- 2U Rackmount Server, 4 Nodes
- Dual Socket SP5, AMD EPYC 9004 Series CPU
- 24x DIMM slots, up to 6TB RAM DDR5-4800MHz
- 2x 2.5 Inch hot-swap drive bays
- 2x 1GbE RJ45 LAN ports
- 1x PCI-E 5.0 x16 Expansion slot
- 2x 3000W redundant power supplies (Titanium Level)
- 2U Rackmount Server, 4 Nodes
- Dual Socket E, 4th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable CPU
- 16x DIMM slots, up to 4TB RAM DDR5-4800MHz
- 2x 2.5 Inch hot-swap drive bays
- 1x VGA, 2x USB 3.2, 1x RJ45 MLAN
- 1x PCI-E 5.0 x16 Expansion slot, 1x OCP 3.0
- 2x 2600W redundant Power Supplies (Titanium Level)
- 2U Rack Server, up to 205W TDP
- Dual Socket P+, 3rd Gen Intel® Xeon® Scalable processors
- 20x DIMM Slots (16 DRAM + 4 PMem), up to 4TB RAM DDR4-3200MHz
- 6x 2.5 hot-swap NVMe/SATA/SAS Drive bays (6x 2.5 NVMe hybrid)
- 2x PCI-E 4.0 x16 (LP) slots
- Built-in SAS3 Support via Broadcom 3808, IT Mode
- 2600W redundant Power supplies (Titanium Level)
- 4U Rackmount Server, up to 165W TDP
- Dual Socket P, 2nd Gen Intel Xeon Scalable Processors
- 12x DIMM slots, 2TB RAM DDR4-2933MHz
- 60x 3.5 SATA/SAS hot-swap drive bays
- 3x PCI-E 3.0 x16 slots and 1x Mezzanine card
- 2x 10GbE SFP+ and 2x 1GbE LAN ports (QLogic® QL41102)
- 2x 2000W redundant power supplies (Platinum Level)
- 2U Rackmount Server, 4 Nodes
- Dual Socket E, 4th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable CPU
- 16x DIMM slots, up to 4TB RAM DDR5-4800MHz
- 2x 2.5 Inch hot-swap drive bays
- 1x Dedicated management port
- 1x PCI-E 5.0 x16 Expansion slot, 1x OCP 3.0
- 2x 3000W redundant power supplies (Titanium Level)
- 2U Rackmount Server, 4 Nodes
- Dual Socket SP5, AMD EPYC 9004 Series CPU
- 24x DIMM slots, up to 6TB RAM DDR5-4800MHz
- 2x 2.5 Inch hot-swap drive bays
- 2x 1GbE RJ45 LAN ports
- 2x PCI-E 5.0 x16 Expansion slots, 1x OCP 3.0
- 2x 2600W redundant Power Supplies (Titanium Level)
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4 Nodes FatTwin Architecture
- 4U Rackmount Server, up to 205W TDP
- Dual Socket P+, 3rd Gen Intel Xeon Scalable Processors
- 16x DIMM slots, up to 2TB RAM DDR4-3200MHz
- 4x hot-pluggable Nodes
- 8x 3.5 hot-swap SATA/SAS drive bays
- 2x PCI-E 4.0 x16 (1x LP & 1x AIOM) slots
- 4x 2200W redundant Power supplies (Titanium Level)
- 2U Rackmount Server, 4 Nodes, 60 Cores
- Dual Socket E, 5th/4th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable CPU
- 16x DIMM slots, up to 4TB RAM DDR5-4800MHz
- 2x 2.5 Inch hot-swap drive bays
- 1x CMC MLAN, 1x VGA, 2x USB 3.2, 1x RJ45 MLAN
- 2x PCI-E 5.0 x16 Expansion slots, 1x OCP 3.0
- 2x 2600W redundant power supplies (Titanium Level)
- 2U Rackmount Server, 4 Nodes
- Dual Socket E, 4th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable CPU
- 16x DIMM slots, up to 4TB RAM DDR5-4800MHz
- 6x 2.5 Inch hot-swap drive bays
- 1x VGA, 2x USB 3.2, 1x RJ45 MLAN
- 2x PCI-E 5.0 x16 slot, 1x OCP 3.0 slot
- 2x 3000W redundant Power Supplies (Titanium Level)
- 2U Rackmount Server, up to 240W cTDP
- Dual Socket SP5, AMD EPYC 9004 Series CPU
- 24x DIMM slots, up to 6TB RAM DDR5-4800MHz
- 8x 2.5 Inch hot-swap drive bays
- 2x 10GbE RJ45 LAN ports
- 18x PCI-E Gen5 Expansion slots (16x FHFL GPUs & 2x LP)
- 2x 3000W redundant power supplies (Titanium Level)
- 2U Rack Server, up to 205W TDP
- Dual Socket P+, 3rd Gen Intel Xeon Scalable Processors
- 20x DIMM slots (16 DRAM + 4 PMem), bis zu 6TB RAM DDR4-3200MHz
- 6x 2.5 Hot-swap NVMe/SATA/SAS Drive bays (6x 2.5 NVMe hybrid)
- 1x PCI-E 4.0 x16 (LP) slots
- 4x heavy-duty cooling fans
- 2x 2600W redundant Power supplies (Titanium Level)
- 4U Rack Server, up to 165W TDP with IVR
- 8x Hot-pluggable nodes
- Dual Socket P, 2nd Gen Intel Xeon Scalable CPU
- 12x DIMM slots, up to 3TB RAM DDR4-2933MHz
- 2x or 4x Fixed 2.5SATA3/NVMe drive bays
- 2x PCI-E 3.0 x16 (low profile & SIOM), 1x PCI-E 3.0 x8 slots
- 4x 2200W Redundant power supplies (Titanium Level)
- 4U Rackmount Server, up to 165W TDP
- Dual Socket P, 2nd Gen Intel Xeon Scalable Processors
- 12x DIMM slots, up to 3TB RAM DDR4-2933MHz ECC
- 8x Hot-pluggable nodes
- 2x 3.5 SATA3 drive bays
- 2x PCI-E 3.0 x16 and 1x PCI-E 3.0 x8 slots
- 4x 2200W redundant power supplies (Titanium Level)
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Liquid cooling solution
- 2U Rackmount Server, 4 Nodes
- Dual Socket E, 4th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable CPU
- 16x DIMM slots, up to 4TB RAM DDR5-4800MHz
- 2x 2.5 Inch hot-swap drive bays
- 1x VGA, 2x USB 3.2, 1x RJ45 MLAN
- 1x PCI-E 5.0 x16 slot, 1x OCP 3.0
- 2x 2600W redundant Power Supplies (Titanium Level)
special highlight
Liquid cooling solution
- 2U Rackmount Server, 4 Nodes
- Dual Socket E, 4th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable CPU
- 16x DIMM slots, up to 4TB RAM DDR5-4800MHz
- 6x 2.5 Inch hot-swap drive bays
- 1x VGA, 2x USB 3.2, 1x RJ45 MLAN
- 1x PCI-E 5.0 x16 slot, 1x OCP 3.0 slot
- 2x 2600W redundant Power Supplies (Titanium Level)
special highlight
Up to 1 Add-on card per Node on 4U
- 4U Rackmount Server, up to 280W TDP
- Single Socket SP3, AMD EPYC 7003 Series Processor
- 8x DIMM slots, up to 2TB RAM DDR4-3200MHz
- 8 hot-pluggable Nodes
- 2x 2.5 NVMe and 4x SATA3 drive bays
- 1x PCI-E 4.0 x16 LP slot & 1x PCI-E 4.0 x8 internal RAID AOC
- 4x 2200W redundant power supplies with PMBus
special highlight
Liquid cooling solution
- 2U Rackmount Server, 4 Nodes
- Dual Socket E, 4th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable CPU
- 16x DIMM slots, up to 4TB RAM DDR5-4800MHz
- 6x 2.5 Inch hot-swap drive bays
- 1x VGA, 2x USB 3.2, 1x RJ45 MLAN
- 1x PCI-E 5.0 x16 slot, 1x OCP 3.0 slot
- 2x 3000W redundant Power Supplies (Titanium Level)
- 4U Rackmount Server, up to 300W cTDP
- Dual Socket SP5, AMD EPYC™ 9004 Series CPU
- 48x DIMM slots, up to 12TB RAM DDR5-4800MHz
- 12x 2.5 Inch hot-swap drive bays
- 2x 1GbE RJ45 LAN ports
- 18x PCI-E Gen5 Expansion slots (8x FHFL GPUs, 10x LP)
- 4x 3000W redundant power supplies (Titanium Level)
- 2U Rack NAS, 2 nodes
- 16x Hot-swap 3.5 drive bays
- Intel Xeon D-2142IT CPU
- Up to 512GB RAM, DDR4 ECC RDIMM
- 4x FSP+ 10GbE LAN ports
- 3x RJ-45 GbE LAN ports
- 770W Redundant power supplies
special highlight
Integrated RAID controller
- 1U Rack Server
- Dual Intel Xeon Gold 6244 included
- Up to 4TB RAM, DDR4-2933MHz ECC
- 4x RJ45 GbE LAN ports
- 2x Hot-swap 2.5 NVMe drive bays
- 8x Hot-swap 2.5 SAS3 drive bays
- 750W Redundant power supplies (Platinum Level)
- 2U Rack NAS, 2 nodes
- 24x Hot-swap 2.5 drive bays
- Intel Xeon D-2142IT CPU
- Up to 512GB RAM, DDR4 ECC RDIMM
- 4x FSP+ 10GbE LAN ports
- 3x RJ-45 GbE LAN ports
- 700W Redundant power supplies
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Octa Socket, up to 24TB RAM
- 7U Rack Server, 205W TDP
- Octa Intel Xeon Scalable CPU, 2nd. Gen.
- Up to 24TB RAM, DDR4-2933MHz ECC
- 23x PCIe 3.0 slots, up to 39x PCIe 3.0 slots for OEM
- 16x Hot-swap 2.5 SAS3 drive bays
- 1600W (N+2) Redundant power supplies (Titanium Level)
- 2U Rackmount Server, up to 350W TDP
- Dual Socket E, 4th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable Processors
- 32x DIMM slots, up to 8TB RAM DDR5-4800MHz
- 12x 3.5 hot-swap drive bays
- Up to 8x PCI-E Gen5 Expansion slots
- 2x AIOM Networking slots, 4 GPUs
- 2x 1200W redundant Power Supplies (Titanium Level)
- 2U Rackmount Server, up to 350W TDP
- Dual Socket E, 5th/4th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable Processors
- 32x DIMM slots, up to 8TB RAM DDR5-4400MHz
- 8x 2.5 hot-swap NVMe/SATA/SAS drive bays
- Up to 8x PCI-E 5.0 x8 slots — optional
- 2x AIOM Networking slots, 4 GPUs
- 2x 1200W redundant Power Supplies (Titanium Level)
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What is server virtualization?
Server virtualization is used to provide systems or applications with hardware or hardware resources virtually. The system can work with this virtual hardware in the same way as with actual physical hardware.
In each virtual machine (VM), a separate operating system is installed and only the hardware is shared. This results in independent environments that can be configured with different settings. Virtual machines are also called logical partitions, logical domains, or kernel-based virtual machines.
What are the advantages of server virtualization?
Companies can use server virtualization in a variety of ways to leverage their resources more efficiently and save money in the long run:
- Fully utilized hardware resources
- Easy configuration
- Efficient allocation of resources
- More space and lower electricity needs
- Free choice of hardware
- New space for old applications
Server Virtualization: The Three Most Common Approaches to Virtualization
There are a number of different approaches in order to implement server virtualization. These different methods are often also used simultaneously by the virtualization solutions and combined with each other. This depends on the support of the guest OS, the hardware support, and the respective settings.
- Software Virtualization Software virtualization does not impose any special requirements on the hardware. Storage protection mechanisms are used to prevent interference caused by overlaps. I/O accesses to devices are intercepted and passed from the software of the host to the hardware. In this form of server virtualization, the hypervisor simulates the devices by analyzing the operating system code.
- Hardware Virtualization Hardware virtualization uses special instruction sets of the CPU or I/O devices. These must, of course, be supported by the hardware. Virtual machines can then use hypervisor calls to access the devices. This increases the efficiency of the hypervisor by reducing the load.
- Paravirtualization Paravirtualization uses dedicated drivers that are adapted to the hypervisor. This also eliminates the need for hardware support. An I/O request is sent on a logical level directly to the hypervisor, which then forwards it to the hardware. This eliminates the need to monitor the guest operating system code and makes guest communication with the hypervisor much more efficient.
OS-level server virtualization
With the operating system virtualization, only one operating system is installed on the hardware. The operating system then provides different environments. These environments look like independent operating systems, but they no longer have access to the hardware. Nevertheless, applications can be configured and operated independently of each other and are therefore protected.
The virtual instances share the kernel and the drivers. This means that each instance has the same patch status. Depending on the solution, the TCP/IP stack can also be shared. In some cases, however, it can also be configured independently.
Server Virtualization and the Importance of Hypervisors
When it comes to the type of virtualization, a basic distinction is made between type 1 (bare-metal hypervisor) and type 2 (hosted hypervisor) virtualization concepts. While bare-metal hypervisors are based directly on the hardware and do not require a host operating system, type 2 hypervisors are software that can be installed under Windows, Linux, or MacOS X.
In practice, however, the limits of this definition are becoming increasingly blurred. For example, Microsoft Hyper-V is considered a bare-metal virtualization product, while KVM (Kernel Virtual Machine, Linux) is a hosted hypervisor.
Everything you need to know about server virtualization and much more at HAPPYWARE
If you are looking for more information on server virtualization or you have further questions, please phone or send us an email - we will be happy to help.