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Would a Lenovo TS430 make a good server for Swizzin? I'm looking at one used that's $40 with no hard drives, but has 16gb of ram and a Xeon E3-1240 V2. I can get a 2tb drive for $20 and get more over time. https://www.lenovo.com/co/es/data-center/servers/tower-servers/ThinkServer-TS430/p/77LS7TS430M
Question: if i want to have a bunch of drives together in the same data pool where it's largely transparent and stable, but if a drive fails I just lose the data on that drive and nothing else, should i use ZFS or mergerfs or something else?
The server by default comes with no hard drives. The seller lists that they will sell a 2tb hard drive for it, but I was planning on just using my existing drives for now.If the drives are old and on their last legs (assuming $20 for a 2tb means they are) you are begging for trouble with something like ZFS. If you ever need help with its quirks, you will need to need to get it from server gorns who are going to shit on you with a religious fervor that you dared to run their holiest of filesystems on straight-up jank.
The server by default comes with no hard drives. The seller lists that they will sell a 2tb hard drive for it, but I was planning on just using my existing drives for now.
So I'll just use mergeRFS then? It's ultimately just a media server, and the OS and important files will be on good drives that I trust. If I use a system where a failed drive just means that those files get lost while everything else is intact, Sonarr and radarr will let me redownload what I want to keep easily enough
But what about the used Lenovo ThinkServer TS430? Is it good hardware?Should be adequate for what you describe.
But what about the used Lenovo ThinkServer TS430? Is it good hardware?
That makes sense. The price seemed low and the seller isn't very forthcoming on details. Based on what is being omitted I'm thinking all the hard drive hot swap caddies were pulled out and tossed.People seem to favor them for their price. Linux support is where these proprietary enterpriseish machines usually excel. Lenovo vs. Dell vs. HP stuff like this will be proprietary inside. From proprietary plastic thingies, to proprietary PSUs and a lack of expandability. Lack of CPU upgrade path or strange results ie, over heating with no suitable cooling solution, finicky RAM, etc) if you want to try to max them out some future day. Cheaper they are more likely it is because no one wants to deal with them.
While I'm thankfully in a position of having an old server trays and all, you've got my noggin joggin' about 3d-printing adequate replacements for any future acquisitions. Something that ensures the drive inserts without risk of pressing too hard on components, and stops it from dangling and snapping a connector, shouldn't be too hard to toss together in FreeCAD....yup.
For those sitting in the back, it's common practice when disposing of old servers to just yank the old hard drives out and shred them. However, those hard drives are almost always screwed onto little hot swap trays that also go into the shredder. So all those really nice looking old servers that are dirt cheap? They're useless because you can't put hard drives in them, unless you track down that exact style of hard drive trays.
That doesn't sound impossible... I'd you had a list of all the repositories used by default for each distro you could do an apt or rnf lookup on each one and list which ones have them and under which locations.Is there a centralized resource for finding with distros have a certain package, and by what name? For example, if I wanted to add a find_package(jsoncpp) call to a CMake file, it would show me which distros have jsoncppConfig.cmake in one of its packages?
It would be nice if the trays were standardized so you could buy them cheap, but I'd settle for an online list of 3D models for each style to print your own.While I'm thankfully in a position of having an old server trays and all, you've got my noggin joggin' about 3d-printing adequate replacements for any future acquisitions. Something that ensures the drive inserts without risk of pressing too hard on components, and stops it from dangling and snapping a connector, shouldn't be too hard to toss together in FreeCAD.
Wow, I'm an idiot. I meant to post this in the Linux thread. Sorry everyone.That doesn't sound impossible... I'd you had a list of all the repositories used by default for each distro you could do an apt or rnf lookup on each one and list which ones have them and under which locations.
Search for it on ThingiverseWhile I'm thankfully in a position of having an old server trays and all, you've got my noggin joggin' about 3d-printing adequate replacements for any future acquisitions. Something that ensures the drive inserts without risk of pressing too hard on components, and stops it from dangling and snapping a connector, shouldn't be too hard to toss together in FreeCAD
One thing you may find is those server type systems are not optimized for quiet. So depending on where you want to put it you may want to do some fan swaps. But at least that's far easier to do in a tower style case than a 1u or 2u rack case.Well, tonight I'm picking up the Lenovo ThinkServer. Even if the drive trays are missing I can get them off AliExpress for not too much, and it otherwise looks to be a really good deal. I'll run memtest and do a bunch of checks before buying parts for it tho
The Lenovo TS430 is supposed to be "whisper quiet" but that might just be relative to other servers. I'll find out tonight when I get it and test itOne thing you may find is those server type systems are not optimized for quiet. So depending on where you want to put it you may want to do some fan swaps. But at least that's far easier to do in a tower style case than a 1u or 2u rack case.