I’m asking my gamer-friends at work and will be perusing Ebuyer, Quiet-PC et al, but I thought I’d formally post this out here…
I am looking to upgrade my somewhat shabby PentiumIII PC at home. It’s always been a bit flakey, and now is woefully underpowered.
The role of the new machine will be as a NFS server running Solaris, with all of the filesystems being on a single, enormous ZFS raidZ dataset.
To give you a picture of what I am thinking, what I have in mind is something like this:
- a 64-bit amd processor…
- chosen to be nearly silent…
- ie: slow enough to be passively cooled and/or do through-case cooling in a tower case with quiet 12cm fans…
- big-name, clever mobo which can boot off-of usb flash-drives in a pinch
- 1Gb ram is considered adequate
- gigabit ethernet (primary mode of access to storage, sets fairly low boundary on requirement for physical i/o throughput hence software raid-z)
- between 1 and 2 Tb of redundant storage, eg: 6×250 Gb, 5×500 Gb or 3×750 Gb SATA disks
- basic video requirement (we’re talking X-windows and GNOME, not Quake)
- PSU and case to suit, preferably of a kind which will not lacerate you upon opening.
Big questions are: Processor, Mobo, and Storage; there will be cost-burdens by going with many smaller/cheaper drives – cooling, hassle, getting enough SATA ports (because I gather that SATA is point-to-point?) and so forth.
I suppose the simplest big system would be some manner of low-power Athlon, Opteron, or Turion something (whatever, so long as it’s 64-bit) with a mobo that has 4x SATA ports, and then pack it with 500Gb or 750Gb disks.
The point about external booting is for messing-about; booting off an external device that can punt to an on-ZFS root filesystem will get me over a temporary hump until Solaris totally native-boots onto ZFS…
…or, if the mobo still has IDE, then I can stick a fifth, more basic “boot” disk in there…
Any advice? Alas the guys at work have never built anything quite like this before.
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