Hardware tip needed

Status
Not open for further replies.

Andaluz

Cadet
Joined
Feb 12, 2018
Messages
5
Hi all,

as I´m curious around FreeNAS and searching for new options for the future I wanted to build a FreeNAS system to play around. I have quite some old hardware here which I would like to reuse.
Before anyone starts...this will just be a test system and will hold no important data. All my data is already saved on three other NASes I have here.


Here the hardware I have:

- 4x 4GB Kingston Technology 4GB 1600MHz Reg ECC
- 7x 2TB HDD´s NAS ready
- 128 GB Samsung SSD
- BeQuiet 350W Power Supply
- An ugly case but with good airflow where all HDD´s would fit in

What do I need?
This is exactly the point where I need the experience of you guys!
I´m searching for a board and CPU where i can fit the RAM. I´m really happy to buy something used via a reseller or private person. As the budget for the moment is very limited.
As this system will only be for storage and playing around performance is not the main key. I would like to have a mATX or uATX board.
SoC or CPU and board both system would work for me.

Thanks in advance for tips!

regards,
Andaluz
 
Last edited by a moderator:

danb35

Hall of Famer
Joined
Aug 16, 2011
Messages
15,504
I´m searching for a board and CPU where i can fit the RAM.
What kind of RAM, since you didn't say? DDR2? DDR3? DDR4? In any event, I doubt four 4 GB sticks of registered ECC RAM are worth making much effort to save, but the RAM type would determine what kind of board would need to be used. I don't think any SOC boards support registered ECC RAM.
 

MrToddsFriends

Documentation Browser
Joined
Jan 12, 2015
Messages
1,338
4x 4GB Kingston Technology 4GB 1600MHz Reg ECC [...] DDR3

After putting my Intel and Supermicro glasses on this leads me directly to a Socket-2011 (not -3, that would be the more recent variant for DDR4) Ivy Bridge-EP or Sandy Bridge-EP Xeon E5 CPU, E5-1xxx being sufficient for single socket motherboard:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Intel_Xeon_microprocessors#"Ivy_Bridge-EP"_(22_nm)_Efficient_Performance
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Intel_Xeon_microprocessors#"Sandy_Bridge-EP"_(32_nm)_Efficient_Performance

And a UP Xeon Motherboard - Socket R (LGA 2011), X9 Series:

https://www.supermicro.nl/products/motherboard/Xeon3000/#2011

That said, E5 Xeon CPUs for Socket-2011 are by far less energy efficient than E3 Xeons, at least in idle state. E3 Xeons, on the other hand, are not capable of handling registered DIMMs.
 
Last edited:

loch_nas

Explorer
Joined
Jun 13, 2015
Messages
79
Only some of the "newer" SoC mainboards take reg. RAM, and they want DDR4 RAM, not DDR3.

You could try to get a used mainboard or server with C60x chipset (2011 or 1356 socket), but the question is if it's really worth it as @danb35 said.

An important aspect could also be voltage as a lot of mainboards seem to only accept low voltage RAM. You didn't tell us the voltage of your memory (1,5 or 1,35 V).
 

joeinaz

Contributor
Joined
Mar 17, 2016
Messages
188
Hi all,

as I´m curious around freeNAS and searching for new options for the future I wanted to build a freeNAS system to play around. I have quite some old hardware here which i would like to reuse.
Before anyone starts...this will just be a test system and will hold no important data. All my data is already saved on three other NASes I have here.


Here the hardware I have:

- 4x 4GB Kingston Technology 4GB 1600MHz Reg ECC
- 7x 2TB HDD´s NAS ready
- 128 GB Samsung SSD
- BeQuiet 350W Power Supply
- An ugly case but with good airflow where all HDD´s would fit in

What do I need?
This is exactly the point where I need the experience of you guys!
I´m searching for a board and CPU where i can fit the RAM. I´m really happy to buy something used via a reseller or private person. As the budget for the moment is very limited.
As this system will only be for storage and playing around performance is not the main key. I would like to have a mATX or uATX board.
SoC or CPU and board both system would work for me.

Thanks in advance for tips!

regards,
Andaluz

I have three boards in my lab. My current FreeNAS system uses the SuperMicro X10SAE motherboard with eight 2 TB disks and 16 GB of EEC. It's a nice board ATX form factor board the has an Intel 1150 socket. It has three limitations; first the board supports only up to 32 GB of RAM; this may be a restriction for future growth. Secondly, it needs EEC UDIMMs and those are not cheap. Finally, it has only 2 PCIe slots bigget than x2. I need at least three x8 slots.

My newest project focused on providing a large memory space for the least cost. If money were no issue I would choose the Supermicro X10SRL-F. The 8 DIMM slots and 1TB max RAM capacity make memory a non-issue. The challenge is the cost of DDR4 memory and Intel v3 and v4 CPUs. Instead, I looked at 2 other boards:

The X9SRL-F, and the X8DTE. Both can use DDR3 registered DIMMs which are relatively inexpensive. eBay has 32GB (4x 8GB) for under $100. The big difference in the two boards are the form factor, DIMM slots and sockets.

My X8DTE is an extended (E-ATX) motherboard. This means you need a larger than normal (full-tower) case to use it. It has two 1366 sockets. The 4 core E5640 CPU I use cost under $10 on eBay. Each socket has 6 DIMM slots and each slot can support 16GB DIMMs. The board's 12 slots can support up to 192 GB of RAM. With the X8DTE, I can start out with a single CPU and 24GB of RAM for about $80 and the cost of the motherboard. There are six x8 slots on the motherboard.

My X9SRL-F is an regular ATX motherboard. This means you likely can install it in a regular case (mid-tower). It has one 2011 socket. It supports Intel E5-2600 v1 and v2 CPUs. I purchased an 8 core E5-2650 (v1) CPU for $70 on eBay. 8 DIMM slots and can support 32GB or registered DIMMs. The board can support up to 256 GB of RAM in this configuration. With the X9SRL-F, I can start out with a single CPU and 24GB of RAM for about $150 and the cost of the motherboard. There are seven x8 slots (two of the slots are x16 form factor).

At this point I am torn as to which board to use in my new system build. My new case will support 12 disks (and my tape drive) internally and either board will do. I hope to test each in the near future. Any suggestions will be helpful...
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top