On Fri, 9 Dec 2022 at 15:48, Mark Rogers <mark@more-solutions.co.uk> wrote:
Over the years I've used a handful of HP Micro servers to run a
Linux-based web server application. To be honest I suspect it would
comfortably run on a Pi, to give you some idea of power requirements.
However it does need to be dependable and one of the criteria is RAID
(software RAID 1 is fine).

We replace the hardware every few years so the question I have is:
what is a good small server for Linux these days? Apart from the
requirement to host 2 SATA drives there isn't much in terms of
hardware requirements.

We don't even use a lot of disk space  - maybe a few dozen GB. One HDD
gets replaced annually so that no disk is older than 2y, using
commodity disks in the 1-2TB range but partitioned to only use 200GB
on each disk, just because we don't need more and it makes the swap to
a new disk quicker. Hot swap not needed. Would consider SSD for the
new server.

I was about to get a quote for an HP Gen10 MicroServer when it crossed
my mind that maybe just buying the same server out of habit wasn't
necessarily the right approach!

--
Mark Rogers // More Solutions Ltd (Peterborough Office) // 0344 251 1450
Registered in England (0456 0902) 21 Drakes Mews, Milton Keynes, MK8 0ER
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What did you find? I’ve been thinking about getting a small home server and other then interesting RISCV or Arm boards with M.2 NVMe drives the HP micro server still looks quite good.

If physical space isn’t an issue you can run ECC RAM with some AMD Ryzen motherboards. I guess something like that could be just as small and probably faster but at a higher cost.

If you only need 200GB of replicated data SSD’s might be a better idea these days.

Cheers,
Dennis