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Re: General-Purpose Server for Debian Stable



On 2020-10-02 17:16, Linux-Fan wrote:
David Christensen writes:

The Fujitsu might do PCIe/NVMe 4X M.2 or U.2 SSD's with the right adapter card.

Been there, failed at that:

https://www.reichelt.de/pcie-x8-karte-zu-2x-nvme-m-2-key-m-lp-delock-90305-p256917.html?&trstct=pos_3&nbc=1

I added two SSDs, a Crucial P5 SSD 2TB, M.2 NVMe and a Seagate FireCuda 510 SSD 2TB M.2 PCIe (all ordered together) and started the server. Nothing was recognized at the OS level but opening up the 1U case showed a fault indicator LED at the PCIe slot where I had added the new card.

Perhaps a different brand adapter card would give better results.


Rather than a new VM server and a new workstation, perhaps a new workstation with enough memory and fast local working storage would be adequate for both purposes.

Maybe; I will get some prices for comparision... In terms of the base model price I do not expect there to be much difference between the server and the workstation with the same computation power, but if the workstation allows custom HDDs while staying under warranty it might be much cheaper.

Buying a new major brand server/ workstation with all the parts installed at the factory is going to be expensive.


As other readers have mentioned, a small business that builds to order should have better prices and may offer "quiet" systems.


In addition to U.2 drives, Intel makes server systems:

https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/servers/server-chassis-systems.html


And, Intel seems to be related to the Clear Linux distribution:

https://clearlinux.org/


I would expect an Intel server with Intel drives and Clear Linux should be a good combination. Perhaps you should research Clear Linux and/or ask the community.


David


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