MrDudeMan
Lifer
I'm working on getting a refurbished Dell R810. Here are the specs:
The price is $2,382.00 without disks, which will be ~$600 for a total or ~$3,000. That leaves enough in the budget to get a decent UPS, a new 27U rack, and some other odds and ends.
I've decided to leave the API, web, and MySQL servers at Amazon until the new server is configured and stable. At that point, I may be able to get enough money to purchase a second server, which would primarily be for redundancy.
As it stands, we currently have a single server as the DC + FS. When it goes down, obviously everything goes down, but most people are unaffected by that scenario unless it lasts longer than half of a day or so. The nature of the work being done at my office is such that file I/O is infrequent.
I'll probably put Hyper-V on this host as the external IT company I use when things are beyond my abilities is more familiar with that platform. It's not my first choice, but I think I should go with the setup that's most familiar to the people who will potentially need to assist me.
Does this sound reasonable or have I gone astray again?
- 4x Xeon X7560 (8C/16T @ 2.26 GHz) - It's $140 to add a 3rd and 4th CPU, so why not?
- Dell H700 6 GB/s RAID w/ 512 MB Cache
- RAID 10 (no drives - I'll add 6x new WD SE 1 TB drives)
- 64 GB PC3-10600R (they don't have an option for more unfortunately - this is the only problem with the build AFAIK)
- iDRAC6 Enterprise
- Quad Gigabit NICs
- Dell R810 Sliding Rails
- Redundant 1100 Watt PSU
- 5 year warranty
The price is $2,382.00 without disks, which will be ~$600 for a total or ~$3,000. That leaves enough in the budget to get a decent UPS, a new 27U rack, and some other odds and ends.
I've decided to leave the API, web, and MySQL servers at Amazon until the new server is configured and stable. At that point, I may be able to get enough money to purchase a second server, which would primarily be for redundancy.
As it stands, we currently have a single server as the DC + FS. When it goes down, obviously everything goes down, but most people are unaffected by that scenario unless it lasts longer than half of a day or so. The nature of the work being done at my office is such that file I/O is infrequent.
I'll probably put Hyper-V on this host as the external IT company I use when things are beyond my abilities is more familiar with that platform. It's not my first choice, but I think I should go with the setup that's most familiar to the people who will potentially need to assist me.
Does this sound reasonable or have I gone astray again?
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