Nice to see a shout-out to DragonFlyBSD in the article
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AMD Makes A Compelling Case For Budget-Friendly Ryzen Dedicated Servers
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Originally posted by coder View Post[...] when the 5600X was benchmarked against the 5600G, the X had a very consistent margin over the G.
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Originally posted by tehehe View PostToo bad 128GB RAM is max for Ryzens.
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Thanks for calling my attention to that table, because I'm disappointed to note that it's lacking the 5700X. I hope I can still use a regular one.
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Originally posted by orzel View PostAlmost all servers from 2012~2013 that I have, both amd/intel, can go up to to 768G.
If you need lots of RAM, check out the bottom of the EPYC stack. I'm seeing the single-socket, 16-core 7313P with a list price of < $1k, but Newegg is currently selling it for $1180. However, Newegg also has the previous generation 12-core 7272 for just $667.
Last edited by coder; 18 March 2022, 09:22 PM.
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Originally posted by tehehe View PostToo bad 128GB RAM is max for Ryzens.
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Originally posted by torsionbar28 View PostIMO the 128 GB size is about the limit for the workloads you'd be running on a Ryzen. The bigger problem is that ECC memory is only officially supported with the "PRO" variant of the chip which is OEM-only and not available at retail.
If you check the docs of that ASRock Rack board, they say which CPUs support it and which don't. Of the non-Pro models, only the APUs (i.e. the G-series) truly don't. Hence the interest in this thread in obtaining Ryzen Pro APUs.
Plus, what's all this about the server-oriented "A" OPNs?
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