- Joined
- May 17, 2014
- Messages
- 3,611
Was looking for my next NAS server, parts or complete system. Because of Mr. Meltdown and the ever elusive Ms. Spectre, I've removed a certain manufacturer off my approved CPU list. (Even though they are the Worlds Leader, in CPU Security Flaws that is.) So, looking at AMD options, some of the embedded Epyc CPUs seemed interesting. ASRock Rack makes a few boards, but only one really meets my needs, EPYC3451D4I2-2T.
www.asrockrack.com
My needs:
The price is pretty high for the EPYC3451D4I2-2T, so I wish they sold it with the Epyc 3351. Both the 3451 & 3351 have the same over-all features, with the 3351 having fewer cores. (The lower end embedded Epyc CPUs don't include as many SATA ports.) In fact, the 3451 has way too many CPU cores for my needs. I may experiment on disabling some cores, just to see if that keeps things cooler.
The case I am looking at is;
Anyone else see AMD server boards for NAS use?
While I might like a Threadripper or non-embedded Epyc, those are over-kill. Even the Epyc 3451 is over-kill, but some of the Ryzen boards are not qualified for ECC. And those that are, don't seem to be setup for NAS use.
ASRock Rack > EPYC3451D4I2-2T
My needs:
- >5 years of life, (so a real server board, with ECC)
- 10-12 SATA, (or SAS)
- 2.5/5Gbps Ethernet, (as this is more likely than full 10Gbps at home, for me)
- ECC memory
- >= 32GB of memory capacity
- IPMI, (just too dang useful)
- CPU with ECC support
- 4 DIMM slots, up to 128GB of memory, (RDIMM), or 64GB U-DIMM
- 16 lane PCIe 3.0 slot
- 14 SATA
- M.2 NVMe slot
- Standard IPMI with Aspeed AST2500 & dedicated network
- Intel X710-AT2: 2 RJ45 (100M & 1/2.5/5/10Gbps) Ethernet
The price is pretty high for the EPYC3451D4I2-2T, so I wish they sold it with the Epyc 3351. Both the 3451 & 3351 have the same over-all features, with the 3351 having fewer cores. (The lower end embedded Epyc CPUs don't include as many SATA ports.) In fact, the 3451 has way too many CPU cores for my needs. I may experiment on disabling some cores, just to see if that keeps things cooler.
The case I am looking at is;
Anyone else see AMD server boards for NAS use?
While I might like a Threadripper or non-embedded Epyc, those are over-kill. Even the Epyc 3451 is over-kill, but some of the Ryzen boards are not qualified for ECC. And those that are, don't seem to be setup for NAS use.
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