

- #Hp dl360 g6 memory population rules pro#
- #Hp dl360 g6 memory population rules software#
- #Hp dl360 g6 memory population rules Pc#
- #Hp dl360 g6 memory population rules windows#
PSU: Fractal ION 2+ 650WLike my post (or find it helpful)?. VM/Docker host, using ESXi and running pfSense alongside FreeNAS (separate Dual Intel NIC added, dedicated to the pfSense VM)Ģx Intel NUCs running TrueNAS SCALE 22.02-RC.1.2ĬASE: Fractal Node 304 running TrueNAS SCALE 22.02-RC.1.2ĬPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E3-1240L v5 2.10GHz NIC: Intel EXPI9402PTBLK Pro, Dual-Gigabit Adapter (plus the 2 onboard Intel NICs, 1x 210, 1x 218)

#Hp dl360 g6 memory population rules pro#
Corsair Commander Pro to control the fans (see script and code)ĬPU FAN: 1xCorsair H60 CPU Radiator - Front OS: 1 x Kingston UV400 120GB SSD - boot driveįANS: 3xFractal R3 120mm - 3 Front, 1 Rear. SSD: 4 x Samsung 850 EVO Basic (500GB, 2.5") - VMs/Jails
#Hp dl360 g6 memory population rules Pc#
2 xNoctua NF-A8 PWM Premium 80mm PC Computer Case Fan.4 x Kingston Value RAM (32GB, DDR4-2400, ECC RDIMM 288).
#Hp dl360 g6 memory population rules software#
G7 Server HP D元60 G7 Server overview The Avaya Common Servers category includes the HP ProLiant D元60 G7 1U server that supports several Avaya software solutions, some requiring additional hardware and memory requirements.

On a D元80 it's easy, 16x 15k drives, 18 DIMM's, two CPU's, and 3 PCIe cards will get you to the edge of 750 for max draw.Aiming to mostly replicate the build from (with some mods, hopefully around about as good as that link) Do you just go to 300GB pairs for the boot drive?Īdd two more 15k drives and use 10Gbit CNA's and you probably need the 750's.
#Hp dl360 g6 memory population rules windows#
Side question: when you guys have a Windows server with massive gobs of RAM (this box has 60GB), what do you do with virtual memory/C: drive? It is going to want at least 60GB of my 130~GB system mirror for pagefile. I've only had the G5 servers until now, and on the G5s IIRC the 360s and 380s had different PSUs. I sat there scratching my head for ages trying to figure out why they even sell the 750s and 1200W units, then I realized that the D元60s are now sharing supplies with the D元80 (which can hold a lot more disk, for one). and it still only hit 420W and said that the 460W PSU was fine. I then built up an absolutely loaded 360 - 4x 15k drives, 18 sticks of 8G reg ECC, dual 6-core xeons at fastest spec they allowed, 2x dual 8G FC cards. Yeah, when I'm configuring what we have, it is showing redundant with 2x460s. Do the 460W supplies crap easy if you fill up a box? I'm not going to use both PCIe slots (yet), but I probably will fill the RAM up with 4G sticks and may have 4 drives on some machines. Looking for field experience from you guys, who I trust. HP's Power Advisor (pretty nice tool if you've never used it) begs to differ - even if I fully load a machine with the fastest 6-core Xeons, 8G RAM sticks in all 18 slots, 4x 15K disks, and 2x PCIe 8GB FC cards (which belch heat if their 2GB cousins are any indication), the Power Advisor only comes out around 420W for the whole machine, which is split evenly across both PSUs if your power sources are stable. My CDW rep implied/suggested that if you have the server "loaded up" the 460W units would die more frequently due to the heat/load, and that the 750W was "safer" if you have a lot in the box. They all tend to ship with a 460W PSU (or a pair). We're starting to replace hardware and I've been getting some of the new G6 and G7 D元60s.
