ATA? That long ago?

Sorry, IDE like. Forgot the terminology. You could put 4 drives on a controller, then two controllers per unit (EISA was cool).

Possible but unusual in a server, I would have thought.

What OS, just out of interest?

I think it was SCO Unix.

A single box? Oh dear.

We were so silly back then :-)

I've had catastrophic hardware failures, but luckily, none that took
out a RAID controller. I've just heard the horror stories.

I remember pulling it. There was a hole where one of the ASIC chips was. Pretty amazing to be honest, but oh well. Compaq took it back to the factory for review.

I finally left the support business in about 2011, but by then, it was
fairly standard practice to install VMware (the free VMware ESX
hypervisor if the company didn't have a paid vSphere site licence) on
all new boxes, then install the OS in that. Even if it was a dedicated
machine that only ran 1 OS ever. Because that way, if the machine
died, you could restore the backup onto a new, totally different box,
so long as it was running ESX, and it would Just Work™ with no driver
or activation issues -- the virtualised hardware was the same.

VMWare was *great*. I started using it on a small IBM box, then once I realized it was like a true mainframe OS we bought a pair of IBM 366's and a DS4300 SAN. Then upgraded the CPUs on them (4 CPUs). Then a set of DS4700 SANs (redundant arrays of arrays with 2 controllers per array). Then got a third so we could always run 2/3 of the cluster as opposed to 50% (for failover, see SystemPro). Then 3850's and 3950's with QPI memory sharing. God that worked, I was able to get 70-80 servers per box running away....

Much cheaper to run systems there than in the cloud. But everyone loves the cloud, so off we go.

C


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