[Arm-dev] What's the best support hardware model ?

Tue Dec 1 13:05:17 UTC 2015
Karanbir Singh <mail-lists at karan.org>

On 01/12/15 12:59, PixelDrift.NET Sam wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 1, 2015 at 11:46 PM, Gordan Bobic <gordan at redsleeve.org> wrote:
>> 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:
>>>>
>>>> https://www.boston.co.uk/solutions/viridis/default.aspx
>>>
>>>
>>> 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.

late 2013 I believe it was discontinued.

>>
>> 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.
>>
>> Gordan
>>
> 
> My experience has been identical.
> 
> There appears to be a lot of talk around ARMv8, but I have been unable
> to find any hardware at close to reasonable prices (keen for
> suggestions).

For v8 itself the 96boards are available, I've seen lots of those ( and
have a few myself, bought in retail ).

> I have been considering the Nvidia Shield while I wait for decent
> server hardware to turn up, can anyone provide feedback on this
> hardware?


-- 
Karanbir Singh
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