Hyperconverged Supermicro a2sdi-4c-hln4f
This howto aims at describing the choices and the build of a compact homelab with a hyperconverged chassis based on a Supermicro A2SDi-4C-HLN4F motherboard. The hypervisor OS will be Slackware64-current (with Qemu/KVM for virtualization), the storage will be provided by a Truenas core VM (thanks to pci-passthrough) and network orchestrated by an OPNSense VM.
Motivations
Why such a motherboard with a modest 4 cores Intel Atom C3558 ? Let's see the advantages :
- obviously, it's very compact (mini-itx form factor)
- up to 256 GB ECC RDIMM RAM supported
- the CPU has a very low TDP (~ 17W), so no need for a fancy and potentially noisy cooling solution
- 4 * 1 Gb/s Ethernet ports (cool for a network appliance such as OPNSense and there's no need for 10 Gb/s for this project)
- dedicated IPMI Ethernet port
- the SATA ports are provided by two distinct PCIe lines (see below, very important for pci-passthrough and no need for an additionnal HBA card)
Well, the system has drawbacks too :
- the CPU power will not be extraordinary
- it's not possible to put a fan directly on top of the CPU heatsink (more on that later)
- no external USB 3.0 ports (ony one "internal", on the motherboard itself) ; this is desirable to plug an external HDD for local backups (USB 2.0 is too slow)
Hardware
2.5 or 3.5 inches drives ?
What is required for this project :
- mini tower format chassis
- Hypervisor OS on RAID 1 with two drives
- 4 TB of encrypted data with a minimum of resilience (at least RAID 1 or RAID 5, RAID 10 or RAID 6 desired)
- it is recommended not to exceed 80% of the capacity of a ZFS filesystem, so, for 4 TB of usable data, 5 TB of raw capacity is required
- all disks easily accessible from the front of the chassis
Choosing between 2.5 (SFF) or 3.5 (LFF) inches drives is not so easy. Obviously, for raw capacity over a gigabit network, LFF HDD are unbeatable in terms of price. In France (as of march 2021), it costs ~ 80 euros for a 2 TB NAS 3.5 LFF HDD ... Same price for a 1 TB NAS SFF HDD. Moreover, SFF HDD over 2 TB simply doesn't exist for consumer NAS systems (enterprise SFF HDDs exist but are way too expensive). LFF HDD are a clear winner ? What about chassis size, cooling and noise ?
At this point, there are two choices :
- 2 * 500 GB SFF SSD (RAID 1 for hypervisor and VMs OS) plus 2 * 6 TB LFF HDD (RAID 1 storage)
- 2 * 500 GB SFF SSD (RAID 1 for hypervisor and VMs OS) plus 4 * 2 TB SFF SSD (RAID 5 storage)
The most reasonable would be to use LFF HDD but silent operation with a tiny chassis are very important, so let's stick with the "unreasonable" configuration !
Cooling the CPU
As seen earlier, a standard CPU fan cannot be fitted on the heat sink.
final system
- Chieftec mini tower case
- Supermicro A2SDi-4C-HLN4F
- 64 GB DDR4 RAM (RDIMM)
- ToughArmor MB992SK-B for hypervisor and VMs OS with 2 * WD SA500
- ToughArmor MB994SP-4SB-1 for data storage (with fans off) with 4 * Crucial MX500
- PCIe card with 2 * USB 3.0 ports