this post was submitted on 23 Feb 2025
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I just got a dl380 G7 for free, with one processor. And 6 free 2.5 drive slots (2 of them are in use). I want to move my services to the new server hardware and repurpose my old media server but I'm a bit out of my depth, never worked with this type of hardware before.

  1. I didn't exactly check what processor is installed. Do you think it will be able to handle transcoding?

  2. I have a sata drive case with 5 3tb 3.5 HDDs which I used to use as storage for my media server. How would I go about connecting it? I'm happy with software raid.

I'm thinking about geting this HBA (sc08e), a couple of sas <-> sata cables and an external power supply. But it is clunky.

I also read about maybe using cable connectors for the drives in the dl380. Maybe like this?

I love the idea of having a DAS but don't want to spend that amount of money. Will keep my eyes open for one tho.

Thanks!!

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[–] adarza@lemmy.ca 6 points 15 hours ago (6 children)

dl380-g7 is some really old stuff. 1st gen westmere. not very power efficient for the performance. there's no hardware encoding (qsv with encoding started with some 2nd gen).

how well it can do software encoding would depend on the cpu. but don't expect too much, and nothing more demanding than h264 avc at reasonable settings. you'd need a newer video card with hardware encoding for hevc, av1 or anything like that.

iirc there was a 6bay 3.5in option for those, and that cage/backplane might be available somewhere.

[–] papelitofeliz@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 14 hours ago (2 children)

Wow you seem to know your stuff, I'll keep looking for the 6bay enclosure.

I'm not finding much from where I am from, but found a guy selling a really cheap MSA30 with 150gb disks on all bays. There are so many acronyms.

Do you think this would work or does it require specific disks? I have no idea how it interfaces with the server, it seems to have a network interface?

Sorry If i'm being too dense, enterprise stuff is complicated and usually not compatible

[–] adarza@lemmy.ca 1 points 8 hours ago

the only 6bay lff cage for it i found online after a quick search was over $400usd.

as others mentioned, msa30 is scsi (yuk). along those lines, you'd want the msa60 which is sas/sata, plus somewhere on the server to connect it to. probably not cheap.

but i really don't think it's worth putting a whole lot of time or money into a 15 year box.. at least not anything that can't be used in or with newer stuff later.

i'd probably just grab some 2-5tb 2.5in hdd for media storage and use those before i bought something specific for that old hardware.

[–] schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business 2 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

MSA30

Unless my memory fails, that's billion year old SCSI drives.

Do not buy billion year old SCSI drives, enclosures for SCSI drives, or uh, well, anything like that.

It's going to use an enormous amount of power, perform slower than a single modern drive, and be prone to failure because well, it's a billion years old.

That's not something you want.

[–] AtariDump@lemmy.world 1 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

Really, just don’t buy SCSI at this point.

[–] schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business 2 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

Yeah, for sure. SCSI died when SAS emerged, and that's been basically 20 years now.

Any SCSI stuff left laying around is going to be literally a decade+ old and yeah, unless you have a VERY specific need that requires it (which really is just trying to get another few years out of already installed gear), it's effectively dead and shouldn't be bought for anything other than paperweights or for a coffee table.

[–] AtariDump@lemmy.world 1 points 2 hours ago

Or the magnets inside; SCSI magnets are killer strong.

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