amka put forth on 12/14/2009 4:30 PM: > So, I want something fine.
With all due respect, your definition of "fine" is misguided. See my previous email about the difference between "workstation" and "consumer" class products. There are "fine" products in both classes. You are of the belief that only the "workstation" class products are "fine". You are _wrong_, but apparently rich. So, buy what you want. You won't necessarily get the "best" buying "workstation" class. In fact, most "workstation" class mobos use slow memory standards. They are always a generation behind so they can claim "stability" and charge more for older technology, driving up profits. In essence, making "suckers" of un/under educated buyers. > 1. > For AMD Opteron 1356, look this : > http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?nm_mc=AFC-SlickDeals&cm_mmc=AFC-SlickDeals-_-NA-_-NA-_-NA&Item=N82E16819105214 Newegg no longer sells that model. Says so right in the link. > ? Impossible to find the Supermicro MB's. -> ? How so? http://www.supermicro.com/Aplus/motherboard/ Best AMD boards on the planet. From a premier Intel contract manufacturer, nonetheless. Supermicro has been manufacturing desktop and server motherboards for Intel for over 10 years, in addition to their own Supermicro branded Intel chip motherboards. They started manufacturing AMD CPU boards shortly after the Opteron hit the market. You probably won't find them on Newegg. They have an authorized dealer channel. Find a dealer, find a board. ;) > But I have simply a doubt... Is the AMD Opteron a good choice ? > I *presume* it's the best of AMD, and I wonder if Intel would be better. No, the Opteron is a bad choice for a single socket workstation. You pay 10-50% more for the Opteron name regardless of any additional capabilities, the only of which there are being an additional HT link on the 800/8000 series Opterons. Single socket Opty's are identical to their Phenom counterparts, they just cost more due to the "target market". BTW, I've never heard of threaded perl code. Unless you're running multiple perl programs (3 or more) simultaneously you won't benefit from a quad-core CPU. In which case, again, go with the faster dual core CPU instead of the slower quad core. If you _will_ be running more than 3 scripts regularly, then I'd recommend going with this AMD cpu and the previous parts list: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819103696 I still think your best bet is to go with the parts list I previously mentioned. And get 4 Western Digital 300GB Raptor SATA2 drives. Fast drives are always better for DB servers: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822136322 Use mdadm/LVM and mirror a 100MB /boot and 30GB /root across all four drives. Of the remaining 270GB on each drive, setup a RAID 10 array and put your database files there. You'll get maximum data protection and access speed/throughput using RAID 10. -- Stan -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org