Re: Hardware compatability question

2012-05-31 Thread Kaya Saman
Hi,

it's not really about the machines but more the hardware.

FreeBSD is quite diverse in what it can run on so best bet check the
HCL's off the www.freebsd.org website as that would give you the best
idea!

Otherwise just install and see what works and doesn't. FreeBSD is
pretty comprehensive of H/W support.



I would say if you were moving away from MS, FreeBSD is a great choice
and probably the best out there providing you don't need something
specific - you will need to get used to the CLI environment but once
that's worked out it's a sinch.


I am now introducing *BSD to my company too and trying to move them
away from Linux which has it's own caveats.


Good luck with the move, I'd love to give you a full-blown sales pitch
but unfortunatley don't have time right now. - though it would be
kinda useless as FreeBSD really sells itself if you know what it can
do for you!


Regards,


Kaya


On Thu, May 31, 2012 at 3:23 PM,  phnxcs_...@lycos.com wrote:

     Hello,
   I am moving away from MS products due to security  and stability
   concerns.  Below are the machines I use and would like  to know which
   version of FreeBSD will work best with each.  The compu ters are used
   at home and away, for e-mail, preparing documents, databases , and
   spredsheets, as well as, web browsing and some begining programing    
 (Perl, C, HTML, and Assembely I think).
   Here are the notes on my machines:
   HP Compaq CQ5300Y
   MOBO M2N68-LA (Narra5)
   AMD Sempron LE-1300 2.30GHz
   Vidio Card NVIDIA GeForce  6150SE nForce 430
   RAM: PC2-6400 MB/sec 2 Gigs RAM
   HD: WDC WD32 00AAJS-65M0A SCSI 320 Gig HD
   Toshiba Satel lite A205-S5880
   Intel Pentium Dual CPU T2390 @ 1.86 GH
   Vidio Card: Mobile Intel 965 Express Chipset
   RAM: 3 Gigs
      HD: Toshiba MK2046GSX ATA
   Both where bought new and  are stock off the shelf models.
   Thank you for your fine efforts  and your time in this,
   Phnxcs_rep
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Re: Hardware compatability.

2008-02-21 Thread Bill Moran
In response to Odeth Solano [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Hi
 
 Can you suggest us, what kind of servers are supported to run if Free Free 
 BSD 6.2?
 HP? Dell? ]IBM?

http://www.freebsd.org/releases/6.3R/hardware-i386.html

 Could you suggest a model of this servers and processors please?

We've had mostly good experiences with Dell's servers.

-- 
Bill Moran
http://www.potentialtech.com
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Re: Hardware compatability.

2008-02-21 Thread Wojciech Puchar


http://www.freebsd.org/releases/6.3R/hardware-i386.html


Could you suggest a model of this servers and processors please?


We've had mostly good experiences with Dell's servers.

while i have one IBM and 2 self-assembled servers recently, both works 
fine. just check the hardware (by chipset, embedded devices etc) if it's 
supported. most are.

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HARDWARE compatability

2007-05-07 Thread Jean-Paul Natola
Hi everyone,

I'm looking to retire my PIII freebsd box for something a little more of age-
being that I'm at a non-profit I do not have the largest of budgets-

On that note I have never used and AMD before for a server so I was looking
at this box
http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=17
40107CatId=1206

it seems pretty good in terms of hardware-cpu speed/ram/raid etc..

and for approx 600 bucks I cant really complain- I'm womdnering if there if
there are any compatibility issues I need to watch out for , here are the
specs;

  Form Factor2U Rackmounted 
  Processor ClassAthlon64 
  Processor Number3500+ 
  Processor Speed2.20GHz 
  Processor InterfaceSocket AM2 
  Processors Supported1 
  Additional TechnologiesHyperTransport 
  Memory TypeDDR2 
  Total Memory1 GB 
  Memory SpeedDDR2 667 (PC2-5400) 
  Compatible RAID Levels0+1 0,1,5
  Number Of Hard Drives2 
  Hard Drive Size160 GB 
  Hard Drive InterfaceSATA-II 
  Spindle Speed (RPM)7200 
  Buffer Memory8 MB 
  Optical Drive Type52x CD-ROM 
  Communications DescriptionIntegrated LAN 
  Data Transfer Rate10 Mbps 100 Mbps 1000 Mbps









Jean-Paul Natola
Network Administrator
Information Technology
Family Care International
588 Broadway Suite 503
New York, NY 10012
Phone:212-941-5300 xt 36
Fax:  212-941-5563
Mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Re: HARDWARE compatability

2007-05-07 Thread Bob Middaugh

 -- Original message --
From: Jean-Paul Natola [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Hi everyone,
 
 I'm looking to retire my PIII freebsd box for something a little more of age-
 being that I'm at a non-profit I do not have the largest of budgets-
 
 On that note I have never used and AMD before for a server so I was looking
 at this box
 http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=17
 40107CatId=1206
 
 it seems pretty good in terms of hardware-cpu speed/ram/raid etc..
 
 and for approx 600 bucks I cant really complain- I'm womdnering if there if
 there are any compatibility issues I need to watch out for , here are the
 specs;
 
   Form Factor2U Rackmounted 
   Processor ClassAthlon64 
   Processor Number3500+ 
   Processor Speed2.20GHz 
   Processor InterfaceSocket AM2 
   Processors Supported1 
   Additional TechnologiesHyperTransport 
   Memory TypeDDR2 
   Total Memory1 GB 
   Memory SpeedDDR2 667 (PC2-5400) 
   Compatible RAID Levels0+1 0,1,5
   Number Of Hard Drives2 
   Hard Drive Size160 GB 
   Hard Drive InterfaceSATA-II 
   Spindle Speed (RPM)7200 
   Buffer Memory8 MB 
   Optical Drive Type52x CD-ROM 
   Communications DescriptionIntegrated LAN 
   Data Transfer Rate10 Mbps   100 Mbps 1000 Mbps
 
 

I'm not familliar with that specific board, but this will get you started:

http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/hardware.html

I think you're biggest concern is the RAID card.  Make sure that's ok.  What 
kind of network card is onboard?  That would be another thing to verify.

Good luck,
Bob
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Re: HARDWARE compatability

2007-05-07 Thread Matthew Seaman
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256

Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
 Hi everyone,
 
 I'm looking to retire my PIII freebsd box for something a little more of age-
 being that I'm at a non-profit I do not have the largest of budgets-
 
 On that note I have never used and AMD before for a server so I was looking
 at this box
 http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=17
 40107CatId=1206
 
 it seems pretty good in terms of hardware-cpu speed/ram/raid etc..
 
 and for approx 600 bucks I cant really complain- I'm womdnering if there if
 there are any compatibility issues I need to watch out for , here are the
 specs;
 
   Form Factor2U Rackmounted 
   Processor ClassAthlon64 
   Processor Number3500+ 
   Processor Speed2.20GHz 
   Processor InterfaceSocket AM2 
   Processors Supported1 
   Additional TechnologiesHyperTransport 
   Memory TypeDDR2 
   Total Memory1 GB 
   Memory SpeedDDR2 667 (PC2-5400) 
   Compatible RAID Levels0+1 0,1,5
   Number Of Hard Drives2 
   Hard Drive Size160 GB 
   Hard Drive InterfaceSATA-II 
   Spindle Speed (RPM)7200 
   Buffer Memory8 MB 
   Optical Drive Type52x CD-ROM 
   Communications DescriptionIntegrated LAN 
   Data Transfer Rate10 Mbps   100 Mbps 1000 Mbps

Hmmm... unfortunately that site doesn't tell you exactly what you
need to know.  For this class of machine, there are really two
fundamental parts of the system where you may run into trouble: the
on-board network interfaces and the SATA controller.   Server class
machines like this tend to have lowest common denominator graphics
which will just work in VESA mode, and who cares about sound if the
box is in a machine room...

In order to have a chance of predicting whether the system will support
FreeBSD you're going to need to know the Motherboard manufacturer and
model number -- or equivalently the chipsets used on the board.  Then
it's a case of hunting through documentation and mailing list archives
to see what other people's experience has been.  There's also this page
on the FreeBSD site:

http://www.freebsd.org/platforms/amd64/motherboards.html

Best test of all is if you can boot up the amd64 installation media
before deciding to buy or not -- looking through the boot-time dmesg
output will tell you a great deal quickly.

Cheers,

Matthew

- -- 
Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil.   7 Priory Courtyard
  Flat 3
PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey Ramsgate
  Kent, CT11 9PW
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RE: HARDWARE compatability

2007-05-07 Thread Jean-Paul Natola


Hash: SHA256

Jean-Paul Natola wrote:
 Hi everyone,
 
 I'm looking to retire my PIII freebsd box for something a little more of
age-
 being that I'm at a non-profit I do not have the largest of budgets-
 
 On that note I have never used and AMD before for a server so I was looking
 at this box

http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=17
 40107CatId=1206
 
 it seems pretty good in terms of hardware-cpu speed/ram/raid etc..
 
 and for approx 600 bucks I cant really complain- I'm womdnering if there if
 there are any compatibility issues I need to watch out for , here are the
 specs;
 
   Form Factor2U Rackmounted 
   Processor ClassAthlon64 
   Processor Number3500+ 
   Processor Speed2.20GHz 
   Processor InterfaceSocket AM2 
   Processors Supported1 
   Additional TechnologiesHyperTransport 
   Memory TypeDDR2 
   Total Memory1 GB 
   Memory SpeedDDR2 667 (PC2-5400) 
   Compatible RAID Levels0+1 0,1,5
   Number Of Hard Drives2 
   Hard Drive Size160 GB 
   Hard Drive InterfaceSATA-II 
   Spindle Speed (RPM)7200 
   Buffer Memory8 MB 
   Optical Drive Type52x CD-ROM 
   Communications DescriptionIntegrated LAN 
   Data Transfer Rate10 Mbps   100 Mbps 1000 Mbps

Hmmm... unfortunately that site doesn't tell you exactly what you
need to know.  For this class of machine, there are really two
fundamental parts of the system where you may run into trouble: the
on-board network interfaces and the SATA controller.   Server class
machines like this tend to have lowest common denominator graphics
which will just work in VESA mode, and who cares about sound if the
box is in a machine room...

In order to have a chance of predicting whether the system will support
FreeBSD you're going to need to know the Motherboard manufacturer and
model number -- or equivalently the chipsets used on the board.  Then
it's a case of hunting through documentation and mailing list archives
to see what other people's experience has been.  There's also this page
on the FreeBSD site:


Gigabyte GA-M61PM-S2 
MotherboardNVIDIA(r) GeForce 6100 / nForce 430 
Super I/O chip: ITE IT8716 
Integrated Peripherals 
T.I. IEEE1394 controller 
Realtek RTL8211 Gigabit Ethernet controller 
Realtek ALC883 Audio Codec
AMD Athlon(tm)64/ Sempron(tm) Socket AM2 platform 
Supports high performance Dual-Channel DDR2 800 memory 
Integrated NVIDIA(r) CineFX 3.0 Graphics Engine 
Features NVIDIA(r) SATA 3Gb/s with RAID function 
Optimized Gigabit LAN and IEEE1394 connection 
Enhances security with NVIDIA(r) TCP/IP Acceleration technology 
Features 8 channel High Definition Audio 
RoHS compliant motherboard for green computing
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Re: Hardware compatability list query (of d00m)

2004-06-12 Thread Toni Schmidbauer
On Fri, Jun 11, 2004 at 06:53:17PM +0100, Mike Woods wrote:
 Anyway, to the point, is there a big hardware compatability list anyway, 
 i dont mean like the one on freebsd.org rather a site stating actual 
 tried and tested cards and the like as opposed to chipsets and controllers ?

for laptops and pcmcia cards there is:

http://gerda.univie.ac.at/freebsd-laptops/

hth,
toni
-- 
Wer es einmal so weit gebracht hat, dass er nicht | toni at stderror dot at
mehr irrt, der hat auch zu arbeiten aufgehoert| Toni Schmidbauer
-- Max Planck |


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Hardware compatability list query (of d00m)

2004-06-11 Thread Mike Woods
Ignore the of d00m too much invader zim does odd things to you.
Anyway, to the point, is there a big hardware compatability list anyway, 
i dont mean like the one on freebsd.org rather a site stating actual 
tried and tested cards and the like as opposed to chipsets and controllers ?

Just wondered :P
Mike Woods
IT Technician
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