Mylo75 Posted October 10, 2017 Share Posted October 10, 2017 (edited) Hi all, this is my server system at the moment, built over a year ago using very cheap 2nd motherboard, memory and cpu's. M/B: Supermicro - X8DTLCPU: Intel® Xeon® CPU L5520 @ 2.27GHzHVM: EnabledIOMMU: EnabledCache: 256 kB, 1024 kB, 8192 kBMemory: 12 GB (max. installable capacity 192 GB)Kernel: Linux 4.9.30-unRAID x86_64 This my windows 10 PC, now 4 or 5 year old and starting to show its age. Motherboard Asus P8Z77-V LX Memory Corsair CM3B4G2C1600L9 2x4GB 8GB DIMM DDR3 clocked @ 1600 MHz GPU Nvidia GTX 650 TiCpu Intel Core i5-3570K LGA1155, 1 CPU, 4 cores, 4 threads Base clock 3.4 GHz, turbo 4.1 GHz OS Windows 10 Now I'm thinking of building a new server and running windows as a vm (I already have a windows vm running on my current server as a little experiment). I do a bit of video editing and play the odd game and maybe have a couple of plex streams running sometimes and would be running maybe 10 or so dockers in unraid. My i5-3570k is overclocked and running at 4.1Ghz, so my new build would need to have the same or better processing power. Now because its an unraid server I presume I would have to go for a xeon as these are the only intel cpu's that support ecc memory? How many cores/threads & Ghz would be needed? Also I don't want to spend a fortune on a cpu. I noticed the new xeon w-2125 https://ark.intel.com/products/126708/Intel-Xeon-Processor-W-2125-8_25M-Cache-4_00-GHz or the xeon w-2135 https://ark.intel.com/products/126709/Intel-Xeon-Processor-W-2135-8_25M-Cache-3_70-GHz but its getting expensive. Any thoughts, help, advice greatly appreciated. Edited October 10, 2017 by Mylo75 Quote Link to comment
ashman70 Posted October 10, 2017 Share Posted October 10, 2017 Many CPU's other than Xeon support ECC, I am running an unRAID server with a Pentium G3260 which supports ECC, you just have to do your research and find the right CPU for you that supports ECC. I would not recommend overclocking for an unRAID server, too many variables can lead to an unstable environment. What resolution are your Plex streams, 720 or 1080p? It does sound like you might want to go for a six core or 8 core CPU as you would want to likely dedicate at least two physical cores to your Windows VM, then a couple to Plex etc. Quote Link to comment
Mylo75 Posted October 10, 2017 Author Share Posted October 10, 2017 Yea I have done research and I think the xeon is the only intel cpu that can achieve the power needed. 5 hours ago, ashman70 said: Pentium G3260 No offence, but a 2 core pentium will not satisfy my needs ? Plex would be high quality 1080p. Quote Link to comment
ashman70 Posted October 10, 2017 Share Posted October 10, 2017 I was only saying that my two core pentium is an example of a non Xeon CPU that supports ECC, I know it's not suitable for your needs. Quote Link to comment
tdallen Posted October 10, 2017 Share Posted October 10, 2017 If you can wait a little while, I would. The latest generation of Intel chips isn't widely available yet, including the workstation chips you linked above and the newest Coffee Lake chips announced last week. Right now your choices for high end chips with support for ECC are a high end Xeon E3 or an E5. (There are many lower end chips as well, as ashman70 pointed out.) If you need to buy right now I'd either go with high end E3, or a Xeon E5-16xx chip for 6+ cores and high clock speeds - but that might be expensive and the landscape should look pretty different over the next couple of months. Quote Link to comment
Mylo75 Posted October 11, 2017 Author Share Posted October 11, 2017 Yea, I guess I'll just have to wait then. But the latest xeon generation of Intel chips do look promising though. Are there going to be xeon Coffee Lake chips? Quote Link to comment
tdallen Posted October 11, 2017 Share Posted October 11, 2017 They haven't been announced yet, but they've accompanied prior generations of the Core processors... Whether we get new E3's, or actual availability of the workstation versions of the new SP Xeon's you linked above, though - there's some great new stuff coming and given the market pressure Ryzen is creating we may get decent pricing. Quote Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.