Product ReviewsNetworks/Servers
Opting for low profile rack servers has often meant a sacrifice in areas such as storage capacity and fault tolerance but HP's latest ProLiant DL360 G5 shows clearly this is no longer the case. HP was the first blue-chip server vendor to made the jump to smaller 2.5in. SFF hard disks and the upshot is the DL360 has enough room for six drives across its front panel. Team this up with the standard Smart Array controller and you have a wide range of RAID and data protection possibilities. HP's remote server management also sets a standard as its iLO2 (integrated lights out) chip is common across all bar the entry-level ProLiant servers. If you need secure remote access to your server and the facilities to monitor and configure it then this really is worth checking out. The iLO2 chip has its own dedicated Fast Ethernet management port and offers a smart web interface from where you can control the server as long as it has power. You can reset the server, power it off and on and emulate pressing the power button and iLO2 provides tools for monitoring the status of the controller and server and viewing installed components. Power monitoring and control is very high on HP's agenda as the iLO2 web interface provides access to the optional Power Meter, Power Regulator and Power Cap features and we tested using a 60-day evaluation which activates all optional features. The Power Regulator supports both AMD and Intel processors and dynamically controls power consumption by throttling the processors back during periods of low demand. You can also set them to run at their lowest possible speed or highest possible performance. The Power Meter provides a graph showing peak and average consumption in watts or Btu/hr along with a table showing average, maximum and minimum values as well. The Power Cap feature allows you to set physical limits in Watts or Btu/hr for your servers to reduce overall power consumption and heat output. There's much more on the management front as you get HP's Systems Management Homepage which opens with a complete rundown on the status of all server components plus colour coded alerts if anything is amiss. HP's additional Systems Insight Manager (SIM) software suite delivers enhanced browser-based remote server management and monitoring. This
And so to the DL360 itself which exhibits a classy built quality and design. There's a lot going on at the front with four of the six hot-swap drive bays on the review system fitted with 36GB SAS hard disks. A monitor port is routed through to one side and up above is a DVD-ROM drive along with HP's nifty Systems Insight Display. This little pop-out panel offers a complete status readout on all critical components so you can see at a glance what has failed. Internally, every looks ship-shape with the hard disk backplane cabled directly to the Smart Array RAID controller mounted to one side. On the review system you have both SAS cables installed so all six drives bays are activated but you can opt a model with single SAS cable and only four bays active. The RAID card came with 256MB cache and the battery backup pack which is neatly stowed in a small compartment behind the front panel. The DL360 is looking good in the processor department as the price includes a pair of 3GHz 5450 quad-core Xeons. These are Intel's latest 'Harpertown' models which are based on 45nm manufacturing processes and come with 12MB of L2 cache. The price also includes 4GB of 667MHz FB-DIMM memory and the eight DIMM slots allow this to go up to 32GB. Cooling is very well handled with a bank of nine, dual-rotor fans that stretches across the entire chassis with each group of three fans hot pluggable. We were expecting this to generate a lot of noise but after power up they settled down to a steady whisper. You can add up to two expansion cards as the chassis butterfly riser has a PCI-e slot on each side and can accept a full-height and low-profile card. Even though the 5450 Xeons have a TDP of 120W this server isn't a power hog. Using our in-line power meter we saw it drawing 30W when powered off and in standby mode. With Windows Server 2003 R2 pottering along in idle we saw an average draw of 213W and with SiSoft Sandra pummelling all eight cores this rose to only 310W. Along with its superb management facilities, the ProLiant DL360 G5 is offering some impressive expansion capabilities that the competition will be hard pushed to beat. Storage capacity and data protection potential are excellent as well - low profile rack server design simply doesn't get any better than this. By Dave Mitchell SPECIFICATIONS:
1U rack chassis, 2 x 3GHz Xeon 5450, 4GB 667MHz FBDIMMs expandable to 32GB, 4 x 2.5in. 36GB HP SAS 10K hard disks in hot-swap carriers, Smart Array P400i with 256MB cache and BBU, supports RAID0, 1, 10, 5, 6, 2 x PCI-e, 2 x Gigabit Ethernet with optional TOE, embedded iLO 2 remote management with 10/100BaseTX, 2x 700W hot-plug power supplies, HP SmartStart and Systems Insight Manager software bundled. Sponsored Links
HP HP Proliant Dl360 G5 Rack Server
HP Proliant Dl360 G5 Intel Xeon E5405 / 2Gb / Smart Array Controller P400 / Dvd+/-R/Rw / 3 Year Nbd Warranty / Rack Server
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