Hi poindexter FORTRAN,
The only reason for not trying it, is that I have no need at
home! (Plus my main VM server is still on ESXi 6). I make sure all
the VM's have backup's going back at least a week. SSD's for the
VM's, hd's for the NAS/Backup's, Via VTX-D to the controller.
I use vSphere at work; I would have loved to run it at home, but the hardware requirements are strict. I had some server hardware supported
under 6.0 that wasn't that old, but wasn't supported by 6.5 - and
hardware that was supported by 6.5 not supported by 7.0.
A lot of people got pissed at vmware for doing that... I was one of them,
my old server had all the supported spec's except for the CPU, so a jump
onto ebay and a Intel S1200BTL with a E3 1240 Xeon cpu, was the new
server. Adding 32gb of ram was a nice feature though!
Some of us don't need the latest wizbang high end system for home use.
I've got my new lab server up and running, and migrated all of my VMs
to the new server last night. Got NUT working so my new server will
shut down when the UPS goes on battery, and this afternoon I'm
planning on swapping them out.
Our power is generally pretty good here, but every now and again some
doofus will do something stupid....
I got a notification monday morning that power had gone out, and the
UPS's (two) kept things running for the half hour until it came back. (I
wasn't home.)
New:
i5-6500 CPU (3.2ghz, 4 cores, 4 threads)
32 GB RAM
1 TB nvme SSD
You'll see the improvement just in core count! The SSD will make it fly
like there's no tomorrow.
\/orlon
aka
Stephen
--- Talisman v0.46-dev (Linux/m68k)
* Origin: Vorlon Empire: Amiga 3000 powered in Sector 550 (21:1/195.1)