Ask Slashdot: Little Boxes Around the Edge of the Data Center?
First time accepted submitter spaceyhackerlady writes "We're looking at some new development, and a big question mark is the little boxes around the edge of the data center — the NTP servers, the monitoring boxes, the stuff that supports and interfaces with the Big Iron that does the real work. The last time I visited a hosting farm I saw shelves of Mac Minis, but that was five years ago. What do people like now for their little support boxes?"
Call me old school, but Unix/Linux are multi-tasking. Why not just run multiple services on one OS directly on the metal?
"I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
Virtualized NTP is about the dumbest thing I've read on /.
Yes, worse than various conspiracy theories and fanboi wars.
Last generation's compute nodes. We keep some around for utility functions after decommissioning a large cluster.
To be fair, if someone cares enough about time accuracy to understand why that's a dumb idea, they should probably be using a GPS receiver instead of a PC.
NTP server is all about consistency. If it's running in a VM and can be delayed at the whim of the host, do you think it's going to be a very good source of time?
Uhhh. because the "little boxes" and individual servers run on unicorn farts and angel tears?
Answer: VMware VMs.
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."