Subject: Re: e450 as a modern server
To: None <port-sparc64@NetBSD.org>
From: Dave McGuire <mcguire@neurotica.com>
List: port-sparc64
Date: 10/31/2006 00:17:53
On Oct 30, 2006, at 10:13 PM, Greg Earle wrote:
>>> its sad, but you're entirely right. x86 won.
>>
>> ...in some areas, like desktops. Real server work, however, is
>> typically done on real computers. You just don't see very many
>> serious datacenters full of PCs. Some, sure...complete with a
>> constant revolving-door of repair parts, etc. But for the most
>> part, that world is actually populated by UltraSPARCs, RS/6000s,
>> and big HPs.
>
> Hah. Get out much? Apparently not. Or did this post bubble up
> from 5 years ago?
Nope, I don't get out much; I work from home because my uptime
allows me to. I manage four datacenters now, one with well over a
thousand machines in it, and have been doing so for a good long
time. The closest is about 1100 miles away, I've seen it twice this
year.
YOUR datacenter may be different. See below.
> I work at a U.S. Government Lab, and trust me, our 'serious
> datacenter' is
> full of "PCs". 1U, 2U, even 3U configurations. Giant RAID boxes with
> multiple terabytes. We just installed a 2U 7.5TB box with quad
> Xeon 5160's
> the other day. Since the CPUs are all Hyperthreaded, it looks to
> the OS
> (Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4, if you had to ask) like 8 CPUs. It
> screams.
> While we also still have some Suns (mostly V240's and V210's), the
> vast
> majority of our in-house systems are now RHEL 3 and RHEL 4 x86
> boxes. It's
> just far more cost-effective and bigger-bang-for-the-buck than Suns
> are.
> You can't fight City Hall ...
Well, if "bang for the buck" doesn't include downtime or
throughput, I guess not. I learned some time ago that I couldn't
fight City Hall...when I realized that was an industry which believes
glossy Dell ads in business magazines over the word of experienced
professionals, I let them go twist in the wind of downtime of
Microsoft toys, throwing good money after bad, and left for greener
pastures.
Did I say "there are no datacenters in the world that are full of
PCs"? No, I didn't. But I assure you, where throughput and uptime
are important considerations...such datacenters are the exception,
rather than the rule.
> Sun hardware might be pretty solid and good for us home users
> (heck, my e-mail
> server is an 11-year-old SPARCserver 20, which someday will be
> replaced by
> my Ultra 60 when/if I can ever find a couple of dreary days to
> devote to
> the task - kinda hard to come by when you live in Southern
> California),
> but let's get real here - out in the real world where I live, "x86
> won".
*ROFL* That's pathetic. I have some standards regarding who I'll
work for...perhaps you should too.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
Cape Coral, FL