- Is it formatted in GPT?
- What motherboard did you get? We don't have any information to go on. Is the SATA controller on this board even slightly on the HCL of ESXi?
- What are the system specs to begin with even?! Come on, throw us a bone here..
SilentDecode
I Googled with Bing
You what now?!
Try to use the APC Firmware updater. Your firmware might be stuck and the way to go is to update the firmware. This might be a little hard to find, because APC recently did a dick-move and threw all their NMC firmware utilities behind a MASSIVE paywall. If you really can't find the tool, I can link you one. Send a DM if you're interesed. I think I have a tool for the AP/9630/AP9631, but I'll have to check to be sure.
is there a good solution for this?
Get a ODD caddy to HDD adapter, put in a proper quality SATA SSD and use the cableing of the ODD to connect it all. Install the OS and boot from it. I've been doing this to many servers over the years, also in my current R730. Works splendidly.
I was thinking of using a PCIE m.2 adatpter
The R720 and newer R730 do not support boot from NVMe. So without some Clover bootloader magic, you can't boot from this.
I am also running into problems with the lifecycle controller
You can update firmware via iDRAC itself. If you can access iDRAC with a web browser, just upload the Windows .exe file in the 'file upload' section in iDRAC.
Oh, and if your firmware of your iDRAC is still on 1.x.x.x, DO NOT UPGRADE STRAIGHT TO THE NEWEST VERSION OF 2.x.x.x. This will brick the controller. Just take your time with updates and just go slowly through every other firmware update available, until you're on the latest update. I really can't emphasize this enough.
but it could be a fun proof of concept?
Having gigantic clusters of small ARM computers, has been around almost as long as ARM is on consumer hardware. Definitly since the very first Pi 1. Loads of people have constructed many different configurations with all kind of different hardware. Loads of people here even run K8s and other stuff on their ARM cluster.
Tell me why I shouldn't do this!
If you have no use for it, why bother? Only if you want to learn from it, it can be useful. But still, you really have to think about what you want to do with it.
Oh, and power reasons. If you're in the USA, and your power is cheap, then why not. If you're not so lucky with the powerbill, then just get one big system (x64 or ARM) and just run stuff on there.
Nope. You need to buy a seperate case for this and throw everything over.
ever since I put it in the server gives me a fatal error on bay 1 drive 0
Some SSDs cause this. Don't know for sure why, but all the Samsung consumer SSDs I've put in servers over the years, never triggered those warnings. Maybe for your next round of SSDs, stick with Samsung?
Mostly my own eyes.. /s
I run Dozzle as a container on my host and I use the command 'docker stats' on the CLI on the dockerhost for in-depth stuff.
- It isn't meant for 24/7 usage and it also doesn't have the nice features other options do have (including Windows Server)
- Windows Updates is just annoying
- Why would you if there are plenty better tools for a specific job
- Just because you know it, shouldn't mean you will use it for that. Because maybe it's time you learn a new trick, such as Linux based stuff
- Extremely heavy for simple tasks
- License costs
And to answer your own points you made:
- Windows is always busy with something, so yeah, at default you have a higher usage.
- Valid point
- Simple needs require simple tools. So this is a perfect opportunity for TrueNAS.
I have nothing against Windows, so don't get me wrong. But there are so many better ways to do stuff, also where you don't have to pay for licensing.
I had my rack before I had my cluster of TinyMiniMicro's. I've ran enterprise hardware for years, but not anymore. But a rack is convenient, because my Synology is rackmount too :)
so I have decided to get a Dell Poweredge R710 instead
Also pretty old. It's from 2009..
This is the only correct answer to this question!
I run ESXi on most of my systems. So that means, when there is an update of ESXi, I install the updates and reboot them.
Sometimes I need to change hardware or upgrade stuff. Then too.
I took my docker host offline yesterday, because of a RAM upgrade (16GB > 24GB, yeah, I'm aware I lost dual-channel). I regularly check for updates on non-ESXi machines.
Some people love 100% uptime of their servers. I hate it. When somebody has high uptime, it means they are lazy and don't keep up with updates, which are critical most of the time.