On 11 Nov 2011, at 17:08, Matt Turner wrote:

> On Fri, Nov 11, 2011 at 5:16 AM, Tim Cutts <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
>> As I've said several times,  the current ES45 buildd, goetz.debian.org, will 
>> be available for someone to take as soon as the official Debian alpha ports 
>> no longer need it for Lenny support.  Once Wheezy is released, and official 
>> Debian Alpha support therefore really does end, the two ES45's that I 
>> currently host for Debian (and a third which we have kept so we have some 
>> spare parts) will become available, and I'm sure the Sanger Institute will 
>> be happy to donate them to the unofficial Alpha port, although someone else 
>> will need to come and collect them from our data centre near Cambridge, UK, 
>> and host them somewhere else.
> 
> That's the thing. The hardware itself costs essentially nothing in
> comparison to having a place to keep them powered, cooled, and
> connected to the internet.

Very true.

> If I understand correctly, you're saying
> once Debian ends support for Lenny, these systems will be turned off?

Yes, they will, once the DSA team tell me they no longer want them.  We no 
longer have any Alpha machines on site other than these three for Debian.  They 
take up almost an entire rack, and the space and power are much in demand for 
doing our science.  We use Debian heavily ourselves and are keen to give back 
to the project, so while Alpha is a supported architecture, we're happy to 
donate time space and power to hosting them, but once the project no longer 
needs them in its official capacity, there are better things we could do with 
the power and space (mostly filling it with disks for DNA sequencing data, 
which we're now purchasing at a rate of petabytes a month).  We will be 
continuing to host and support the other two .d.o systems we have (smetana and 
sibelius) since those are an active part of the project, but between them they 
only take as much space as one of the ES45's, and a lot less power...

We're funded by a charity, and at the end of the day we have to show the 
Wellcome Trust that what we do is of benefit to our research.  That's 
relatively easy to do for supporting the current work of the Debian project, 
because we have 2100 systems running Debian or Ubuntu, but it's hard to justify 
for an architecture that we don't use, and that the Debian project is no longer 
supporting.

Regards,

Tim

--
 The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute is operated by Genome Research
 Limited, a charity registered in England with number 1021457 and a
 company registered in England with number 2742969, whose registered
 office is 215 Euston Road, London, NW1 2BE.


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