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Of the Love of Oldtimers - Dusting Off a Sun Fire V1280 Server

vikingpower writes "Today, I decided to acquire a refurbished Sun Fire V1280 server, with 8 CPUs. The machine will soon or may already belong to a certain history of computing. This project is not about high-performance computing, much more about lovingly dusting off and maintaining a piece of hardware considered quirky by 2013 standards. And Now the question creeps to mind: what software would Slashdotters run on such a beast, once it is upgraded to 12 procs and, say, 24 GiB of RAM ?"

10 of 281 comments (clear)

  1. Free software. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Many free software projects are not regularly tested on anything other than x86.
    Make your system available for free software developers and you will be sure to have
    the loag average of 30 or more. Ghostscript project, for instance, would greatly benefit
    from testing on minority platforms.

  2. Re:I must be getting old by rudy_wayne · · Score: 5, Insightful

    WTF?

    "The Sun Fire server brand was a series of server computers introduced in 2001".

    You think something from 2001 is old? What are you? 12?

  3. Re:I must be getting old by TWX · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Heh. My desktop PC is dual 3.2GHz Xeon based on an ASUS PC-DL Deluxe board from ten years ago. It's the most stable computer I've ever owned, even though it spends most of its time booted into Windows XP rather than Linux, and its hardware suspend mode means that when I'm not using it it's not consuming gobs of power.

    The only thing that would prevent me from using a Sun like the submitter describes would be the power requirements. I probably wouldn't use the computer to its extent that justifies the power costs to run it.

    The computer I'm typing this on is a Dell Latitude D410, which is eight years old. It's normally the shop computer, but works just fine for general computing. It's a lot faster than the much newer netbook, and the keyboard is loads better.

    I guess I've graduated from newest/latest/greatest to just wanting computers that do what I want them to do. I get a lot of gear from local surplus dealers, as I don't feel a need to spend more money than I have to for a given result. If the Core2Duo HP in the entertainment center runs XBMC at full 1080p then it's adequate and won't be changed out until it's no longer good enough.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  4. Re:I must be getting old by CapeBretonBarbarian · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is a port of open source Illumos / Opendiana that should work on this hardware :

    http://opensxce.org

    Solaris 11 will not work on this hardware, but sxce should work.

  5. can you please donate it to GNU compile farm by decora · · Score: 5, Informative

    they will stick Debian on it and people will use it to port free software.

    they do have a sunfire but it's almost out of disk space and there are tons of people using it already.

  6. Re:I must be getting old by somenickname · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It may not be that old but, it's definitely of nostalgic value for a lot of people. 12 cores isn't mindblowing these days but, in 2001, cramming 12 processors (not 12 cores) into a single rack mountable computer was a very impressive feat. I worked at Sun in the late 90s and I'd love to own some brand new gear from that era because, in those days, Sun was doing really impressive things with hardware in an exciting time. It's like wanting to own a muscle car. It's probably not that fast, it handles like garbage, it uses too much gas, etc. But, damn, it's cool.

  7. Re:I must be getting old by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The only thing that would prevent me from using a Sun like the submitter describes would be the power requirements. I probably wouldn't use the computer to its extent that justifies the power costs to run it.

    This is the real problem with old hardware like that. In the not so distant past we had a wall of obsolete HPUX workstations, which while being decent at number crunching, were simply outclassed by new Intel machines (literally it was a wall - 3high by many wide, they stack well). I considered ways of converting them into some kind of compute farm, but they simply weren't worth the air conditioning or power required to run them (not to mention space). Power efficiency has so vastly improved in recent years that for compute tasks it just isn't worth it to keep old hardware like that running.

  8. Re:I must be getting old by Rockoon · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've got post-it notes on my desk older than this thing.

    Still havent called mom.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  9. Re:I must be getting old by Trouvist · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've got post-it notes on my desk older than this thing. Still havent called mom.

    But isn't she just upstairs?

  10. Re:I must be getting old by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    15W is still quite a lot, for what it does. A vaguely modern mobile phone or even something like a Raspberry Pi can emulate a C64 with under 1W of power draw, and will have HDMI so you can drive a TFT without having to power an ADC to generate the digital picture.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News