[ale] upgrading desktop
Leam Hall
leamhall at gmail.com
Wed Jul 29 10:05:36 EDT 2020
Hey Bob,
I won't contradict the others; they know a lot more about the current
hardware stuff than I. My suggestion would add to theirs.
See if your local Goodwill, or similar, has a computer store. When mine
opens back up I can get refurb Dells for $50 (I'm using one as I write
this). If you got one you could use it to ensure your migration skills
are ready, as well as have a back up machine in case your primary goes
south. I do development on mine, push updates to git each session, and
do weekly backups to an external drive. Quarterly uploads to Google
drive. And I've restored from my backups, too. :)
If you have a cheap machine you could have more time to build your own.
It's a fun hobby, and with the level of expertise here you can build a
great box.
Leam
On 7/29/20 9:35 AM, Bob via Ale wrote:
>
>
> Hi Jim,
>
> Both you and J.D. are suggesting that I not bother putting more memory
> in my current system, so I'll scrap that idea. Both of you prefer an
> AMD cpu for the desktop.
>
> You're suggesting purchasing a 2 year old, off-lease machine with an AMD
> cpu and DDR4 memory. Your philosophy with computers sounds similar to
> mine about cars. I prefer to buy a car that's a couple of years old,
> and then drive it until
>
> J.D. is suggesting replacing cpu and motherboard provided I have a
> decent case. If I don't have a decent case, I think he's suggesting
> building a new desktop. Building a desktop sounds intriguing since I've
> never done that; however, I think I should wait on a project like that
> until I have more free time.
>
> Both of you like having an ssd. I'll look into that. At least one of
> you doesn't think it's that important to keep directories that are
> frequently read from and written to off of the ssd, correct?
>
> --Bob
>
>
> On 2020-07-28 6:56 p.m., Jim Kinney via Ale wrote:
>> I have to keep kicking myself that when I spec a system, it's a node
>> in an HPC stack that will run HARD 24x7 for the next 6-8 years by
>> several hundred people I'm convinced are trying to crash systems. Most
>> normal people don't need 3GHz dual 32-core cpus with 500GB RAM and 4TB
>> of RAID1 NVME scratch space and 100G Infinniband to share data between
>> dual P100 GPUs. (Buy 100+ of these systems and call me. I'll make
>> house calls)
>>
>> Keep this in mind: personal machine power efficiency has improved so
>> much that buying an off lease cheap box (2 years old) will be an big
>> upgrade compared to a mid price system of 6-8 years ago. AMD is always
>> better performance per watt than Intel.
>>
>> When I did the price point calculations, the "knee" in the price vs
>> performance curve was about 2 releases back from the most recent for
>> almost all technology components. Don't buy the fastest or biggest.
>> Buy the third or fourth fastest.
>>
>> Getting DDR4 RAM is a good plan. Way, WAY cheaper per GB than prior
>> types.
>>
>> I've had decent performance from RealTek 1G network chips. The Intel
>> ones are way better but 4x the price. For desktop hitting interwebs
>> for basic stuff, realtek won't be the slow point. For a home file
>> server, it's a nightmare. Use Intel cpu for that as well. Never dug
>> into why, but Xeon is great for file servers. AMD is for number
>> crunching.
>>
>> SSD tech is where I get fussy/crazy. I will buy cutting edge when all
>> that matters is speed (and it's someone elses money). When I need a
>> balance of performance and reliability, RAID1 SSD 2 gens back from
>> leading edge (this is my standard for most things, home and work).
>> When it's my money and longevity is paramount, a single SSD 3 gens
>> from edge plus a spinning rust disk for local backup. It's not off
>> site but if the house burns, I'll have bigger issues.
>>
>> I futzed around with raid and mixed drives, ssd and rust. Under most
>> home read conditions, raid1 worked fine. But during heavy writes with
>> reads, it was a mess. Of course I was using Linux software raid. But
>> getting behind larger than write behind buffer on hardware raid will
>> generate a system wait to flush then it _all_ flushes. Not great doing
>> a video convert.
>>
>> My $0.02. worth about that much, too 👍
>>
>> On July 28, 2020 4:06:11 PM EDT, DJ-Pfulio via Ale <ale at ale.org> wrote:
>>> What's your budget? What's the goal?
>>>
>>> Is the Lenovo using standard PSU and case? If it doesn't have a
>>> standard case, most major "upgrades" are risky. Need all the screws and
>>> clearances to be right. OTOH, a $30 case for someone who doesn't open
>>> it more than once a year to clean out the dust is just fine.
>>>
>>> The easy way to provide info about your current box, is to run: inxi
>>> -Fz and post that.
>>>
>>> $214 for MB+CPU combo:
>>> https://www.microcenter.com/product/5003878/-amd-ryzen-5-3600-with-wraith-stealth-cooler,-asus-b450m-a-csm-prime,-cpu---motherboard-bundle
>>>
>>> The only negative I see with this is a crappy Realtek NIC, so I'd need
>>> to spend $25 on a quality NIC. The forums are full of people with
>>> Realtek NIC issues. I have a G3258 with a flakey Realtek NIC. Ended up
>>> disabling it and throwing in an old cheap Marvell.
>>>
>>> I need to check a few other MB+CPU combos to see what's available.
>>> Microcenter almost always has some
>>>
>>> With a standard case, that MB+CPU combo just needs some DDR4 RAM and a
>>> GPU. That's almost 18K passmarks in 65W. 5 yrs ago, that was Xeon
>>> server performance. My Ryzen 2600 is just 13K passmarks. Reuse
>>> everything else you already have.
>>>
>>> There's little purpose in doing a little upgrade to an 8 yr old CPU
>>> unless it is only a CPU swap and the newer one is 2x faster - minimal.
>>> However, an SSD would make a difference for pretty much any system.
>>> I'm a fan of the Samsung 8xx and 9xx lines. Just be sure to check the
>>> warranty TBW numbers so you know what you are getting. I have a
>>> model: Samsung_SSD_860 size: 500.1GB in a laptop. It is a SATA
>>> interface with a 2.5inch form factor standard for laptops. I've never
>>> seen a 3.5inch form in any SATA. I have seen m.2 for both SATA and
>>> NVMe, but you don't have any m.2 slots, so that won't work. My rule
>>> for SSDs is pretty simple. If they don't have a warranty based on TBW
>>> (endurance) or they refuse to publish that data, then I won't buy.
>>> Their are a number of SSD "brands" which do that. I've had a few SSDs
>>> fail over the years. They were much cheaper than the Samsung.
>>> I also have a model: Micron_1100_MTFD size: 512.1GB. Micron is who I
>>> think WD and Crucial buy their SSDs from. I would have preferred to
>>> get a Samsung, but needed the storage for a build and was already over
>>> the budget. The Samsung was $30 more at the time.
>>>
>>> When I was researching SSD lifespans and linux information, so things
>>> jumped out. I'm a simple person and only recall when I make a decision
>>> to avoid certain types, not the details. Those decisions are based on
>>> my needs which probably don't meet anyone else's needs. Do your own
>>> research. Plus, it has been 18+ months since my last SSD purchase. The
>>> SSD world could have changed in that time.
>>>
>>> How big should an SSD be? How can we say? For some systems, 16G is too
>>> much. For others 2TB isn't enough.
>>>
>>> Because you didn't say what CPU is currently used, we can't tell
>>> whether any upgrade is worth it.
>>>
>>> 280W is probably fine for anyone not dropping in a $130 GPU that needs
>>> extra power, but it completely depends on the current CPU draw and how
>>> much storage there is.
>>>
>>>
>>> On 7/28/20 12:16 PM, Bob via Ale wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Charles has me thinking about upgrading my 8 year old lenovo desktop.
>>>> I'm thinking of increasing memory and installing an ssd.
>>>>
>>>> I don't know much about hardware, so I'm hoping some of you might
>>>> give me some advice and maybe keep me from doing something stupid.
>>>> I'm not a gamer, so that might make things simpler.
>>>>
>>>> 1) Memory. Currently, there are two 4 GB ddr3 1600 memory modules
>>>> in the two memory slots. There is no graphics card in my desktop and
>>>> the integrated graphics uses some of the memory. I can upgrade to
>>>> two 8 gb ddr3l 1600. According to crucial.com, the crucial 16gb kit
>>>> (2 x 8GB) ddr3l-1600 udimm are compatible.
>>>>
>>>> I believe my motherboard can use either ddr3 or ddr3l. Is there an
>>>> advantage of one over the other?
>>>>
>>>> (The power supply unit has been fine, but it's only 280 watts. I
>>>> don't know if that would affect the above choice or not.)
>>>>
>>>> Microcenter has a variety of brands: Neo Forza, G. skills ripjaw,
>>>> crucial, .... Are there brands to avoid? Are there brands that
>>>> you'd recommend?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> 2) ssd. This seems more complicated.
>>>>
>>>> There are 4 empty pci express slots---one is x16 and the others x1.
>>>> I do not believe that the motherboard supports pcie ssd. The
>>>> motherboard does not have mSATA or m.2 slots. So pcie ssd seems to
>>>> be impossible. (I don't know what I'd ever use these slots for.)
>>>>
>>>> The chipset on the motherboard only supports SATA at 3.0 gb/s. There
>>>> are 3 SATA ports and one e-SATA port. (There has been no update to
>>>> the bios/uefi firmware.)
>>>>
>>>> One SATA port is connected to the optical drive, and the other two
>>>> SATA ports are connected to the two 1TB HDDs Both drives have plenty
>>>> of free space.
>>>>
>>>> I don't know why I get slightly different info for the following.
>>>> When I execute "sudo hdparm -I /dev/sda | grep SATA", the result is:
>>>>
>>>> Transport: Serial, SATA Rev 3.0
>>>>
>>>> but on /dev/sdb, the result is:
>>>>
>>>> Transport: Serial, SATA 1.0a, SATA II Extensions, SATA Rev
>>>> 2.5, SATA Rev 2.6, SATA Rev 3.0
>>>>
>>>> The e-SATA port is connected to a usm hot-swappable bay where I'm
>>>> supposed to be able to plug in a portable SATA drive. The connector
>>>> is supposed to be a standard SATA connector. I have never used this
>>>> bay so far.
>>>>
>>>> It seems like I could either purchase an external SATA ssd and plug
>>>> it into the bay. I don't know if I would have troubles booting from
>>>> that drive.
>>>>
>>>> OTOH, I could remove one of the HDDs and put the SSD into either
>>>> /dev/sda or /dev/sdb. Presumably, I could put the HDD that was
>>>> removed into an enclosure allowing it to be placed into the swappable
>>>> bay on the rare occasions that it was needed.
>>>>
>>>> 1) Does it seem better to remove an HDD and put the ssd into that
>>>> space vs. putting the ssd into the swappable bay? Does it make a
>>>> difference if the ssd is put into the drive where /dev/sda is or
>>>> /dev/sdb?
>>>>
>>>> 2) Any suggestions on how large the ssd should be?
>>>>
>>>> 3) Are there brands to avoid or brands that you would recommend?
>>>>
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>>
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