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    • DashrenderD
      Dashrender @JaredBusch
      last edited by

      @JaredBusch said in Another new server question:

      @Dashrender @notverypunny we have already had this discussion. Do you all have no memory?

      The OS is not open for discussion.

      nope

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • notverypunnyN
        notverypunny @JaredBusch
        last edited by

        @JaredBusch said in Another new server question:

        @Dashrender @notverypunny we have already had this discussion. Do you all have no memory?

        The OS is not open for discussion.

        Memory? Me? Not lately.... My brain seems to be turning into an etch-a-sketch.

        But now that it's been prodded in the right direction I recall seeing the hyper-v discussion a while back.

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

          @siringo said in Another new server question:

          So my question is, would you run the host OS instance and the VM OS instances on the SSDs (or VD1) and the storage for the VMs on spinning media?

          There are VERY VERY VERY few cases where you'd use spinning media, ever. Consider that spinning disks are easily 1% OR LESS than the speed of a cheap laptop hard drive. So when would you want your expensive server to be an itty, bitty fraction the speed of a cheap laptop? Never, basically.

          Spinning drives are ONLY for super low performance, archival storage and special cases like that. Backups, perhaps. But even then, super rarely.

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

            @siringo said in Another new server question:

            From what I've seen it looks like vendors are now supplying servers out of the box with 2 x SSD drives. I've seen Lenovo come with 240GB and Dell with 480GB and you have to ask to not have them, you can't untick them from the configurator.

            Good reason to choose a different vendor. If this one doesn't meet your needs.

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

              @notverypunny said in Another new server question:

              Someone is no doubt going to chime in to say that Hyper V is basically a dead product at this point and suggest KVM, possibly xcp-ng or proxmox.

              We covered that thoroughly in his first post on the subject. He's aware. There's no business or technical decision here, it's purely politics.

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

                @notverypunny said in Another new server question:

                If you can configure ALL SSDs that would be ideal, but I'd try to keep the hypervisor on a separate RAID set from the VMs. Ideally you'd have the VMs' OS disks isolated from their working data as well.

                Only in extreme cases would I bother to separate them. There's just no need for that anymore (since SSDs, really.)

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                  last edited by

                  @Dashrender said in Another new server question:

                  it's not dead, just the stand alone product is dead - why do I say that? Because it's still in the Windows Server 2022 server itself. Sure that means you have to burn a license for the host, but meh, that's the cost of doing business

                  "Just a cost of not doing business well." It's not a good product (relative to what is on the market for free), nor does it have a proper install method (that doesn't require license management - that alone should send it to the rubbish heap.) If someone was "doing business", Hyper-V could never make the list of considerations anymore. So anyone claiming this is a cost of business is completely misunderstanding business and IT at a deeper level.

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

                    @pmoncho said in Another new server question:

                    As the saying goes, "Price is what you pay, value is what you get!" If the business perceives Windows 2022 with Hyper-V Role to be worth the value it provides then it is the lowest cost option.

                    Hyper-V has only negative value. So they'd have to PAY you to use it, to make it "cost less" than the alternatives. That's the issue.

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

                      @pmoncho said in Another new server question:

                      I second @notverypunny with separating the Hypervisor on its own RAID 1.
                      If using Dell servers, BOSS card is one possible option.

                      If that was free and didn't lose us storage, I'd agree. But it costs money and lowers usable storage. Except in extremely special cases where performance or reliability have to be absolutely maximized (and NO situation like that would ever, ever, ever consider Hyper-V, Windows, or making decisions based on politics over business value - so it cannot in any way apply here) I would not do that, even with spinning disks. That's why "OBR10" was something we talked about so much a decade ago. The need to split file systems just isn't a thing today.

                      https://smbitjournal.com/2012/11/one-big-raid-10-a-new-standard-in-server-storage/

                      That was a full decade ago.

                      JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller
                        last edited by

                        So my thought it....

                        Do you HAVE to get Lenovo because of the same politics making you get Hyper-V? Then get it, waste the money, and buy more SSDs for the VMs. Good value doesn't matter, at all. It is what it is, don't put yourself at risk to save money of people who might resent you for it.

                        If you have no real reason to choose Lenovo, skip these unnecessarily complex and inappropriately designed devices. Get something that fits your needs properly and do a single appropriately sized SSD array.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                        • siringoS
                          siringo
                          last edited by

                          Thanks everyone for the thoughts and advice.

                          This server is going into an environment where what is chosen will, eventually, attract criticism, not formerly, but by way of passing comments.

                          I would be better to suggest a server with bells and whistles rather than one that did the job and cost less. But with that said, putting in place an overspec'd server would also be criticised.

                          If I were to select Dell as the vendor, that would be acceptable, Lenovo possibly less so.

                          I'll use the info from this post and go and take another look at what I can get my hands on.

                          I think I'll look for something with all SSDs that gives me 4TB of useable space, that's all I need, with some type of disk redundancy.

                          64GB RAM and a single CPU.

                          It will run Server 2022 with the Hyper-V role and house around 6 VMs.

                          I'm open to suggestions.

                          Thanks again.

                          scottalanmillerS 1 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller @siringo
                            last edited by

                            @siringo said in Another new server question:

                            I would be better to suggest a server with bells and whistles rather than one that did the job and cost less. But with that said, putting in place an overspec'd server would also be criticised.

                            I wouldn't say it is overspecc'd, but impropoerly specc'd. Not quite the same thing.

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

                              @siringo said in Another new server question:

                              I think I'll look for something with all SSDs that gives me 4TB of useable space, that's all I need, with some type of disk redundancy.
                              64GB RAM and a single CPU.
                              It will run Server 2022 with the Hyper-V role and house around 6 VMs.
                              I'm open to suggestions.

                              That all makes sense. With good SSDs, RAID 5 works fine.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • 1
                                1337 @siringo
                                last edited by 1337

                                @siringo said in Another new server question:

                                Thanks everyone for the thoughts and advice.

                                This server is going into an environment where what is chosen will, eventually, attract criticism, not formerly, but by way of passing comments.

                                I would be better to suggest a server with bells and whistles rather than one that did the job and cost less. But with that said, putting in place an overspec'd server would also be criticised.

                                If I were to select Dell as the vendor, that would be acceptable, Lenovo possibly less so.

                                I'll use the info from this post and go and take another look at what I can get my hands on.

                                I think I'll look for something with all SSDs that gives me 4TB of useable space, that's all I need, with some type of disk redundancy.

                                64GB RAM and a single CPU.

                                It will run Server 2022 with the Hyper-V role and house around 6 VMs.

                                I'm open to suggestions.

                                Thanks again.

                                CPU

                                Only needing 64GB of RAM suggest getting an E-2200/2300 series Intel CPU.

                                That's what used to be the called the E3-1200 series. Entry-level servers with Xeon CPUs that are similar to their desktop i7 equivalent. Up to 8 cores, max 128GB RAM (E-2300).

                                You pay for 16 cores with Windows so get what you feel is appropriate for the VMs running. But 6 cores is probably good enough.

                                RAM

                                • 4 x 16GB is probably your best bet
                                • 2 x 32GB will also work fine with 100% performance but might be more expensive

                                SSD

                                4TB options:

                                • 2 x 4TB RAID 1 (lower failure rate with only two drives)
                                • 3 x 2TB RAID 5

                                If you can get a good deal go for that - whatever combination.

                                Dell adds 200-300% on their SSD prices though. IMHO only enterprise customers get a fair price from Dell.

                                SSD price 3.84TB SATA enterprise drive

                                • Manufacturer $600-$700 (Samsung PM893)
                                • Lenovo $1,180 (maybe it's a special offer - I don't know)
                                • Dell $2,172

                                Server

                                Dell

                                • R250 is their entry level range (R240 old model)
                                • R350 has the same CPU range (R340 old model)
                                • R6515 (AMD Epyc) if you need more CPU or fast NVMe SSDs

                                Be aware of backplane configurations. Hotswap ability and backplanes is standard on high-end servers but not on entry level servers.

                                Lenovo SR250 seems to be their entry-level but it has more advanced option compared to Dell's R250.

                                siringoS scottalanmillerS JaredBuschJ 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                • siringoS
                                  siringo @1337
                                  last edited by

                                  @Pete-S Thanks so much for the help, I really do appreciate it.

                                  You've given me some really good start points & info to go for a look and see what I can get.

                                  Thanks again.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @1337
                                    last edited by

                                    @Pete-S said in Another new server question:

                                    @siringo said in Another new server question:

                                    Thanks everyone for the thoughts and advice.

                                    This server is going into an environment where what is chosen will, eventually, attract criticism, not formerly, but by way of passing comments.

                                    I would be better to suggest a server with bells and whistles rather than one that did the job and cost less. But with that said, putting in place an overspec'd server would also be criticised.

                                    If I were to select Dell as the vendor, that would be acceptable, Lenovo possibly less so.

                                    I'll use the info from this post and go and take another look at what I can get my hands on.

                                    I think I'll look for something with all SSDs that gives me 4TB of useable space, that's all I need, with some type of disk redundancy.

                                    64GB RAM and a single CPU.

                                    It will run Server 2022 with the Hyper-V role and house around 6 VMs.

                                    I'm open to suggestions.

                                    Thanks again.

                                    CPU

                                    Only needing 64GB of RAM suggest getting an E-2200/2300 series Intel CPU.

                                    That's what used to be the called the E3-1200 series. Entry-level servers with Xeon CPUs that are similar to their desktop i7 equivalent. Up to 8 cores, max 128GB RAM (E-2300).

                                    You pay for 16 cores with Windows so get what you feel is appropriate for the VMs running. But 6 cores is probably good enough.

                                    RAM

                                    • 4 x 16GB is probably your best bet
                                    • 2 x 32GB will also work fine with 100% performance but might be more expensive

                                    SSD

                                    4TB options:

                                    • 2 x 4TB RAID 1 (lower failure rate with only two drives)
                                    • 3 x 2TB RAID 5

                                    If you can get a good deal go for that - whatever combination.

                                    Dell adds 200-300% on their SSD prices though. IMHO only enterprise customers get a fair price from Dell.

                                    SSD price 3.84TB SATA enterprise drive

                                    • Manufacturer $600-$700 (Samsung PM893)
                                    • Lenovo $1,180 (maybe it's a special offer - I don't know)
                                    • Dell $2,172

                                    Server

                                    Dell

                                    • R250 is their entry level range (R240 old model)
                                    • R350 has the same CPU range (R340 old model)
                                    • R6515 (AMD Epyc) if you need more CPU or fast NVMe SSDs

                                    Be aware of backplane configurations. Hotswap ability and backplanes is standard on high-end servers but not on entry level servers.

                                    Lenovo SR250 seems to be their entry-level but it has more advanced option compared to Dell's R250.

                                    I looked quickly but this all seems solid. I'd concur.

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

                                      @scottalanmiller said in Another new server question:

                                      @Pete-S said in Another new server question:

                                      @siringo said in Another new server question:

                                      Thanks everyone for the thoughts and advice.

                                      This server is going into an environment where what is chosen will, eventually, attract criticism, not formerly, but by way of passing comments.

                                      I would be better to suggest a server with bells and whistles rather than one that did the job and cost less. But with that said, putting in place an overspec'd server would also be criticised.

                                      If I were to select Dell as the vendor, that would be acceptable, Lenovo possibly less so.

                                      I'll use the info from this post and go and take another look at what I can get my hands on.

                                      I think I'll look for something with all SSDs that gives me 4TB of useable space, that's all I need, with some type of disk redundancy.

                                      64GB RAM and a single CPU.

                                      It will run Server 2022 with the Hyper-V role and house around 6 VMs.

                                      I'm open to suggestions.

                                      Thanks again.

                                      CPU

                                      Only needing 64GB of RAM suggest getting an E-2200/2300 series Intel CPU.

                                      That's what used to be the called the E3-1200 series. Entry-level servers with Xeon CPUs that are similar to their desktop i7 equivalent. Up to 8 cores, max 128GB RAM (E-2300).

                                      You pay for 16 cores with Windows so get what you feel is appropriate for the VMs running. But 6 cores is probably good enough.

                                      RAM

                                      • 4 x 16GB is probably your best bet
                                      • 2 x 32GB will also work fine with 100% performance but might be more expensive

                                      SSD

                                      4TB options:

                                      • 2 x 4TB RAID 1 (lower failure rate with only two drives)
                                      • 3 x 2TB RAID 5

                                      If you can get a good deal go for that - whatever combination.

                                      Dell adds 200-300% on their SSD prices though. IMHO only enterprise customers get a fair price from Dell.

                                      SSD price 3.84TB SATA enterprise drive

                                      • Manufacturer $600-$700 (Samsung PM893)
                                      • Lenovo $1,180 (maybe it's a special offer - I don't know)
                                      • Dell $2,172

                                      Server

                                      Dell

                                      • R250 is their entry level range (R240 old model)
                                      • R350 has the same CPU range (R340 old model)
                                      • R6515 (AMD Epyc) if you need more CPU or fast NVMe SSDs

                                      Be aware of backplane configurations. Hotswap ability and backplanes is standard on high-end servers but not on entry level servers.

                                      Lenovo SR250 seems to be their entry-level but it has more advanced option compared to Dell's R250.

                                      I looked quickly but this all seems solid. I'd concur.

                                      The number of RAM modules will depend more on the channels used by the CPUs - assuming you don't want to gimp yourself.

                                      scottalanmillerS 1 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                                        last edited by

                                        @Dashrender said in Another new server question:

                                        @scottalanmiller said in Another new server question:

                                        @Pete-S said in Another new server question:

                                        @siringo said in Another new server question:

                                        Thanks everyone for the thoughts and advice.

                                        This server is going into an environment where what is chosen will, eventually, attract criticism, not formerly, but by way of passing comments.

                                        I would be better to suggest a server with bells and whistles rather than one that did the job and cost less. But with that said, putting in place an overspec'd server would also be criticised.

                                        If I were to select Dell as the vendor, that would be acceptable, Lenovo possibly less so.

                                        I'll use the info from this post and go and take another look at what I can get my hands on.

                                        I think I'll look for something with all SSDs that gives me 4TB of useable space, that's all I need, with some type of disk redundancy.

                                        64GB RAM and a single CPU.

                                        It will run Server 2022 with the Hyper-V role and house around 6 VMs.

                                        I'm open to suggestions.

                                        Thanks again.

                                        CPU

                                        Only needing 64GB of RAM suggest getting an E-2200/2300 series Intel CPU.

                                        That's what used to be the called the E3-1200 series. Entry-level servers with Xeon CPUs that are similar to their desktop i7 equivalent. Up to 8 cores, max 128GB RAM (E-2300).

                                        You pay for 16 cores with Windows so get what you feel is appropriate for the VMs running. But 6 cores is probably good enough.

                                        RAM

                                        • 4 x 16GB is probably your best bet
                                        • 2 x 32GB will also work fine with 100% performance but might be more expensive

                                        SSD

                                        4TB options:

                                        • 2 x 4TB RAID 1 (lower failure rate with only two drives)
                                        • 3 x 2TB RAID 5

                                        If you can get a good deal go for that - whatever combination.

                                        Dell adds 200-300% on their SSD prices though. IMHO only enterprise customers get a fair price from Dell.

                                        SSD price 3.84TB SATA enterprise drive

                                        • Manufacturer $600-$700 (Samsung PM893)
                                        • Lenovo $1,180 (maybe it's a special offer - I don't know)
                                        • Dell $2,172

                                        Server

                                        Dell

                                        • R250 is their entry level range (R240 old model)
                                        • R350 has the same CPU range (R340 old model)
                                        • R6515 (AMD Epyc) if you need more CPU or fast NVMe SSDs

                                        Be aware of backplane configurations. Hotswap ability and backplanes is standard on high-end servers but not on entry level servers.

                                        Lenovo SR250 seems to be their entry-level but it has more advanced option compared to Dell's R250.

                                        I looked quickly but this all seems solid. I'd concur.

                                        The number of RAM modules will depend more on the channels used by the CPUs - assuming you don't want to gimp yourself.

                                        For sure.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • JaredBuschJ
                                          JaredBusch @scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by JaredBusch

                                          @scottalanmiller said in Another new server question:

                                          If that was free and didn't lose us storage, I'd agree. But it costs money and lowers usable storage.

                                          Dell & HP boxes have a daughter card. It will, in no way affect the RAID controller storage amount. Not free, but i very much love having the mirrored SSD/NVMe on the daughter card for the Hypervisor.

                                          Then the regular storage on the RAID controller.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                          • JaredBuschJ
                                            JaredBusch @1337
                                            last edited by

                                            @Pete-S said in Another new server question:

                                            R250 is their entry level range (R240 old model)
                                            R350 has the same CPU range (R340 old model)
                                            R6515 (AMD Epyc) if you need more CPU or fast NVMe SSDs

                                            I would only use the R350, assuming he does not need to step up to beyond a basic server.

                                            The R250 has basically no good features.

                                            The R350 has an actual PERC in it, getting you things like blind swap functionality for a failed drive.
                                            e0ffd1a9-a84e-40b2-9004-6a21313451ef-image.png

                                            I would get the 8 core processor.
                                            531bad7d-ee82-41d5-a6c2-312d1707c79c-image.png

                                            A pair of 32GB RAM sticks to meet your requirements.
                                            513e63bf-5538-4485-b28a-684458f5c209-image.png

                                            Choose the PERC.
                                            e571f049-1e9b-449d-a122-7e0f5984d337-image.png

                                            Just picked 2x 4TB drives, find your own as @Pete-S noted.
                                            c4f195a5-978d-4f14-8786-a7a904af9ec7-image.png

                                            As I said previously, I like the BOSS card for the Hypervisor.
                                            7d7951e7-b41a-487a-8f72-8c410df784e3-image.png

                                            iDRAC Enterprise, unless Dell has changed it to allow remote screen on Basic.
                                            c809dc01-ba34-404d-b981-265642d355bd-image.png

                                            Redundant powersupply.
                                            3b881e7a-1611-4ee9-9e56-754e60d97bc8-image.png

                                            Dell price is $11k, but $7k of that is those two drives.
                                            8b1837e5-0301-48fb-95c4-cd3356dc3976-image.png

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