Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3
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@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@pmoncho said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
Oh also, the BOSS card is out as it is a single CPU and the Intel NIC is in the PCI slot.
I don't know the first thing about BOSS cards - what is it? and what does single CPU and a NIC in the PCI slot have to do with anything - unless that somehow implies that there is only one PCI slot and it's in use and BOSS is only PCI?
BOSS (Boot Optimized Storage System) Cards connect to PCI slot in the mother board. It holds two M.2 drives for a RAID 1 configuration to load the OS.
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@pmoncho That seems like a complete overspend for the need. Although there might not be a better way
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@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@pmoncho That seems like a complete overspend for the need. Although there might not be a better way
No, it keeps the boot off the data raid array.
You can do the same with something straight on the sata bus, but a minor expense gives you a dedicated boot raid array -
@pmoncho said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@jaredbusch said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@pmoncho said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
BOSS card is out as it is a single CPU
What does the single CPU have to do with it?
Having only one CPU in a R440 does not power on
Slot IISlot III on the motherboard. Therefore, there is no slot to put a BOSS card in.Hmmm... now you have me thinking. Heading to look at the specs again to see exactly where the SD card is located.
*Edit - Changed Slot II to Slot III
The SD cards have their own slot. Bummer. No replacing it with the BOSS card.
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@jaredbusch said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@pmoncho That seems like a complete overspend for the need. Although there might not be a better way
No, it keeps the boot off the data raid array.
You can do the same with something straight on the sata bus, but a minor expense gives you a dedicated boot raid arrayI agree you want the boot/hypervisor not on the main array... but I'm assuming these BOSS setups aren't cheap.. definitely no where near as cheep as a USB stick or SD Card. Likely 100's of time more, if not 1000's more. that's all I am getting at.
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@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@jaredbusch said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@pmoncho That seems like a complete overspend for the need. Although there might not be a better way
No, it keeps the boot off the data raid array.
You can do the same with something straight on the sata bus, but a minor expense gives you a dedicated boot raid arrayI agree you want the boot/hypervisor not on the main array... but I'm assuming these BOSS setups aren't cheap.. definitely no where near as cheep as a USB stick or SD Card. Likely 100's of time more, if not 1000's more. that's all I am getting at.
A BOSS card is just a PCIe to dual M.2 converter, lots of them available at not much cost. I have no idea how much BOSS cards sell for.
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@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@jaredbusch said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@pmoncho That seems like a complete overspend for the need. Although there might not be a better way
No, it keeps the boot off the data raid array.
You can do the same with something straight on the sata bus, but a minor expense gives you a dedicated boot raid arrayI agree you want the boot/hypervisor not on the main array... but I'm assuming these BOSS setups aren't cheap.. definitely no where near as cheep as a USB stick or SD Card. Likely 100's of time more, if not 1000's more. that's all I am getting at.
BOSS card is just a card, it uses standard NVMe drives. So you are looking at $100 in drives retail for a pair of 250GB drives.
They don't have the issues of SD or USB with wear, thus removing an entire fail domain.If you have a Dell server with SD boot, then you already had a BOSS card, so there is no difference in the expense.
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@jaredbusch said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@jaredbusch said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@pmoncho That seems like a complete overspend for the need. Although there might not be a better way
No, it keeps the boot off the data raid array.
You can do the same with something straight on the sata bus, but a minor expense gives you a dedicated boot raid arrayI agree you want the boot/hypervisor not on the main array... but I'm assuming these BOSS setups aren't cheap.. definitely no where near as cheep as a USB stick or SD Card. Likely 100's of time more, if not 1000's more. that's all I am getting at.
BOSS card is just a card, it uses standard NVMe drives. So you are looking at $100 in drives retail for a pair of 250GB drives.
They don't have the issues of SD or USB with wear, thus removing an entire fail domain.If you have a Dell server with SD boot, then you already had a BOSS card, so there is no difference in the expense.
OK - nice to know they are that reasonable... still tons more expensive than USB, but a ton safer too.
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@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@jaredbusch said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@jaredbusch said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@pmoncho That seems like a complete overspend for the need. Although there might not be a better way
No, it keeps the boot off the data raid array.
You can do the same with something straight on the sata bus, but a minor expense gives you a dedicated boot raid arrayI agree you want the boot/hypervisor not on the main array... but I'm assuming these BOSS setups aren't cheap.. definitely no where near as cheep as a USB stick or SD Card. Likely 100's of time more, if not 1000's more. that's all I am getting at.
BOSS card is just a card, it uses standard NVMe drives. So you are looking at $100 in drives retail for a pair of 250GB drives.
They don't have the issues of SD or USB with wear, thus removing an entire fail domain.If you have a Dell server with SD boot, then you already had a BOSS card, so there is no difference in the expense.
OK - nice to know they are that reasonable... still tons more expensive than USB, but a ton safer too.
No one boots current hardware to USB. No one. It was only a thing for a couple years in fact.
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@jaredbusch said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@jaredbusch said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@jaredbusch said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@dashrender said in Server upgrade advice for upgrade to ESXi 7.0 U3:
@pmoncho That seems like a complete overspend for the need. Although there might not be a better way
No, it keeps the boot off the data raid array.
You can do the same with something straight on the sata bus, but a minor expense gives you a dedicated boot raid arrayI agree you want the boot/hypervisor not on the main array... but I'm assuming these BOSS setups aren't cheap.. definitely no where near as cheep as a USB stick or SD Card. Likely 100's of time more, if not 1000's more. that's all I am getting at.
BOSS card is just a card, it uses standard NVMe drives. So you are looking at $100 in drives retail for a pair of 250GB drives.
They don't have the issues of SD or USB with wear, thus removing an entire fail domain.If you have a Dell server with SD boot, then you already had a BOSS card, so there is no difference in the expense.
OK - nice to know they are that reasonable... still tons more expensive than USB, but a ton safer too.
No one boots current hardware to USB. No one. It was only a thing for a couple years in fact.
/sigh - yes Jared, I'm aware of the change.