David Hrbáč wrote: > Dne 26.6.2012 15:40, Rafał Radecki napsal(a): >> Hi all. >> >> I am working for a hosting provider in Poland. We are currently >> searching for an universal, extensible hardware platform which we >> would like to use in our server infrastructure. >> The platform should have: >> - possibility to install up to 32GB of RAM and at least 4 slots for it; >> - at least 6 SATA ports; >> - the possibility to use SAS disks; >> - at least one 1Gb/s network interface and the possibility to add >> another one; >> - size of 2 or 3U; >> - hot swap for disks. >> We are looking for a solution in which we would be able to deploy a >> basic server with for example 2 SATA disks, 8GB of RAM, 1 NIC, 4 cors >> and to be able to use the same enclosure and motherboard and extend it >> to deploy a more heavy-duty server with for example 6 SATA disks, 24GB >> of RAM, 2 NICs, 8 cors. >> Which manufacturer can you recommend and why? We are looking for >> something rather not expensive but reliable which has a good support. >> All servers will be based on CentOS5/6 :) > > Cisco UCS? :o) Kidding, too pricey for these requirements. Your > requirements are quite low and almost every desktop motherboard is ok > nowadays. If your infra is built with failure in mind, you can go > Google way. No special HW, just HA sw solution. I do not think you want any desktop m/b, not for a hosting provider server. Spend a bit more and get server-class machines. That's right, you *did* mention 2 or 4 U servers. Really, for what you want, you can get in a 1U box. The Penguins I mentioned were, I think (I didn't order them) under $10k or $12kUSD, or the Dells, were all under $20k each, maybe under $15kUSD. mark