I'm considering upgrading, and am trying to choose a modern motherboard that nevertheless fully works with Centos5/RHEL5. Though I'm partial to AMD processors, and would like to use one in my new configuration, that's not a requirement, if the most appropriate board happens to be intel-compatible. However, given the way ASUS is dumping LInux and crawling more firmly into bed with the Beast, I'd prefer to avoid ASUS boards. I see that NewEgg has some combo deals at reasonable prices, but I can't tell which chipsets/boards are known to work with centos5 and which aren't. Just at random, here's one of their offerings, a Biostar board: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813138143 I've always understood Biostar boards to be cheap, not only in price, but perhaps they're serviceable? I'm open to other suggestions, too. Thanks in advance! -- ---- Fred Smith -- fredex at fcshome.stoneham.ma.us ----------------------------- The Lord detests the way of the wicked but he loves those who pursue righteousness. ----------------------------- Proverbs 15:9 (niv) ----------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: not available URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20090704/8e044a9f/attachment-0003.sig>
fred smith wrote:> I'm considering upgrading, and am trying to choose a modern motherboard > that nevertheless fully works with Centos5/RHEL5.What role is that system going to play? I assume server because I'd put money down that in excess of 99% of CentOS installations are servers. (that number started at 95% and I kept jacking it up higher the more I thought about it..) In which case.. Supermicro has a pretty large selection of Istanbul-ready boards, you don't really mention any special requirements outside of OS compatibility so it's hard to say what board is best: http://www.supermicro.com/Istanbul/Istanbul.cfm?pg=MB Pretty much all of them should work fine with CentOS 5, of course I would avoid the on board controllers for disks, use an external controller like a 3Ware or something mainly for performance reasons. Tyan has plenty of good boards too. nate
Well, despite what you say about ASUS, I recently bought an M3N78-VM (http://www.ebuyer.com/product/152752 - although the net card specs are wrong) because it was cheap and it supported 8gb. The only problem was the lack for forcedeth drivers in standard CentOS, which I download from somewhere else. I can't speak for graphics or sound because the machine uses neither. It's running Xen kernel from the Gitco repositories and it's rock solid (touch wood). ________________________________ From: fred smith <fredex at fcshome.stoneham.ma.us> To: centos at centos.org Sent: Saturday, 4 July, 2009 15:39:26 Subject: [CentOS] modern motherboard for centos-5 I'm considering upgrading, and am trying to choose a modern motherboard that nevertheless fully works with Centos5/RHEL5. Though I'm partial to AMD processors, and would like to use one in my new configuration, that's not a requirement, if the most appropriate board happens to be intel-compatible. However, given the way ASUS is dumping LInux and crawling more firmly into bed with the Beast, I'd prefer to avoid ASUS boards. I see that NewEgg has some combo deals at reasonable prices, but I can't tell which chipsets/boards are known to work with centos5 and which aren't. Just at random, here's one of their offerings, a Biostar board: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813138143 I've always understood Biostar boards to be cheap, not only in price, but perhaps they're serviceable? I'm open to other suggestions, too. Thanks in advance! -- ---- Fred Smith -- fredex at fcshome.stoneham.ma.us ----------------------------- The Lord detests the way of the wicked but he loves those who pursue righteousness. ----------------------------- Proverbs 15:9 (niv) ----------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20090705/3aa908fb/attachment-0003.html>
fred smith wrote:> I'm considering upgrading, and am trying to choose a modern motherboard > that nevertheless fully works with Centos5/RHEL5. > > Though I'm partial to AMD processors, and would like to use one in my > new configuration, that's not a requirement, if the most appropriate > board happens to be intel-compatible. >Personally, for consumer grade motherboard, I prefer to use Gigabyte or MSI. Between those two, MSI is more USB boot friendly. I boot many implementations with USB SysLinux without problem with MSI, but problematic with Gigabyte. For AMD, I recommend to get any with AMD 780G chipset, the reasons are : a. already has built in low entry 3D capable graphic unit, and has DVI output in case you want to use them with large LCD screen b. the SATA chipset brought by the AMD SB700 or SB750 is compatible with VMWare ESX 4.0i, thus can be made as local VMFS storage. My CentOs is always above VMware ESX now.> However, given the way ASUS is dumping LInux and crawling more firmly > into bed with the Beast, I'd prefer to avoid ASUS boards. >Long time never used the Asus board anymore, thus cannot comment.> I see that NewEgg has some combo deals at reasonable prices, but I > can't tell which chipsets/boards are known to work with centos5 and > which aren't. > > Just at random, here's one of their offerings, a Biostar board: > http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813138143 > I've always understood Biostar boards to be cheap, not only in price, > but perhaps they're serviceable?I have some cheap BioStar motherboards. Works well, and suitable for lower price desktop built for my friends. All of the running Ubuntu Linux. However none of them running 24x7 thus cannot recommend whether it is suitable for your email server requirements. The oldest possibly about 2 years old. If I recall, I never had any motherboard problem since 2001 and I only used Gigabyte-MSI-Biostar-Palit. Yes, there are some old motherboards who were dead after never been used, but usually they are > 4 years old and becoming rusty after I put them in the store room (very humid here in Singapore).
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