94 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
94 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3935
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Title: HPR3935: Server build retrospective
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3935/hpr3935.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 17:36:43
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3935 for Friday the 1st of September 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, Server Build Retrospective.
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It is hosted by Daniel Person and is about 10 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Daniel Person goes through his experience of building his first server.
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Hello Hacker's and welcome to another podcast with Daniel and I'm going to talk about a bunch
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of different subjects and I'm doing like chat GPT. I'm really good at creating a bunch of
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words without any real knowledge behind them. But the topics that I'm going to talk about are
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pretty random and I'm going to split them up. And we are back and we are now talking about my
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server build. So this semester or this holiday where I had four weeks off, I actually had more
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work done than when I actually were working. I usually have like three or four things that I
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look into when I'm working and now that I was actually free and off I put down a list of 10
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things that I needed to accomplish during my vacation. And I think it's very healthy for me
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to do stuff and figure things out and so on. I really think that is fun. I like to work.
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I like to figure things out. So one of the things that I wanted to do was build a server.
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So I currently have a bunch of small servers. I running a bunch of these kind of micro mini tiny
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PCs and those were pretty well and they are just one unit so you put in a disk in them and then
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plug them in and you can run a bunch of stuff in them. But the problem I have now is the buying
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two and a half inches of disk drives is not really the best options. The three and a half inches
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I have more space per dollars so they are more cost effective and therefore I wanted to build
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a bigger server. So what I did I figured out a server build with one of these kind of cast
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chassis that could fit in my rack but wasn't that deep. So I found a really shallow racked
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shallow server that I can install and it took a mini ITX and it only ran 200 watts power supply
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and so on. So I thought it was a pretty good choice. I also bought a bunch of brackets for fans
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and I bought some nother fans and I was really planning out later on figure out what kind of
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hardware I wanted to put in it. And then I was at my friend's house and he had just upgraded one of
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his kids computers and he had mini ITX board just laying around and he didn't really need it.
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So mini ITX board. So it's a lot larger than it actually would fit in here and it also had
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big fan on it on the processor and so on but everything was included except for a drive perhaps.
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So I took that home I put it into the computer I realized that it fits but having the hard drives
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there will be hard it doesn't really fit well but I thought that having it up and running just as
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thing in the meantime and figuring out how to work with the chassis could be a fun thing. So I
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put that in and then I looked at these kind of brackets for the fans and I realized that
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these brackets that they sell for like ten bucks at this shop is for server fans. Those thick
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big fans that do slide into these ones. So they were built for those and the noxia fans
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are really thin but noxia saved me there because they have these kind of plastic or rubbery
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things that you can throw through them and I could actually put it through the grill at the end
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of the chassis and get it mounted in the chassis as well so that worked out just fine. So now I had
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the motherboard put in and I also put in the noxia fans. So now I wanted to plug in the
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power supply and there was the next hurdle because on the motherboard you have a 24 pin
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power connector and a 4 pin power connector and the funny part is that the 200 watts power supply
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it had a 20 pin plus an 8 pin so it was not compatible at all but after I looking around a lot
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I found this retailer from I think Taiwan that sold these kind of 8 pin to 4 pins connector
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so and I read up on it and it's pretty much an 8 pin is two sides of the connector so you could
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go from 8 to 2 4 without any problems you could put an 8 into a 4 if you just put it in the right
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place and they are actually notched in a way so you can't really force it in in the correct way
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but it was other components at the end of the connector so I couldn't really get it in without
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having this kind of a bridge and then I was looking at the 24 pins and was thinking okay how
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can I use a 20 pins in a 24 pin so I read up on that as well and the extra 4 pins there
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is just a 12 volt connector extra for the board so you could connect and 20 pin to a 24 pin
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as long as you don't use the full power of the CPU and so I wanted to try that out I haven't
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really got the first connector yet so I tried to get the other one in and I realized that cable
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was too short now I have bought an extension cable to the server as well in order to get that
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connector so there is a bunch of things that is in the mail waiting to be shipped out to me in order
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to get my server built up and running so what I have learned from this experience is that I need
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to figure out what kind of cables actually come with the mounting hardware and also figure out
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what kind of motherboard is actually supported and probably use those kind of things instead of
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going with these kind of odd choices and another thing was also that the front panel connector
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was just one large brick with a bunch of connectors in it but it isn't really that bad because those are
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just like on-off switches and like leds and so on the worst thing you can do is actually burn out
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led on the front panel so I'm not really worried about that but there were no pins that really
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matched that connector but I could push it in over one of the front panel connector pins it was
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fewer pins than it was in that connector but I think they are pretty much stabilized where they
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are placed so I hope that it will work so that's another thing I need to figure out if I actually
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can get the front panel connector to work or if I need to just bridge a pin or something like
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that to get the server up and running but I don't really need the extra leds I don't really need a power
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power button or anything like that it's not that important because the server will pretty much
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be on 24-7 but it would be nice to get those working as well and I think in the future I will
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replace this motherboard with an ITX Mini instead so I actually have the right kind of board for
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this kind of chassis but looking that up on AliExpress or something like that and figuring out
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a correct CPU that works with a right board and then finding a static solution for the cooling
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so I can't really have a thin one with a fan because then you will have a fan that lies against the
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lid of the board so you pretty much need to just have a cooling solution without a fan so that is
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something I need to figure out as well so there is a bunch of things to think about when it comes
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to building server chassis so maybe next time when I buy a server I might look at the pre-built
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because it's a lot of work and I have built a lot of computers in my life but usually it's just
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plug and pray you just pick some components that you know works together and then you put it into
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a chassis and you have a lot of space to put it in but when it comes to these one new servers
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your space constrained and then everything becomes a lot more complicated but that's the fun part
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as well if it was easy it would be as fun I think so I have a lot of think about and if you have
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any comments please leave them and I will read them later
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you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does it work
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today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording
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broadcast you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it leads hosting for HBR has been
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kindly provided by an honesthost.com the internet archive and our syncs.net on the Sadois status
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today's show is released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
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