Sorry, I’m not very used with server stuff, if I buy an Intel CPU without an integrated GPU like most Xeon, then I wouldn’t have enough pcie lanes for a GPU because all is taken for nvme drives
Specifically, the motherboard ipmi is powered by aspeed ast2500
If I understood right, that chip will act as a 2d basic graphics card that’s enough to see what happens that day the server is unresponsive
I don’t plan to connect a monitor, it’s just that I’m scared if I break truenas and I can’t connect via ssh, then I could still see the local screen from the management Page on the browser
If you’re willing to deal with terminal, you don’t need a gpu at all. You can merely connect over serial (which could be a DB8 connector, or an ethernet connector, or whatever), and a directly plugged in screen/keyboard (which is usually also supported, though maybe not over HDMI or anything) will also work.
And to be honest, if you want to play with servers, you should get used to terminal- it will do you a lot of good in general.
I mean yeah probably, but you better hope to God that the motherboard has DHCP enabled by default. I don’t know why it wouldn’t, but I’ve seen some stupid configs in my life.
Why it should need dhcp? You can configure bmc’s IP from the bios or from the system running ipmitool. I never use dhcp for the ipmi’s ip, it is better to use a static one since it is better to keep always the same one.
Yes,I manage some servers with this config and it should work very well.
The only problem is that some old ipmis (and some new) use Java web start (.jnlp files) for the remote control feature and that is being phase out, so in some cases I have to use a vm with an old Java version to connect. Modern ipmis have also html5 kvm which is much more useful.
I’m looking at you IBM/Lenovo
And supermicro, gigabyte…
Supermicro new licensing scheme for new platforms requires a special license to mount media on the html5 kvm, so you must use the annoying Java version if you need that or don’t want to pay a 200$ extra feature unlock.
Also in that case I only was able to run it with the supermicro utility for Linux, which includes its own Java distro.
Never ran across a server motherboard that needed an extra PCIe card to plug a video display regardless of the CPU used.
This BMC advertise the remote display feature you seek.
ATi Rage 128 gang.
Install the boot drive in a different machine and then pass it though to a VM. Once in the VM install truenas to the disk.
After that’s completed you are good to go. Just boot up the physical machine and point your browser to Truenas.local
It doesn’t break anything doing this? Especially networking settings?
It shouldn’t