EU Supermicro 4 Node Server 2022TG 8x AMD Opteron 6275 16 Core CPU G34 @£199 Collection Only

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anoother

Member
Dec 2, 2016
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These look super interesting, BUT:

- I can find no mention of them on the SM site, or anywhere in fact
- The heatsinks look like Intel heatsinks... Not even sure if they're big enough to cover a G34 CPU.

They have SGI/Rackable stickers, so likely custom OEM solution by SM?
 

michathe

Active Member
Feb 25, 2016
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These look super interesting, BUT:

- I can find no mention of them on the SM site, or anywhere in fact
- The heatsinks look like Intel heatsinks... Not even sure if they're big enough to cover a G34 CPU.

They have SGI/Rackable stickers, so likely custom OEM solution by SM?
I thougt these where LGA1366 at first but Supermicro makes a Motherboard that seems do use intel Heatsinks on the G34 socket.

Super Micro Computer, Inc. - Aplus Products | Motherboards | H8DGT-HLIBQF
 

anoother

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Dec 2, 2016
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I thougt these where LGA1366 at first but Supermicro makes a Motherboard that seems do use intel Heatsinks on the G34 socket.

Super Micro Computer, Inc. - Aplus Products | Motherboards | H8DGT-HLIBQF
Yup, was just looking into it. That does look like the board, and this looks like the system: Super Micro Computer, Inc. - Products | A+ Servers | 2U | 2022TG-HLIBQRF

You can also see in the seller images how the socket almost meets the edge of the heatsink on one end, so it definitely looks G34 sized.

I wonder how much the FLOPS limitiation impacts performance; I guess these were designed to be used for network pushing packets around at high-speed, where it probably doesn't make too much difference.

I don't need a loud, power-hungry, relatively-low-performance cluster, but I am mighty tempted...
 

Mishka

Active Member
Apr 30, 2017
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London, UK
I wonder how much the FLOPS limitiation impacts performance; I guess these were designed to be used for network pushing packets around at high-speed, where it probably doesn't make too much difference.
Wonder if you could swap out the CPU for a 6272 or a 6276, both fairly common and cheap (£20-30 per CPU) although they are getting a bit rare it seems for the cheap ones
 

linuxmanbg

Member
Jun 23, 2016
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Hello,
a day before weekend my 2 SuperMicro servers arrived, but now I have time to publish some pics.

out2smal2.jpg outt.jpg out3smal.jpgout4smal.jpg out5smal.jpg
the motherbord is found on SM site it is: H8DGT-HLIBQF-SG007
BIOS was 3.5 upgraded to 3.5c
IPMI FW was 2.1x upgraded to 3.15 .
Select in BIOS for all working nodes (currently 2) Energy saving and FAN is not noisy (but they become noisy if 80% of cpus are busy), two nodes mining monero (soft. xmr-stak-cpu ) 77-82 dB .
 
Last edited:

Iaroslav

Member
Aug 23, 2017
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Kyiv
Hello,
a day before weekend my 2 SuperMicro servers arrived, but now I have time to publish some pics.

View attachment 7380 View attachment 7381 View attachment 7382View attachment 7383 View attachment 7384
the motherbord is found on SM site it is: H8DGT-HLIBQF-SG007
BIOS was 3.5 upgraded to 3.5c
IPMI FW was 2.1x upgraded to 3.15 .
Select in BIOS for all working nodes (currently 2) Energy saving and FAN is not noisy (but they become noisy if 80% of cpus is busy), two nodes mining monero (soft. xmr-stak-cpu ) 77-82 dB .
Great, mine is still on its way.
So, what is your actual hashrate per node? As far as I see it's ok with a non-ECC memory?
 

linuxmanbg

Member
Jun 23, 2016
54
14
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50
Great, mine is still on its way.
So, what is your actual hashrate per node? As far as I see it's ok with a non-ECC memory?
Fedora 25 ( 4.13.16-100.fc25.x86_64) 22 threads :
Totals: 790.1 791.4 783.8 H/s
Highest: 839.0 H/s
sometimes: 914 H/s

Fedora 26 (4.14.8-200.fc26.x86_64) 22 threads:
Totals: 940.9 941.6 942.0 H/s
Highest: 954.3 H/s
2 nodes consume ~642W measured with watmeter.
Accidently put non buffered memoty 2x4GB and it worked (officially supported)!
lscpu:
Architecture: x86_64
CPU op-mode(s): 32-bit, 64-bit
Byte Order: Little Endian
CPU(s): 32
On-line CPU(s) list: 0-31
Thread(s) per core: 2
Core(s) per socket: 8
Socket(s): 2
NUMA node(s): 4
Vendor ID: AuthenticAMD
CPU family: 21
Model: 1
Model name: AMD Opteron(tm) Processor 6275
Stepping: 2
CPU MHz: 2300.000
CPU max MHz: 2300,0000
CPU min MHz: 1400,0000
BogoMIPS: 4600.09
Virtualization: AMD-V
L1d cache: 16K
L1i cache: 64K
L2 cache: 2048K
L3 cache: 6144K
NUMA node0 CPU(s): 0-7
NUMA node1 CPU(s): 8-15
NUMA node2 CPU(s): 16-23
NUMA node3 CPU(s): 24-31
Flags: fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflush mmx fxsr sse sse2 ht syscall nx mmxext fxsr_opt pdpe1gb rdtscp lm constant_tsc rep_good nopl nonstop_tsc cpuid extd_apicid amd_dcm aperfmperf pni pclmulqdq monitor ssse3 cx16 sse4_1 sse4_2 popcnt aes xsave avx lahf_lm cmp_legacy svm extapic cr8_legacy abm sse4a misalignsse 3dnowprefetch osvw ibs xop skinit wdt lwp fma4 nodeid_msr topoext perfctr_core perfctr_nb cpb hw_pstate vmmcall arat npt lbrv svm_lock nrip_save tsc_scale vmcb_clean flushbyasid decodeassists pausefilter pfthreshold

power info:
cpupower frequency-info
analyzing CPU 0:
driver: acpi-cpufreq
CPUs which run at the same hardware frequency: 0
CPUs which need to have their frequency coordinated by software: 0
maximum transition latency: 5.0 us
hardware limits: 1.40 GHz - 2.30 GHz
available frequency steps: 2.30 GHz, 1.40 GHz
available cpufreq governors: conservative userspace powersave ondemand performance schedutil
current policy: frequency should be within 1.40 GHz and 2.30 GHz.
The governor "ondemand" may decide which speed to use
within this range.
current CPU frequency: 1.40 GHz (asserted by call to hardware)
boost state support:
Supported: yes
Active: yes
Boost States: 2
Total States: 7
Pstate-Pb0: 3200MHz (boost state)
Pstate-Pb1: 2600MHz (boost state)
Pstate-P0: 2300MHz
Pstate-P1: 2300MHz
Pstate-P2: 2300MHz
Pstate-P3: 2300MHz
Pstate-P4: 1400MHz

turbostat
turbostat version 17.06.23 - Len Brown <lenb@kernel.org>
CPUID(0): AuthenticAMD 13 CPUID levels; family:model:stepping 0xf:1:2 (15:1:2)
CPUID(1): SSE3 MONITOR - - - TSC MSR - -
CPUID(6): APERF, No-TURBO, No-DTS, No-PTM, No-HWP, No-HWPnotify, No-HWPwindow, No-HWPepp, No-HWPpkg, No-EPB
CPUID(7): No-SGX
cpu3: POLL: CPUIDLE CORE POLL IDLE
cpu3: C1: <null>
cpu3: C2: ACPI IOPORT 0x815
cpu3: cpufreq driver: acpi-cpufreq
cpu3: cpufreq governor: ondemand
cpufreq boost: 1
Package Core CPU Avg_MHz Busy% Bzy_MHz TSC_MHz IRQ C1 C2 C1% C2%
- - - 894 68.76 1300 1150 66047 13 279 0.00 15.62
0 0 8 2295 88.23 2602 2301 5259 0 1 0.00 11.78
0 1 9 1585 60.92 2602 2301 3661 2 22 0.00 39.11
0 2 10 1397 53.69 2602 2302 3202 0 4 0.00 46.35
0 3 11 2583 99.23 2603 2302 5922 0 13 0.00 0.77
0 4 12 484 18.61 2601 2301 1130 1 6 0.00 81.41
 
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BlackArchon

Member
Jun 23, 2016
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Thank you, linuxmanbg!
These turbo steps looks exactly like the 6276, the core configuration too. Maybe the 6275 has a lower TDP than the 6276's 115 W, but I don't know how to get this value within Linux. Can someone help?