I just had a look at a dell r630 with 2 x Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2697 v3 @ 2.60GHz
At a moderate workload, (VMs) With 2 x spinning disks for boot disks
1 x dual port 10G card.
Power draw : currently 125W, peak of last 24 hours, 135W
So it sounds ok
I guess if you are going to run 16 x 10G ports as suggested it may draw a bit more :-)
Kind regards
Edd
On 1 May 2024, at 18:01, Joe Botha via zanog-discuss wrote:
Hi
120W seems pretty low power.
Last time I checked 8 core Xeon D uses around 85 Watt when doing basic Linux routing at low-ish speeds.
Always figured VPP would be much more power hungry? keeping all the cores busy all the time.
-- Swimmingly, Joe
swimgeek.com/blog +27 82 562 6167 instagram.com/joe.swimgeek "...all progress depends on the unreasonable man.”
On 25 Apr 2024, at 11:10, Nishal Goburdhan via zanog-discuss zanog-discuss@lists.nog.net.za wrote:
On 27 Mar 2024, at 11:16, Pim van Pelt via zanog-discuss wrote:
But just to re-iterate: any PC with an Intel Xeon D or E, or AMD Zen3+ will do absolutely fine. Some folks may want more PCI slots or dual PSU, so a fine alternative that I also run in production is the *Dell R630* [link https://i.dell.com/sites/doccontent/shared-content/data-sheets/en/documents/dell-poweredge-r630-spec-sheet.pdf ] because it allows for up to 16x10G at line rate, using ~120W. In case you want to binge watch some VPP materials - take a look at my [NOG recordings] https://video.ipng.ch/c/ipngnetworks/videos?s=1 .
for those following this, thread, thanks pim for posting your talk from last week’s GRNOG : https://video.ipng.ch/w/nnYWXW3Gw9dA7kWGswf1g1
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