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Running Fedora 30 workstation
Spec
Intel i5 9600k
Asus Z390 Prime-A
16GB Teamgroup Vulcan 3000 memory
Solarflare SFN7122F 10Gbe NIC
LSI MegaRAID 8888ELP controller
Intel RES2SV240 SAS Expander
Samsung PM960 128GB SSD (OS)
7x 2TB WD Se disks in raid 5
Superflower 550W golden green PSU
Housed in an old CM690-II case with 2x icydock backplanes
"in progress" pictures of the utility room clean up project (or my server room as I prefer to call it). Both the wall cabinet and the rack are mounted and the wiring is basically finished.
Hey guys, the new server is almost ready to put up! In about half an hour I'll post the IP. Thanks, and stay posted! Please comment if you mean to connect later today!
IP:198.12.65.62:25865
-Alex
Linksys Routers with DD-WRT firmware. Old laptop servers with Linux does the rest like VPN, printer sharing, etc.
My workplace had a massive clearout of old kit, which got sent off to a specialist computer recycling centre. This is one of the many old servers that made up what was approximately a metric ton of equipment
Lodgen Spiseri i Hemsedal Skisenter. Foto Kalle Hägglund. Bildet kan kun benyttes i forbindelse med promotering og av Hemsedal og skal krediteres fotograf og SkiStar Hemsedal.
How to enable .htaccess in Apache HTTP server
If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to Ask Xmodulo
These lights were very intelligently installed. The orange-hue florescent lights are temporary, as they have a lifetime of only a few years, and are installed over what will soon be cages for server racks, which will make them nearly possible to change.
To get around that, they will be removed, because the bluer ones at the top of the pole are LEDs, and have an estimated lifetime of 40 years.
You can move your mouse over the photo to identify the gear.
The one piece that needs explaining is The-Flame - it's the silent PC I built originally to be a hackintosh, and then just ended up doing lab duty. I documented the gear here:
www.brentozar.com/archive/2009/05/how-to-build-a-silent-pc/
These days, I just use it as a general purpose lab box, throwing different pieces of software on there to evaluate and then wiping it clean. At the moment, I'm running StarWind's iSCSI target software on it, which lets me use it as a storage server.