We almost have a new dev server…

It’s merrily chugging through an install of Ubuntu Server 7.04 (the beta of 7.10 is dying over some libncurses issue), at the moment. Hopefully, it’ll detect the NIC I added after it didn’t detect the built-in PCI-E one.

Meet the machine:

  • 1.8 gHz Pentium Dual Core - a good price-performance tradeoff for what we’re doing with it, and it has more cache than the other budget contenders.
  • Asus P5KPL-VM - comes with everything up to and including the kitchen sink. Too bad the gig LAN isn’t supported. It also has only one IDE channel—which is one more than some of the new Dell business machines I’ve been working with lately.
  • 2GB DDR2-800 - I got the Kingston ValueRAM because the fellow at my friendly cheapo computer shop said that there was a timing issue with the cheaper (but shinier) OCZ stuff. I took him on his word.
  • 320gb of Seagate SATA. Jiggabytes per dollar: Excessive. Cache: 16 mb.
  • Case/PSU are an unused Antec Sonata (mmmm), courtesy of Boyfriend.
  • Everything else is inconsequential.

So, for well under $400 CAD we have a totally sweet dev machine with a public IP (TekSavvy rocks) and seriously excessive storage. Life is good.

If only the install would finish so I can get along with granting Owen ssh access :)

-Leigh

4 Responses so far »

  1. 1

    Owen Jacobson said,

    October 9, 2007 @ 2:39 pm

    I suppose this means I need to get off my butt about build automation again.

  2. 2

    Leigh Honeywell said,

    October 9, 2007 @ 7:22 pm

    Why yes, yes it does :)

  3. 3

    Fred Supinski said,

    October 10, 2007 @ 11:38 am

    You can never have enough storage! Also, if you are able to having a RAID1 mirror of your drive would be a good idea.

  4. 4

    Owen Jacobson said,

    October 10, 2007 @ 1:10 pm

    I’m less worried about reliability on that machine. The servers hosting the source repository, collaboration bits, email, and so on are backed up automagically; having the testbed machine go kablammo on us is about equally time-consuming to fix whether or not RAID, backups, or manual labour is involved.

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