Am 30.05.2014 um 19:34 schrieb John R Pierce <pierce at hogranch.com>: > On 5/30/2014 5:28 AM, Andrew Holway wrote: >>>> >>>> As I think about it, the control node for the UV 2000 looks an*awful* lot >>>> like a Penguin.... >>>> >> SuperMicro gear is only as good as the server integration company selling >> it. > > bingo. I think too many people buy 'whitebox' supermicro stuff direct > and self-integrate, then are surprised when there are issues. > Integration needs to include testing. All that integration and testing > is why brands like HP are more expensive, you can usually assume its > going to work. True. The thing I hate about HP is that their SSD offerings are IMO a joke. Not only are they several times as expensive as an equivalent Intel SSD (even taking into account that we don’t pay list-price) but in addition, they perform only half as well (in terms of IOP/s). I suspect it’s because HP does not include a super cap and thus their SSDs don’t do write-caching (which the Intel does). Also, due to the fact that they don’t offer a SAS-Controller that does JBOD, you have to setup each drive individually as a RAID0 - which is totally stupid, once you run something like FreeBSD where HPACUCLI is not available. Each failed drive necessitates a reboot then. I could of course buy an LSI JBOD controller (which would also allow me to buy Intel SSDs) - but what’s the point of buying a HP server then? IMO, HP does not want you to actually make good use of current-generation enterprise-SSDs - they’d prefer you buy a couple of dozens of P2000 arrays instead…