I'm interested in an enterprise grade 32bit arm product. Even if you don't send it to the list, I'd be interested in who it is.
As for netiquette, I think enough other arm board manufactures have been mentioned on this list. Listing one more isn't going to be considered "advertising".
Troy
On Tue, Dec 1, 2015 at 12:28 PM, miniNodes Info info@mininodes.com wrote:
I do see that the conversation has moved on to ARMv8, but quickly to add to the 32-bit discussion...The organization that purchased the Calxeda assets reached out to me recently, and they have an enterprise-grade 32-bit product ready to ship. I can share their contact information if its desired (not sure of proper netiquette).
-David
Date: Tue, 1 Dec 2015 12:46:25 +0000 From: gordan@redsleeve.org To: arm-dev@centos.org Subject: Re: [Arm-dev] What's the best support hardware model ?
On 2015-12-01 12:36, Karanbir Singh wrote:
On 01/12/15 12:32, Gordan Bobic wrote:
On 2015-12-01 12:12, Karanbir Singh wrote:
On 01/12/15 10:11, Andreas Reschke wrote:
Hi there, I want to replace some servers (SOHO, Mail-, web-, Infrastructure, X86_64, all with CentOS) with ARM-Servers. I've a /home-Server with Odroid XU4 (Cloudshell) with Fedora running fine.
Are there other ARM-Devices running CentOS easy?
there are -no- ARMv7 grade server hardware available, there are single board units, none of which are capable of running infrastructure services for any reasonable performance. the cubietruck seems the most 'capable' but still falls well short of reasonable performance.
There are however ARMv8 based server's that are available, the APM Mustang class of boards are well supported in CentOS Linux 7 and are perhaps the most widely available.
this does however take into consideration my own interpretation of what might be considered 'reasonable performance'.
ARMv7 server grade hardware does exist. It wasn't so long ago that I was helping the guys at Boston get RedSleeve 6 getting up and running on their Viridis servers:
I believe the viridis platform has been discontinued for a few years now,
Has it? I seem to recall getting RSEL6 running on it 4 years ago, and it has had a refresh since then. If it has been discontinued it must have been relatively recently.
And decent ARMv8 hardware is not actually that easily available, at least in UK. There's a lot of posturing and press releases but very little actual hardware to show for it. And if you can ever find it commercially it is disproportionately expensive for what it is.
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