Dell shows dell PowerEdge 12G series in anticipation of the Xeon E5

0
243

Following In the footsteps of HP, Dell new PowerEdge 12G-server hardware displayed that will use the not-yet-released Intel Xeon E5. Dell put under improved managementmogelijkheden and hot-swappable pcie ssds.

The new hardware in the PowerEdge 12G line is in Dell’s focusing on everything from simple servers for small businesses to high-end database systems for large enterprises. Because Intel on Sandy Bridge-based Xeon E5 processors still do not provide, Dell has still no prices released, nor were details about the cpu’s.

In total, Dell has six new PowerEdge servers is proposed. The T620 is the simplest model in the series and features two processor sockets which quadcore Xeon E3-1220 processors can be placed. In the 24 memory slots can hold up to 768GB of ddr3 memory to be pinned, while Dell is up to 36TB of storage can be included via sas or sata drives.

The 1U rack server PowerEdge R620 can have two Xeon E5 processors, while there is also space for ten hot swappable solid-state drives of 2.5″. Dell provides optionally its own Express Flash ssds, which is in a pci-express slot pricked, and no separate controller is needed. Also you can choose to four 3.5″sata or sas drives to combine with two ssd’s. Furthermore, the PowerEdge R620 is optional two 10 gbps ethernet ports or four 1 gbps connections are provided. The PowerEdge R720 is twice as high as the R620 and can be up to eight 3.5-inch or sixteen 2.5-inch drives, while the dell PowerEdge R720xd-variant is a 2U rack server with capacity for 24 x 2.5″drives or twelve 3.5-inch drives.

Dell also has the medium-height PowerEdge M620 blade server announced. Also this server can be equipped with two Xeon E5 processors and is available with a choice of gigabit or 10 gbps ethernet ports. The M620 includes two 2.5″-drive bays, while the two sd card readers can be used as a redundant hypervisors. The PowerEdge C6220 is a 2U chassis and is available with support for either two or four nodes. Each node can have two Xeon E5 cpus are pricked, together with sixteen memory slots. To the front, twelve 3.5-inch drives or 24 x 2.5″disks are inserted.

The server manufacturer has finally let you know to work on the PowerEdge R820-rack server. This would be optimized for running databases, but details about this system are still missing. The server manufacturer just wanted to say that the R820 four sockets will have. It is still unclear whether the rack server Xeon E5 processors can be placed.

The new servers from the PowerEdge portfolio in Dell’s also easier to manage if the optional integrated DRAC 7 service processors in the systems are placed. System administrators should be independent of the operating system through iDRAC 7 over five thousand parameters can adjust on a PowerEdge system.