity blocks distributed across all member disks.
RAID 6 does not have a performance penalty for read operations, but it does have a performance penalty on write operations because of the overhead associated with parity calculations.
The definition of RAID 6 is: "Any form of RAID that can continue to execute read and write requests to all of a RAID array's virtual disks in the presence of any two concurrent disk failures."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_RAID_levels
The Money Trap = Intel i7 930 | Corsair H70 | ASUS P6X58D-E | 3 x 2GB G.Skill DDR3 2000 6-9-6-24 | EVGA GTX 580 DS SC | OCZ Vertex 2 90GB SSD | WD VelociRaptor | Klipsch ProMedia | Cooler Master HAF 932 | Antec TPQ-1200W | Dell U2711 2560 x 1440 27" | Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit | APC RS1500
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