Reddit mentions: The best computer servers

We found 143 Reddit comments discussing the best computer servers. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 61 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

4. Supermicro SuperServer E200-8D - Mini-1U - Xeon D-1528 1.9 GHz - 0 MB - 0 G

    Features:
  • The product is manufactured in China
  • Memory Voltage:1.2 V
Supermicro SuperServer E200-8D - Mini-1U - Xeon D-1528 1.9 GHz - 0 MB - 0 G
Specs:
ColorBlack
Height10.87 Inches
Length5.59 Inches
Weight2.9982867632 Pounds
Width15 Inches
Release dateFebruary 2019
Number of items1
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12. HP ProLiant G7 N54L 2.2GHz 2-core 1P 4GB-U 150W PS EU MicroServer

HP ProLiant G7 N54L 2.2GHz 2-core 1P 4GB-U 150W PS EU MicroServer
Specs:
Height15.74 Inches
Length12.4 Inches
Weight16.9976404002 Pounds
Width14.75 Inches
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🎓 Reddit experts on computer servers

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where computer servers are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
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Top Reddit comments about Computer Servers:

u/TUBBB · 2 pointsr/freenas

>My main idea was to create a nas that would be able to transcode my media with plex and i could access outside my network and act as a file server and backups for my laptop

Backing up data is the one thing where you'd benefit from ZFS but everything else can be done as well and perhaps better with Linux.

>but dont fully understand all thier is to freenas

The linked comment in my previous post is a good place to start (especially Cyberjock's Guide), as are the links provided by u/dxm765... I second what he said about asking further questions.

>but looking around everyone always recommends it

FreeNAS is great at what it does but there are certain people who think it's the answer to every NAS / Server question... it isn't. There's also a tendency to not mention certain limitations in the same way you'd say a Ferrari is a fantastic car without mentioning the servicing costs.

>so i just figured my build would be ok since it seems like a good htpc but was i way off. Im not competely set on freenas and if you could suggest other os and programs i could use that would be great apperciate the help.

Am I right to assume that you're not a Linux user?

If that's correct, I'd recommend Ubuntu as it's very user friendly and has the largest community and therefore the largest resource for troubleshooting problems and learning. I'm also partial to the Gnome desktop environment with a few extensions. I can tell you more about what a desktop environment and Gnome extensions are and which extensions I use if you're interested.

As for what applications to use, that depends on what you want to be able to do. You might like to checkout Atomic Toolkit. That should cover pretty much everything you'll need for a HTPC server apart from secure WAN access. There is more than one way to skin the cat though. You could dockerise your server (use a docker image for each application) or you could install everything manually... it all depends on what you want to be able to do.

One thing that might be worth considering is looking for a cashback deal on either a Dell T20 or a Lenovo TS140 (which is known for being very quiet). They're both home/small business servers and they're often on sale. I've actually seen the TS140 with a Xeon e3 1226-v3 being sold for less than the RRP of the processor alone. The reason I mention this is that they're designed for 24/7 as a server.

Here's a TS140 with 4GB of RAM and an i3 4150, which is beefy enough for two simultaneous 1080p transcodes. You'd need to add some RAM and a HDD (as it doesn't come with storage) but for $219, it's certainly worth considering.

[EDIT] Same model of TS140 on offer for $189 - http://www.ebay.com/itm/Lenovo-ThinkServer-TS140-70A40037UX-4U-Tower-Server-Intel-Core-i3-4150-3-5Ghz-/291591988601?_trkparms=5373%3A0%7C5374%3AFeatured

u/spx404 · 1 pointr/HomeServer

I highly recommend unRAID for an OS. It can do everything you asked (not sure about the email portion) and more! It has a free trial you can use. I played with the free trial for about 10 minutes and knew that I had to have it.

As far as hardware, I'm sure most will recommend something like this from from Amazon. But personally, I like traditional servers, ebay is your best bet for prebuilt goodness, like a Dell R710. But, I digress, I'll let other recommend hardware because I always go over board, you know, for expandability because, I don't know what I may be into in the future.

u/JoeB- · 2 pointsr/HomeServer

It really depends on what you want to do now and potentially later. You can buy...

  1. an external HDD like the WD 10TB My Book Desktop External Hard Drive for $206.98 USD and connect it to the laptop,
  2. a consumer NAS like the Synology 2 bay NAS DiskStation DS218+ (Diskless) for $289.62 USD plus the cost of HDDs,
  3. a PC that can take a couple of hard drives like the HP EliteDesk 800 G1 SFF i7-4770 3.40Ghz 16GB RAM 2TB HDD 240GB SSD Win 10 Pro (Renewed) for $315.99 USD plus a larger HDD,
  4. something like the HP ProLiant MicroServer Gen10 Ultra Quad-core 8GB DDR4 SDRAM Serial ATA/600 Controller Micro Tower Server Model P03698-S01 for $395.00 USD plus the cost of HDDs, or
  5. any number of other options.

    Since you are familiar with Ubuntu, which is based on Debian, you should look into Proxmox VE, which is a Debian server with custom tools and a web UI for creating and managing Linux containers (LXCs) and kernel-based virtual machines (KVMs) and storage management. LXCs are similar to Docker containers except they behave more like virtual machines. Pre-built LXC containers including tons of web development frameworks like LAMP, Node.js, Drupal, Django etc. are available from TurnKey Linux for downloading and installing in minutes. Great fun!
u/neuromonkey · 2 pointsr/raspberry_pi

Oh, I've gotten e-mail from them, but only general stuff. No "time to order" yet. Also, the address I used for that doesn't have a spam filter on it, but good thought. Other accounts I have do, and I'm always forgetting about it.

I've almost given up on using the RPi for what I want. Since I won't be able to get more than one in the foreseeable future, I can't really make a product around it. I want to build 30's-era console radios into net radios, and sell a few. The only other SoC board I've found that seems like it'd be great for that is the Dreamplug, which costs around $180. Everything else (Shivaplug, Guruplug, BeagleBone, etc.) has bunches of people talking about problems with the audio. I am trying to figure out whether I can get a USB audio dongle working with a Pogoplug, as they can be found pretty cheaply on sale.

Wow. I'm rambling. Check spam folder. Always a good suggestion!

u/nighthawk05 · 1 pointr/homelab

To build, or not to build. That is the question.

It's hard to build your own and keep it under $300 unless you have some hardware laying around that you can use.

If you don't need hotswap bays then you could go super cheap. Try to find an early generation i7 or i5 desktop and stick it's guts into a big case with lots of room for internal drive bays. You won't have ECC and you will be limited on max memory. Many homelab storage servers start off this way. I'm guessing you will want a better setup than this since you already have an R710 and are looking at 10GB sfp+.

If you do want hotswap then it get's harder to build for super cheap. You could pick up a generic rackmount case with lots of drive bays (Maybe something like this?), then find a dual 55xx or E5-2600v1 motherboard/cpu combo on eBay. DDR3 is cheap on eBay if you buy 4GB or 8GB sticks. That's still probably getting into the $400 range unless you can find a case, or barebones kit, for real cheap on eBay.


That being said, I'd recommend you go the Buy route instead of Build.

I don't see a reason to build vs buy other than personal preference. If you want to build, then build. Sometimes I do that just because it's fun. Buying is probably the better choice because the R510 / DL180 are so cheap, and the hardware has been used by thousands of companies around the world. You know it's going to work. There are just so many out there for cheap.

u/HomeIntThrowAway · 1 pointr/DDWRT

A quick thing before more server info.

I can see the WiFi plug's IP is 192.168.1.1 I'm not sure what the primary routers IP is will they just be the same?

Here's a picture for a more clarificaltion

Additional Server Info

I've never accessed my server remotely before The server is a HP proliant microserver g7 n54l It's currently running FreeNAS


Bonus info

So here the ultimate dream - The server is currently just for file storage. But I want to be able to stream video and music around my house. The XBOX I hope to have plex working on it one day so I can stream video to my TV.

A Raspberry Pi and some speakers will be used for audio. (Perhaps eventually an additional RasPi will replace the XBOX for video streaming)

And if I get also get remote access to my files I will feel like I have reached the self actualisation stage of Maslow's hierarchy of needs ^_^

Please keep pouring all your kind advice on me. It's truly appreciated! :)

u/Letmefixthatforyouyo · 3 pointsr/sysadmin

I bought an HP micorserver for mine. I actually use it as an esxi host, and run a freenas install as a VM. Its dead silent, can take 8GB of Ram, has a dual core 1.5 GHz amd chip, has 4 drive bays, and I believe 8 USB ports. I have no issue running 7 Linux VMs on it with the NAS, including a soft firewall (smoothwall), Wiki (twiki), and a few other misc boxes (backtrack, Damn vulnerable linux, etc). It is all of one cubic foot.

My current config is a Zpool of 2X 2TB raid 1, with a hotspare, via 3 internal 2TB drives, and 2 External 2TB drives. This gives me 3.6TB of usable space. If I want to expand, I just remove the hot spare, slap in another 2TB disc, make a mirror, and then add it to the Zpool. Redundant, easy to expand storage. The writes are slow, running about 4MB/s, but the reads are more in the 12MB/s range. Fine for media. Freenas does automatic smart warning via email, has easily configuarble shares, SNMP reporting, snapshotting, ZFS data autohealing, etc. Its beautiful.

A warning: Freenas loves Ram, so it worth going from the stock 2GB to 8 right off the bat. 4GB sticks run about $40 each.

u/Virtualization_Freak · 2 pointsr/HomeServer

Lovely when they do that.

What's your budget? I could see this as an easy upgrade path:

  • Purchase an HP ML10 Server

  • Move your disks over

  • Move RAM over (if you'd like.)

  • Sell off your current computer (or use for a media PC/friend/Whatever.)

    Gives you 4 clean easy to use drive bays plus a fifth if you take out the cdrom. Better CPU and RAM. This one would be even faster for PLEX and more VMs.

u/finnSquared · 2 pointsr/BitcoinMining

This answer hits all the right points. PC/GPU mining isn't what it once was. You'd probably start burning out components before hitting $100.

I would also recommend the Antminer U3. It's cheap, easy to use and I think it looks cool. If you're interested in learning about cryptocurrencies and want to start experimenting, this would be a great way to get a feel for mining. Related links below.

U3 @ Amazon

Setup guide from bitcointalk

u/djinnsour · 1 pointr/PFSENSE

I've had my eye on this but honestly the pfSense XG-1541 model might be a better idea simply because of support.

Edit: Didn't notice the comment about top of rack switches. I've been using mostly Huawei and Extreme Networks for a while now.

u/CollateralFortune · 19 pointsr/homelab

You are basically going for a unicorn. So be prepared to pay:

This fits the bill. I have a few and they are great little servers.

This would more than cover the passmark.

Both those towers have 4x3.5" hotswap drives and spots for a pair of 2.5" SSDs. Plus you get an SATA M2 SSD slot. Up to 128GB if you are willing to sacrifice body parts.

The D-1541 a bit shy on the passmark, but hits all the other marks. Only the highest E3s come close on passmark, but they are still short of the Xeon D. And I dunno about having something prebuilt in that nice little form factor. Those Xeon D towers really are great little servers.

u/DanielHeth · 1 pointr/homelab

I’m seeing some good deals related to Synology NAS’s. I’m watching for a second for my remote “home” lab.
Along side that, I’ve been saving up for some servers powerful enough to use as virtual servers, yet fit within this cabinet... namely the Supermicro 5018D-FN4T Xeon D-1541 8-Core Front IO Mini 1U Rackmount w/ Dual 10GbE https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01M0X365V/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_dTjfAb7ZZST13
Aside from new hardware for this cabinet, honestly EBay has some awesome deals on enterprise servers.

u/oramirite · 1 pointr/sysadmin

Thanks again for the input everyone. After searching around with this advice I've narrowed this down to two systems:

Pricier but with 10GbE:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01K1JVM0Q/ref=ox_sc_saved_title_1?smid=AHG2MI785YUY7&psc=1

More reasonable pricing but less power:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07944RYM7/ref=ox_sc_act_title_1?smid=AEELF2HAVZFED&psc=1

As long as the 2nd option wouldn't struggle with virtualization and databases, this seems like a good fit. Thoughts?

u/iamacannibal · 2 pointsr/HomeServer

This is considerably better for about the same price.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01230V2U6/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_nfIMybWC7AJQQ

It has a much better CPU and it's in a platform where you can easily upgrade parts.

It also comes with a 500GB HDD and 8GB of Ram for on $10 more than what you posted.

Also it has a fan to cool the CPU. Fanless stuff is not good for anything that requires a decent amount of CPU usage. It will just thermal throttle.

u/eleitl · 0 pointsr/learnprogramming

A pretty cheap, compact and quiet one is

http://www.amazon.com/HP-658553-001-ProLiant-Server-System/dp/B005KKJPCO/

You can put up to 4 SATA (5 with internal drive and one external eSATA drive) drives in there and up to 8 GBytes of ECC RAM. A wide range of operating systems is supported -- for learning programming I would recommend Linux -- e.g. Ubuntu LTS.

u/emk2203 · 1 pointr/buildapc

I know this is heresy to say in /r/buildapc, but I built three miniITX systems on my own, and for the fourth one, I just used a HP microserver N54L. One of the best decisions. Very quiet, reliable, server-grade everything, uses ECC RAM, etc etc. For a small system like this, there's not much difference in building from scratch and modifying a system anyway.

I got mine for a little over €180 with 4GB RAM included, so you would need to shop around (Amazon price is much too high).

All your purposes could be served by installing FreeNAS on it (needs 8GB RAM, though).

u/3Vyf7nm4 · 1 pointr/sysadmin

FreeNAS

It's Free Open Source software, available at no cost (the commercial, paid version is TrueNAS).

It's built on FreeBSD, and uses ZFS filesystem - a Copy-On-Write filesystem that completely avoids the URE/Write Hole problem that RAID5/6/etc. has.

It supports Windows File Sharing, NFS, and iSCSI, and works very well with VMWare. It also directly connects and shares your AWS storage.

---
e1: non-affiliate links, here's how to build a SAN on the cheap:



Qty | Component | Part Number | Amazon | Newegg
---|---|----|----|----
1 | Chassis | SUPERMICRO SYS-5029S-TN2 | $434.90 | $599.99
1 | CPU | Intel Core i5-6500 | $199.99 | $204.99
2 | RAM | Crucial 8GB DDR4(PC4-19200) Unbuffered SODIMM | $70.95 | $69.99
1 | USB drive (OS drive)| Corsair Voyager Vega 16GB | $18.99 | $13.99
1 | SSD (ZFS Cache drive) | Samsung 850 PRO - 256GB | $117.44 | $119.99
4 | SATA Drive | Seagate 8TB (ST8000VN0022) | $259.79 | $259.99
1 | OS | FreeNAS | n/a | n/a
| | Total | $1,952.38 | $2,418.89

The drives are half the cost of the system. If you reduce the size of the disks, you can significantly lower cost. However, keep in mind that RAIDZ will consume 1 disk, and of the remaining 3, you only get 80% with ZFS. With 8TB drives, this is 19.2TB

e2: updated the above to be SATA instead of SAS - the onboard controller does not support SAS

---

e3: Here's the same basic setup, but with a Xeon processor, ECC memory, 2x1Gps, 2x10GigE, and SAS support:

Qty | Component | Part Number | Amazon
---|---|----|----
1 | System | Supermicro SuperServer 5028D-TN4T | $1,220.00
1 | CPU | Intel Xeon-D-1541 | n/a (included in server)
1 | RAM | Crucial 8GB Single DDR4 (PC4-2133) ECC Registered | $109.57
1 | USB drive (OS drive)| Corsair Voyager Vega 16GB | $18.99
1 | SSD (ZFS Cache drive) | Samsung 850 PRO - 256GB | $117.44
4 | SAS Drive | Seagate 8TB (ST8000NM0075) | $299.79
1 | SAS controller | LSI SAS 9207-4i4e | $114
1 | OS | FreeNAS | n/a | n/a
| | Total | $2,888.73

Of the two above systems, the first I would use for home/media, the second is appropriate for business (though it does not have a redundant power supply)

u/lookin2kappa · 6 pointsr/sysadmin

Not addressing the points you are asking but more toward the original issue...

You can always buy a high-power used enterprise server for under $1k and shell out the $800 for windows server standard. I purchased a Dell new server for $10K for our company and it's worse then the $700 used Dell R710 that i bought.

With the money you save means you can buy a few for redundancy and replication purposes. I bought one very similar to this one.

I've been on both sides of the fence in IT as well. Worked for the company that supported the company that i work for serving break-fix services when we bought the new server. When I got hired on directly the first thing i did was buy a good used server for our second office, i regret not having the same one in our main office.

u/red359 · 1 pointr/networking

Along with Pfsense & VyOS, you may want to check out Untanagle NG. There are a lot of virtual router and firewall options out there right now. I assume you would need something with SFP+ to accept the 5Gbps ISP connection. That's the hard part since most routers & firewalls that support speeds greater than 1Gbps are pricey. A combo like this may work for you. Since the Microtik router has two SFP+ ports, you can use one for the ISP link and one for a 10G link to the server running Pfsense or whatever. And then use the remaining router RJ-45 links to span out to your switches.



https://www.amazon.com/Mikrotik-CCR1036-8G-2S-Router-Gigabit-touchscreen/dp/B00HWXBHLO



https://www.amazon.com/Supermicro-SuperServer-5018D-FN8T-Rackmount-10GbE/dp/B01LXUATHB

u/whoa2013 · 1 pointr/PleX

Hey Guys, I'm planning on building a Plex Server/Nas box. I would like to FreeNas as the OS but I am open to any options. I usually stream to clients they use Direct play but sometimes I transcode 2 streams at once.

Would it be better to buy a Xeon TS140 for $370 and add 8GB of ECC Ram to it or build one with different parts?

I am planning on starting with either 2 or 3 3TB Western Digital drives or 2 4TB Western Digital Drives. Then adding more later down the road.

I did add a post in /r/buildapcforme but I didn't get any responses yet. Link

u/icemerc · 5 pointsr/homelab

If you want to stay on Amazon, for a little bit more you can get this DL380 G6 which will be DDR3 and much better on power usage.

Edit:
The same seller also has
R610

DL380 G6

DL360 G6

Any of these would be a better choice than the G5.


u/wr3kt · 1 pointr/homelab

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00OGMGECQ/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o01_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

u/twist_off · 1 pointr/filemaker

You could get by with less than what I suggest here, pretty much any PC that support ECC ram will run server 2016 and most mother boards have RAID support, but for for not crazy money you can build a server that should perform well for years. I looked high and low and wrung my hands and this is what I'm building:

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Supermicro TN4T Server

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00Z7O7EAS/ref=oh_aui_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1

supports 128GB of ECC ram (i'm running 64)

512 GB M.2 SSD for OS FMS and internally stored containers (my solution stores a few documents in internal containers)

1TB SSD for referenced Containers

2x 2 TB hard drives for backups configured as a mirrored raid at.

Off machine backup to a NAS (Synology DS413) on our LAN

Off site backups to Backblaze.

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Fire at will.

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u/drnick5 · 1 pointr/techsupport

I built my own nas a few year ago using an HP Microserver thats similiar to this one. If you wait long enough you can usually find a decent deal (I think I paid $250 for mine with a 250GB hard drive and 4GB of RAM).

I loaded Freenas on it, which install to a USb flash drive you plug directly into the motherboard. (install is easy, you can either burn a CD with the install ISo or make a bootable USB flash drive to install it from).

The Microserver has space for 4 drives. I have 3 x 3TB drive's running in a RAIDz1 giving me just about 6TB of useable storage.

My all in cost was about $650ish, including the hard drives. It works fantastic and was significantly cheaper than going with a Buffalo type unit.

u/JeanLucTheCat · 2 pointsr/homelab

Just curious. What would be the benefit of a Nuc vs something like the Dell T20? The power consumption is very similar, more expansion, and option to run a dual NIC.

u/triobot · 2 pointsr/cordcutters

Why not a HP microserver?

In the UK they are pretty much < £120 due to HP having £100 cashback on them. They're small and efficient.

u/harps86 · 1 pointr/theNvidiaShield

Yeah I bought one of these guys about 6 years ago and it has been running strong ever since. Handles all my plex needs fine along with a couple of other VM's.

u/manbearpig2012 · 1 pointr/PleX

i'd also suggest looking at the $350 recommended build thread, or, if you're not so DIY, check into a Lenovo TS140, just need to add drives and an OS, i have one and love it

u/colon-dwarf · 1 pointr/HomeServer

What are your thoughts on a model like this? Or am I better off building from scratch?

High-End Virtualization Server 12-Core 64GB RAM 12TB Raid PowerEdge R710 (Renewed) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01KU2UQME/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_08EQDbE1A690J

u/Warmachine- · 1 pointr/HomeNetworking

I will be hosting it on a dedicated server. Like I'm talking one of these These are my speed results.

u/evilgold · 1 pointr/BitcoinMining

Antminer U3 for $75 would be a good place to start. Or if you want a stand alone unit get an S1 or S3 used. Keep in mind that regardless of what you buy there is a 99% chance you will not earn enough to cover hardware+power costs. For example the $75 U3, will not earn you $75 worth of BTC.

u/LeZygo · 1 pointr/sysadmin
u/jackmonter5 · 1 pointr/DataHoarder

If you don't mind my asking, why is this bare tower 380, when a refurb dell rack r710 server with motherboard and dual cpu and loads of ecc ram included will run about 400 (granted that only has 6 drive bays but 6x8tb is still a healthy 48tb)

https://www.amazon.com/DELL-PowerEdge-R710-2-53Ghz-E5540/dp/B011M6MSDW/ref=sr_1_7?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1503972363&sr=1-7&keywords=Poweredge

u/plasticluthier · 1 pointr/raspberry_pi

I'd Just go out and buy a NAS. Some of them even have the same kind of processor as a pi so you can put custom firmware on them... or if you want four bays and essentially a laptop in a nice box, why not think about a microserver?

u/goldfingeroo7 · 1 pointr/PleX

Here is one like mine. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CLUIMGQ/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_iB1.BbFDC2EZA

I have to admit that the video card is one I just have lying around. GeForce 8600 GTS. After installing it, here is the output from the following commands.

$ ubuntu-drivers devices
== /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:06.0/0000:17:00.0 ==
modalias : pci:v000010DEd00000400sv00003842sd0000C761bc03sc00i00
vendor : NVIDIA Corporation
model : G84 [GeForce 8600 GTS]
driver : nvidia-340 - distro non-free recommendeddriver : xserver-xorg-video-nouveau - distro free builtin

$ lshw -numeric -c display
*-display
description: VGA compatible controller
product: G84 [GeForce 8600 GTS] [10DE:400]
vendor: NVIDIA Corporation [10DE]
physical id: 0
bus info: pci@0000:17:00.0
version: a1
width: 64 bits
clock: 33MHz
capabilities: pm msi pciexpress vga_controller bus_master cap_list rom
configuration: driver=nvidia latency=0
resources: irq:19 memory:fd000000-fdffffff memory:d0000000-dfffffff memory:fa000000-fbffffff ioport:5000(size=128) memory:c0000-dffff

u/cowprince · 1 pointr/HomeServer

I purchased my iLo advanced license from here, and it's worked fine for the past 6 months. http://www.amazon.com/HP-ISS-512485-B21-iLO-incl/dp/B008J55PV2 you can ignore the 1yr nonsense on it, that's only for support, the actual features it enables are good indefinitely.

u/synk2 · 1 pointr/HomeServer

I'd say it's expensive for what you're getting, especially considering it's basically the same specs as the TS140, which often runs for ~$300 on sale. It's a newer Skylake based Xeon, which means you're getting a 5-10% performance boost, which is going to be pretty unnoticeable for what you're doing. You're really just going to want as much ram as you can stick in the thing, as that's normally the limited factor long before cpu cycles.

I'd look at a T20 or TS140, and put that extra money towards ram or storage (or in your pocket). You're going to get similar performance at a much lower price.

u/ewwhite · 1 pointr/sysadmin

For firmware, run the "Intelligent Provisioning" from the F10 menu during boot. That will bring your system up-to-date from a firmware perspective. You didn't specify the actual model of the server, though.

The machine is in warranty or very close to its end. You can check here:

http://h20564.www2.hpe.com/hpsc/wc/public/home

For the ILO license, you can pick up one for under $30 on Amazon. (Or be shady and Google for a key...)

u/hightekjonathan · 2 pointsr/homelab

I’ll let you know when I get home.

Edit: I’ll do you one better, here’s the exact link to what we bought. Supermicro SuperServer 5018D-FN8T Xeon D Mini 1U Rackmount,10GbE LAN, SFP+, IPMI https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01LXUATHB/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_SyK0Ab0Z5ZB4B

u/epyon_avenger · 1 pointr/DataHoarder

Actually, that said...

If you go with the older model you can put an adapter in the 5.25in bay and a SATA controller in the PCIe slot and get 8 drives instead of 4, which is a much nicer sized ZFS pool.

u/hawkxcore · 1 pointr/PleX

I personally enjoyed my Synology NAS, but I outgrew it quickly. Not in terms of storage space - in terms of what I could physically do with it. If you get one, I would recommend an x86 based model rather than ARM-based. Or, look into an HP MicroServer. Not the most powerful specs out there, but cheap, and can run Windows/Linux/FreeNAS.

Edit - This is the HP I'm referencing. However, I wouldn't recommend it at this price point. Newegg puts it on sale all the time for less than $300.

HP 658553-001 ProLiant N40L Ultra Micro Tower Server System AMD Turion II Neo N40L 1.5GHz 2C 2GB (1 x 2GB) 1 x 250GB LFF SATA https://www.amazon.com/dp/B005KKJPCO/ref=cm_sw_r_udp_awd_OvDWtb0DQ8GJFJT8

u/Jacobjs93 · 1 pointr/homelab

DELL PowerEdge R710 2 x 2.53Ghz E5540 Quad Core 72GB 6x 1TB 6i 2PS https://www.amazon.com/dp/B011M6MSDW/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_M8cJAbGN60D4H

Enterprise Dell PowerEdge R710 Server 2x 2.66Ghz X5650 6C 72GB (Certified Refurbished) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073VR9P1K/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_C9cJAbV992WW6

Mid-Level Dell PowerEdge R710 Server 2x 2.53Ghz E5540 QC 32GB (Certified Refurbished) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B077GZNXMD/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_p-cJAb23FEC2W

These are the ones I’m looking at right now. I’m looking for the 64gb ram range. I have a 2 4tb HD’s and 1 2tb in my desktop now. I run Plex from it. I also run a 240gb (I think) ssd for os. I do some gaming on my desktop so I would like to move a lot of the file sharing stuff to a server.

u/oophe · 1 pointr/HomeServer

Still a bit pricey but it basically has the same features as the gen8:
https://www.amazon.com/ProLiant-Server-System-Dual-core-i3-4150/dp/B01230V2U6/

Edit: this is a discontinued model as well, I bought this server before I bought a Gen8, it's more modern though.

u/sparkfist · 1 pointr/Ubiquiti

Here is a similar spec'd server (with no RAM) for more than what they are charging. https://www.amazon.com/Supermicro-5018D-FN4T-D-1541-8-Core-Rackmount/dp/B01M0X365V

If anything these are under priced for the hardware that it includes but I do agree they fall outside of the typical pricing model.

u/I_Wasted_Time · 2 pointsr/DataHoarder

This might not have enough grunt for your purpose but the HP microserver n54l has ECC ram. I got one recently for low-use file serving etc. Works well.

u/[deleted] · 7 pointsr/Nexus7

Only 64GB? Haha, you pleb.

This + This + These + Stickmount

Seriously though, walking around with a cable dangling from the device is not ideal.

u/PA55W0RD · 1 pointr/raspberry_pi

I was going to recommend a HP Proliant N54L as they're insanely cheap here in Japan.... (I bought mine for around $140) and load on FreeNAS.

Apparently they're not so cheap in the US though.....

u/Ayit_Sevi · 1 pointr/homelab

Hey OP, depending on what Gen Nuc you have ( I have the 6th gen-core i5-66260u) You can go with the XeonD-1518 with 10gbe that /u/Netwerkz101 linked or you can go with this XeonD-1528 which has a better passmark score than both the 6th gen Nuc and the Xeond-1518 and has 2 10gbe ports as well. Either way both don't have the same single threaded score as the I5-6260u but they have multiple ethernet port. I think you might have to weigh your preferences but I'm just throwing this out there so you know what your options are

u/heatcheckk · 2 pointsr/PleX

Currently running my server on a mid 2009 13" Macbook Pro with the following services

u/unsignedlonglong · 1 pointr/homelab

One option to consider, if you want to do any kind of 10Gbe, the SuperMicro 5018D-FN8T can be a very well-priced option - it's current generation, very efficient, and really well-priced for what it is. It's a little bit pricier than recycled-enterprise gear, but not much.. and it's basically top of the line for a little low power server. https://www.amazon.com/Supermicro-SuperServer-5018D-FN8T-Rackmount-10GbE/dp/B01LXUATHB

u/anothernetgeek · 1 pointr/Ubiquiti

The server you show is an 8-core.

The 4-core one would be : https://www.amazon.com/Supermicro-SuperServer-5018D-FN8T-Rackmount-10GbE/dp/B01LXUATHB/ref=sr_1_1

That's an $800 chassis (without the hot-swap drives.)

The UAS has a $75 boot SSD, two $100 data drives, and $200 for 32GB RAM ($300 for the ECC).

So I could build something like this for $1200 but I would not have the hot-swap drive bays. I would have more LAN ports, and fewer USB ports.

u/broken_symlink · 1 pointr/linux

You can use a dreamplug, but its a bit expensive. It looks you can install a ftp server on a pogoplug. There are probably a lot more ways you can do what you want, but those are just a few.

u/Kiyiko · 1 pointr/buildapc

This is what I get for my friends/family when they ask me to "build them a new pc" At the price point they want to pay anyways, it's hard to beat with a custom build, especially if your time is worth anything.

https://www.amazon.com/Lenovo-ThinkServer-70A40037UX-Server-i3-4150/dp/B0167MYLL8/

u/masterzman · 1 pointr/BitcoinBeginners

A simple install mining app would be multiminerapp.com ... it has a user interface and what now. I use this with my Antminer U2 USB based miners.

I started out with the U2 USB miner. http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/B00ITD5NV6/ref=sr_1_1_olp?ie=UTF8&qid=1421524190&sr=8-1&keywords=antminer+u2&condition=used

A newer model would be the U3 miner http://www.amazon.com/Bitmain-Antminer-Bitcoin-Miner-Domestic/dp/B00OQSXMA2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1421524228&sr=8-1&keywords=antminer+u3

You might be able to make your money back over time with the U3 miner if you dont take electricity into account (which im assuming your not when u use the word 'hobby')

u/phletch · 2 pointsr/sysadmin

I'm in college, similar aspirations. I bought this HP Proliant N40L

u/Lawlzstomp · 5 pointsr/EA_NHL

These magazines are combining "Hello fellow kids" meme with a "cringe compilation".

Edit: This is what I got for the UPC code on the magazine.

u/Itsthejoker · 1 pointr/emby

I mean on the server side; I stream to everything. Laptops, phones, TV, no changes.

I've seen stuttering with large file sizes, usually with movies 4GB or larger, but that's not what you're describing. As far as equipment goes, my server is a Lenovo TS140 but for nowhere near that price.

u/welcher1 · 1 pointr/homelab

I use these for lower end hyper v hosts and set up them up as replicas... Memory is still kind of expensive for them though:



Supermicro SuperServer 5018D-FN8T Xeon D Mini 1U Rackmount,10GbE LAN, SFP+, IPMI


​

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01LXUATHB/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1