ggRock Hardware Selection Guide

This article is meant as a guide to appropriately select hardware for a ggRock server based on center needs.

If you're inundated with all this information don't worry, we're here to assist!

Reach out to us at sales@ggcircuit.com

We'll be more than happy to discuss how we can help ease some of the burden from your shoulders through our server configuration and on-site services. 

General Notes

Running ggRock in a virtual environment is not supported.

All hardware selections should be enterprise-grade or server-grade, not consumer-grade.

All hardware selections should meet or exceed the listed minimum specifications.

Hardware Selection Guide

Machine Count

up to 60 up to 180 up to 300

Motherboard

Server motherboard compatible with desired CPU & RAM

CPU¹

  • Intel
    Xeon Bronze 3204
    or
  • AMD
    EPYC 7262
  • Intel
    Xeon Silver 4215
    or
  • AMD
    EPYC 7313
  • Intel
    Xeon Gold 5215
    or
  • AMD
    EPYC 7402

RAM²

64GB ECC 128GB ECC 256GB ECC

OS Drives³

Micron

5400 Pro 240GB

x2

Micron

5400 Pro 240GB

x2

Micron

5400 Pro 240GB

x2

Storage Drives³

Micron

5400 1.92TB

x4

Micron

5400 3.84TB

x4

Micron

9400 7.68TB NVME

x4

Chassis

Select based on business and technology needs

Power Supply

It is advisable to have redundant PSUs.

Power requirements depend on the hardware being used.

Cooling Fans

As needed dependent upon cooling needs and space restrictions

Network Card

10G SFP+ or better 25G SFP+ or better 40G QSFP+ or better

 

 

 

CPU Notes:

The selected CPU should be a server-grade CPU such as an Intel Xeon Bronze or better or AMD EPYC or better because they support ECC RAM which is critical to system stability.

Prioritize more cores or higher thread count over CPU frequency.

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RAM Notes:

To ensure data integrity, only ECC memory should be used.

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Drive Notes:

QLC drives should be avoided, as well as any drive with a decreased cache size (e.g. Samsung QVO) which severely impacts performance.

Hardware RAID controllers, if used, must provide direct access to the operating system to the individual drives (e.g. HBA mode or pass-thru mode).

PLP (power loss prevention) drives can, optionally, be used to protect further against data loss or corruption on power failure.

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Network Notes:
SFP+ Recommended

Server NIC must be compatible with Debian Linux

Client NICs must be compatible with PXE boot.

Avoid managed features on network equipment.

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