I second simply killing it off, unless you need a space heater. I've got a pair of 1850's with p4-based xeon's running esx that are barely suitable for any heavy crunching guests (my minecraft server would regularly kill the box with a big world), so I doubt you'll get much mileage with p3-level gear. I'm in the process of putting to pasture the 1850's in favor of some dell c6100 boxen I picked up off ebay. I see people selling servers like hp dl380g5's on CL for a few hundred bucks that already put that system to shame. You'd save that in power alone likely with a more modern platform, not to mention maybe actually find ram/disks for it that don't cost more than modern equivalents due to scarcity. -mb On 06/14/2012 09:23 AM, Eric Shubert wrote: > On 06/13/2012 09:11 PM, Thomas Cameron wrote: >> On 06/12/2012 04:20 PM, James Dugger wrote: >>> I have inherited a Dell PowerEdge 2450 and want to re-task it somewhere >>> in my network running as a linux server. It was being used two months >>> ago as a VPN server running Windows 2003 Server. >>> >>> Here are the secs: >>> >>> 2 - 866 MHz Pentium Processors >>> Bus 133MHz >>> cache 256 KB >>> 2048 MB ECC SDRAM >>> built in adaptec hardware RAID controller >>> SCSI dual channel backplane - w/1 daughter card installed >>> >>> 4 - 3.5 hot swap drivebays >> >> Man, that thing is going to suck LOTS of power and pump out LOTS of heat. >> >> If it were me, I'd sell it on craigslist or eBay and use the cash to buy >> a modern multicore motherboard, memory, and processor in a desktop case. >> Seriously, for a few hundred bucks you can get a system that sips power >> comparatively, has many more - and much faster - CPUs, and has as much >> more more memory. >> >> I've given up trying to repurpose machines that old. The cost in power >> alone over the course of a year makes it smarter to get rid of it. >> >> TC > > +1. > > Speed of memory/bus is a big consideration for a server. The bus speed > on what you have is, well, pathetic. You can buy a new Fusion/Atom board > that uses 1066ram for ~$100 that'll run circles around that thing. 8G of > ram for one of these can be had for $30-$40. Cooling is a non issue with > these, as they consume so little power. I don't know if these would fit > the 2U case or not (they're std mini/micro though). Some of these boards > have up to 6 SATA6 ports, so software raid (1 or 10) works nicely. > --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss