I3 system with at least 4-5 gigabit ports. 1U preferred
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it's PCI-e. The riser is certainly a weird color.
The ASUS RS100 barebones comes with a 1U CPU cooler.
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You know of any reason why the motherboard will take only i3 and xeon processors and no i5 or i7 ? Techincally they should be compatible.
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You know of any reason why the motherboard will take only i3 and xeon processors and no i5 or i7 ? Techincally they should be compatible.
It's because the i3 CPUs support ECC RAM and the i5/i7 CPUs don't.
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So what if I install non-ECC RAM on this specific system? Will it still work or even boot?
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So what if I install non-ECC RAM on this specific system? Will it still work or even boot?
No idea, I don't own one.
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Check page 5 of this doc: http://cache-www.intel.com/cd/00/00/46/78/467819_467819.pdf
Even Intel don't have an straight answer about non-ecc or i5/i7 CPU.
edit:
Asus CPU support list -
Check page 5 of this doc: http://cache-www.intel.com/cd/00/00/46/78/467819_467819.pdf
Even Intel don't have an straight answer about non-ecc or i5/i7 CPU.
edit:
Asus CPU support listLooks pretty clear to me. They say that the i5/i7 doesn't support ECC.
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this is not what you are asking…but for this system I put the Corei3 with Non ECC RAM and it would not boot. waited an extra day for the ECC RAM to arrive that I ordered and it booted up immediately. same cas, speed, and density too. I guess you must use ECC with the motherboard. Either way, 4x2GB ECC would run you about $90-100.
If you think that at some point you would reuse the system, then get 4GB sticks to make sure it's not a total waste for getting above 8GB. If you want more than 4 cores, get the Xeon e3 CPU. If you go to geekbenches stats, the Intel Xeon E3-1240 V2 gets a GeekBench score of 11313, while the Intel Core i3-2100 gets GeekBench score of 5890. If you look deeper on the GeekBench site you can get encryption metrics for benchmark tests giving you an idea of CPU needs for things like VPN.
The E3-1230V2 is only $100 more, twice the power, twice the cores, twice the usability in the future. Up to you. I know mine will only ever be firewalls so I decided to get the Corei3-2100. The lower the number makes an easier proposal.
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and just look here:
http://browser.primatelabs.com/processor-benchmarksCheck out all of the Corei7 processors that rank above the E3-1240 V2. They cost more $$ and use TWICE the wattage.
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I think I will go for the Xeon. Since I will have 6 dedicated gigabit ports, I will install vmWARE ESXi and assign the dedicated ports to the different segments and move the domain controllers and exchange servers from the current i5 based vmWARE to the new environment as the Xeon will serve as a better processor and I could take advantage of the CPU cycles which might go to waste if I just had pfSense on it.
I suppose I can make my current i5 system a dedicated NAS server.
Thoughts?
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well this box has 1 PSU. maybe the asus rs300…but then again this exercise may go to waste on the saving $$ side when you get that case, etc. Also CPU affinity should be set for this pfsense install if it will be a VM. VM boxes are becoming easier to saturate as people are becoming more and more familiar with virtualization and loading up hosts....but not familiar enough with proper load balancing and resource monitoring. Sometimes you just need a separate box for your firewall to keep other services happy instead of taking down everything at once.
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Check page 5 of this doc: http://cache-www.intel.com/cd/00/00/46/78/467819_467819.pdf
Even Intel don't have an straight answer about non-ecc or i5/i7 CPU.
edit:
Asus CPU support listLooks pretty clear to me. They say that the i5/i7 doesn't support ECC.
My mistake, I should have said: …an straight answer about non-ecc or i5/i7 CPU support on C204. As stated in page 5 ”Not Supported” configurations may still boot