A top-value rack server that combines
storage space with impressive expansion potential
Price: $5,690
Supplier: www.broadberry.com
A key requirement for a 2U rack server is
versatility, and Broadberry’s CyberServe XE5-R224 has it in spades. It’s
designed for businesses requiring a combination of rack density, processing
power, expansion and storage space and it looks to have them all.
The XE5-R224 is an all-Intel product, and
is based on one of Intel’s premium platforms the Server System R2224GZ4GCSAS.
This comprises its Bighorn Peak chassis and Grizzly Pass S2600GZ motherboard.
Storage makes up a major part, with 24 SFF
hot-swap drive bays. This puts it right up with Dell and HP, since only the
high-density versions of their PowerEdge R720 (web ID: 374416) and ProLiant
DL380p Gen8 (web ID: 376273) servers can match it.
The motherboard has two embedded mini-SAS
four-port connectors, and by default the second port is disabled, with only
SATA supported. A connector next to the ports will accept an Intel hardware
upgrade key, which unlocks a choice of drive support and RAID options.
Seven colour-coded keys are available, and
our review model had the top of the range purple key that opens up all available
features. This gives you support for SATA and SAS drives, plus choices for
hardware-managed mirrors, stripes and RAID5 arrays.
The
CyberServe XE5-R224 has 24 SFF hot-swap drive bays
The two embedded SAS ports are cabled
through to a SAS expander board that allows all 24 bays to be supported by the
onboard RAID controller. This is a better arrangement than HP’s ProLiant DL380p
Gen8; once you go beyond eight drives, more PCI Express RAID cards must be
added to support them.
By mounting up to two additional 2.5in SATA
SSDs in the space provided above the plastic air shroud, the drive count can be
increased further; the motherboard also has a dedicated socket for an optional
eUSB SSD device.
There’s an abundance of network
connections, including four Gigabit Ethernet ports on the motherboard and a
separate I/O connector at the rear. This can be used to add more ports using
Intel’s I/O modules. Options include quad-port Gigabit Ethernet, dual 10GbE
SFP, and 10GBaseT plus single and dual-port QDR InfiniBand.
There’s lots of room to expand elsewhere,
since the two riser cards have three PCI Express Gen3 slots apiece. Unlike most
2U rack servers, there’s room behind the two upper slots in both risers for
full height, full length cards.
A single 2.4GHz E5-2665 Xeon is included in
the price one of Intel’s advanced models, with the full 20MB L3 cache and an
8GT/sec QPI speed. They also feature Turbo Boost 2, which allows the cores to
be speeded up briefly beyond their TDP rating when sufficient thermal budget
has been accrued.
The motherboard has 24 DIMM sockets, but in
the review system only 12 were active – you’ll need to add a second processor
to enable them all, a feature common to all Xeon E5-2600 servers. This also
applies to the PCI Express expansion slots, since the second riser card is only
supported in dual-CPU configurations. The chassis has five hot-swap fans
mounted in front of the motherboard, which we found to be quite noisy. However,
the BIOS features an acoustic setting and options to balance power consumption
against performance; with these options selected, the fans dropped down to
near-silent running.
Two 750W hot plug power supplies are
included in the price, and for lighter duties you can go for 460W modules.
Overall consumption is low, though, with the system consuming 85W at idle and
peaking at 199W under heavy load from the SiSoft Sandra benchmarking
application.
The
CyberServe XE5-R224 (inside)
The price also includes remote management,
with Intel’s RMM4 module taking pride of place. This snaps into a small socket
next to the I/O module slot and presents a dedicated network port at the rear.
It won’t be worrying HP’s new iLO4 or Dell’s iDRAC7 for features, though. It
offers a simple web interface with details on sensors for all critical
components, and options to tie their thresholds in with email and SNMP trap
alerts. It also includes KVM-over- IP remote control and virtual media support
as standard.
The CyberServe XE5-R224 has storage space
galore and backs this up with plenty of room to expand and low power
consumption. It doesn’t have the same level of features as Dell’s R720 and HP’s
DL380p Gen8, but a price that’s at least $1,500 less puts it firmly on the
A-List as our rack server of choice.
Rating
·
Overall: 10/10
·
Performance: 10/10
·
Feature & Design: 10/10
·
Value for money: 10/10
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