Andy Ruhl writes:
> On Fri, Sep 2, 2022 at 8:15 AM Greg Troxel wrote:
>> I am not sure this is low enough power, but the PC engines apu2 has 3
>> GbE interfaces and has pretty low power consumption. My UPS reports 37
>> VA, and that's an apu2, a USB hub, 2 ethernet switches one of which
>>
On Fri, Sep 2, 2022 at 8:15 AM Greg Troxel wrote:
> I am not sure this is low enough power, but the PC engines apu2 has 3
> GbE interfaces and has pretty low power consumption. My UPS reports 37
> VA, and that's an apu2, a USB hub, 2 ethernet switches one of which
> isn't particularly low power,
Le Fri, Sep 02, 2022 at 07:38:19AM -0700, Andy Ruhl a écrit :
> Hello all,
>
> I've been running a NetBSD server on i386 for about 20 odd years, I
> should go back and check when I actually started it. I sort of
> accidentally upgraded it to amd64 a while back but it worked.
>
> Anyways, it
I don’t usually post here but felt this might be relevant.
I use thin clients for most of my servers now. Currently using OpenBSD on them
but NetBSD should work just fine.
I have a mix of HP and Wyse units including the HP T5740 (5470? Sorry. Tired.)
and the Wyse Dx0D and others.
Only
Hello Andy,
Am 02.09.2022 um 16:38 schrieb Andy Ruhl:
Hello all,
I've been running a NetBSD server on i386 for about 20 odd years, I
should go back and check when I actually started it. I sort of
accidentally upgraded it to amd64 a while back but it worked.
Anyways, it seems like time to move
On Fri, Sep 02, 2022 at 04:48:59PM +0200, Benny Siegert wrote:
> > https://blog.netbsd.org/tnf/entry/making_rockpro64_a_netbsd_server
> >
> > Using a 128gig internal MMC would be plenty for OS and some local
> > storage then I would add some other disks, possibly SSD.
>
> The RockPro would also
Andy Ruhl writes:
> Hello all,
>
> I've been running a NetBSD server on i386 for about 20 odd years, I
> should go back and check when I actually started it. I sort of
> accidentally upgraded it to amd64 a while back but it worked.
>
> Anyways, it seems like time to move to something else,
> https://blog.netbsd.org/tnf/entry/making_rockpro64_a_netbsd_server
>
> Using a 128gig internal MMC would be plenty for OS and some local
> storage then I would add some other disks, possibly SSD.
The RockPro would also be my recommendation. Solid and very low power.
--
Benny
Hello all,
I've been running a NetBSD server on i386 for about 20 odd years, I
should go back and check when I actually started it. I sort of
accidentally upgraded it to amd64 a while back but it worked.
Anyways, it seems like time to move to something else, maybe lower
power if possible.
I