Hi Alex! On 06/09/2016 09:12 AM, Alex McWhirter wrote: > How "new" does a system have to be in order to meet these requirements. T-5 > machines are probably not too hard to come by, but the starting price of a T-7 > machine is around 40K USD IIRC.
It doesn't have to be bleeding edge technology like the M7, but just just new hardware in the sense that the machines have not been used for a long time or not used at all. I think even the absolute low-end model that Oracle currently offers would be more than enough to be used for Debian, it just should be new or at least refurbished. The problem with the existing SPARC servers that Debian was running was simply that they were quite old and starting to run into issues. And if we want to convince the DSA team to set up new sparc64 servers, those would have to be new and reliable enough that they can be running for a while without any stability concerns. The mentioned SPARC T5 machines would be probably perfectly fine. Anatoly Pugachev, who is on this list, is actually hosting such a machine which we have set up as a buildd (with four instances) and a porter box. The machine runs very stable and the integrated remote management mechanisms make it very easy to admin. So, these machines are ideal for Debian purposes. I guess we could probably convince DSA to use T5 machines if someone were to donate these as long these particular machines have not seen too much usage yet. I actually don't think that even T5 machines that have seen some use already would be in anyway problematic. This kind of enterprise hardware is usually built like a tank. Adrian -- .''`. John Paul Adrian Glaubitz : :' : Debian Developer - glaub...@debian.org `. `' Freie Universitaet Berlin - glaub...@physik.fu-berlin.de `- GPG: 62FF 8A75 84E0 2956 9546 0006 7426 3B37 F5B5 F913