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    What is a Blade Server

    IT Discussion
    servers blade
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    • Bob BeattyB
      Bob Beatty
      last edited by

      My experience with Blade Servers (CISCO UCS B200) is a pleasant one. For the first time in my career, I watched a vendor setup a Server, I didn't have anything to do with it. The enclosure was rack mounted with a FCOE backbone providing 40gb network capability (connections to EMC SAN and dual F5 BIGIP appliances).

      This was setup at a Data Center, and was the perfect fit for the type of business. We had ESXi Enterprise licensing so the 5 hosts were in FA and DRS Cluster with a single EMC SAN for shared storage. The management of the blade server was quite a learning curve with this product, but once I had some time with it, I understood how to manage it properly. What I loved most about it was the simplicity of how it worked for our business and how easy it was to expand by adding a new blade. There were no local hard drives to worry about, just an internal thumb drive (or SSD option if you choose) to house the Hyper Visor. V-motion and fail-over was immediate.

      What they say: Once you go blade, you never go back....

      scottalanmillerS 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @Bob Beatty
        last edited by

        @Bob-Beatty said:

        My experience with Blade Servers (CISCO UCS B200) is a pleasant one. For the first time in my career, I watched a vendor setup a Server, I didn't have anything to do with it. The enclosure was rack mounted with a FCOE backbone providing 40gb network capability (connections to EMC SAN and dual F5 BIGIP appliances).

        I've worked with those some. The Cisco UCS blades that we used cost more than their Dell rackmount competitors, took far more IT support to manage due to their extra complexity and underperformed the rackmounts dramatically. The UCS enclosures are so complex that they actually offer a certification in just that!

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        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @Bob Beatty
          last edited by

          @Bob-Beatty said:

          What I loved most about it was the simplicity of how it worked for our business and how easy it was to expand by adding a new blade. There were no local hard drives to worry about, just an internal thumb drive (or SSD option if you choose) to house the Hyper Visor. V-motion and fail-over was immediate.

          ALL of those features are standard on every enterprise rackmount server. None of that is unique to blades. The blades only add the complexity, not the features that make them seem valuable.

          J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Bob BeattyB
            Bob Beatty
            last edited by

            Whatever - my blade server is better than yours.

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

              @Bob-Beatty said:

              What they say: Once you go blade, you never go back....

              I've actually never once worked with a shop that tried blades and didn't go back. Running side by side with rackmounts over a long period of time and multiple vendors the experience was always the same: increased risk, more problems from all of the complexity, extra training and dependence on the vendors, higher cost and lower performance. And I worked with them in shops that bought servers by the thousands and were able to hit the kind of scale that blades are supposedly built for and they couldn't find a way to get them to break even on cost and maintenance. Once anything would go wrong with them the complexity would rear its ugly head and little issues would turn into big ones. Networking, especially, tends to be problematic. And the firmware issues... oh the firmware issues.

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              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @Bob Beatty
                last edited by

                @Bob-Beatty said:

                Whatever - my blade server is better than yours.

                Same one, UCS B200 🙂

                The UCS were actually the worst. HP was the best, but still bad enough to throw them out, which is what we did.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • Bob BeattyB
                  Bob Beatty
                  last edited by

                  You must have had lemons. Never had an issue with mine and the firmware updates were a piece of cake. But I only managed one - if I had several I would have hated it.

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

                    @Bob-Beatty said:

                    You must have had lemons. Never had an issue with mine and the firmware updates were a piece of cake. But I only managed one - if I had several I would have hated it.

                    It was always "as designed." Just lots of problems with the extra blade complexity. Whole layers of unnecessary management, oversight, things to fail, things to address. All unnecessary. Blades only add complexity, they don't make anything easier. There is just more firmware to deal with, more component interactions, more things that mess with each other. Even if they work flawlessly, they, at best, mimic a normal server. Any deviation and they get worse.

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                    • J
                      Jason Banned @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by Jason

                      @scottalanmiller said:

                      @Bob-Beatty said:

                      What I loved most about it was the simplicity of how it worked for our business and how easy it was to expand by adding a new blade. There were no local hard drives to worry about, just an internal thumb drive (or SSD option if you choose) to house the Hyper Visor. V-motion and fail-over was immediate.

                      ALL of those features are standard on every enterprise rackmount server. None of that is unique to blades. The blades only add the complexity, not the features that make them seem valuable.

                      Dell has the redundant SD cards and internal usb port for ESXi long before UCS had them.

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

                        @Jason said:

                        Dell has the redundant SD cards and internal usb port for ESXi long before UCS had them.

                        HP too. We were doing that on the G5.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • J
                          Jason Banned
                          last edited by

                          I've worked with UCS before. There okay.

                          We have a ton of datacenter space here so we can but a butt load of Dell 1U servers and pack them with 256GB+ of ram and be better of that blades and not locked it.

                          I would like to pick up a used blade maybe a UCS for home though just because I don't have much space.

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                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller
                            last edited by

                            The UCS weren't "bad", only bad in comparison to the competition. The problem was that they never exceeded the minimum bar in any area. At best they met it. But as they fell below it at other times, they just never lived up to the expectations for a minimal server. Nothing about them was ever better than easier options and sometimes worse. That's all it takes to be a "never buy", lacking any compelling reason to be considered.

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                            • Bob BeattyB
                              Bob Beatty
                              last edited by

                              I don't have anything to compare them too - except for rack servers. I thought it was pretty awesome- guess I was missing out on the real fun.

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

                                @Bob-Beatty said:

                                I don't have anything to compare them too - except for rack servers. I thought it was pretty awesome- guess I was missing out on the real fun.

                                I think that blade sales guys do a good job of making standard features that people often have not used in the past sound like they are cool and new and somehow associated with blades so put in a lot of effort pushing those features.

                                Literally the only thing that makes them blades is the lack of discrete electrical components - it's purely a tradeoff of risk for buying fewer parts. Risk vs. density. Any feature beyond that would exist in both worlds.

                                J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • J
                                  Jason Banned @scottalanmiller
                                  last edited by Jason

                                  Any feature beyond that would exist in both worlds.

                                  Size is pretty much the only benefit. And possibly power usage (a few big PSUs are more efficient than lots of small ones - if they are designed well.) but the real world impact of either is pretty much non-tangible.

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

                                    @Jason said:

                                    Any feature beyond that would exist in both worlds.

                                    Size is pretty much the only benefit. And possibly power usage (a few big PSUs are more efficient than lots of small ones - if they are designed well.) but the real world impact of either is pretty much non-tangible.

                                    Yeah, all about density. Although few datacenters are designed in such a way to leverage those aspects.

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                                    • StrongBadS
                                      StrongBad
                                      last edited by

                                      Blades seem to make you give up a lot of flexibility. With an old fashioned server I can run them diskless today and add disks tomorrow if the way that I want to use them changes. But if I have a blade, I'm stuck.

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