Inspur EIS800E Management
Inspur’s primary management is via IPMI and Redfish APIs. We have shown this before, so we are not going to go into too much extra, but will have a recap here. That is what most hyperscale and CSP customers will utilize to manage their systems. Inspur also includes a robust and customized web management platform with its management solution.
There are key features we would expect from any modern server. These include the ability to power cycle a system and remotely mount virtual media. Inspur also has a HTML5 iKVM solution that has these features included. Some other server vendors do not have fully-featured HTML5 iKVM, including virtual media support as of this review being published.
Based on comments in our previous articles, many of our readers have not used an Inspur Systems server and therefore have not seen the management interface. We have an 8-minute video clicking through the interface and doing a quick tour of the Inspur Systems management interface:
It is certainly not the most entertaining subject, however, if you are considering these systems, you may want to know what the web management interface is on each machine and that tour can be helpful.
Next, let us discuss performance.
Intel Atom C3758R Performance: Inspur EIS800E
The Intel Atom C3758R powering this system is the “refresh” or “R” version of the Intel Atom C3758. For a quick comparison from ourĀ Intel Atom C3000 Line Quietly Refreshed piece:
In the context of many CPUs, 200MHz is not a huge increase. In the context of the Intel Atom C3000 line this is about a 9% clock speed boost on the eight low-power cores. The result is that we get notably better performance:
Overall, these are very close figures, but it is nice that Inspur is using the refresh SKUs here since they do seem to offer more performance.
We also just want to point out that the SKUs also have a maximum of 4x 10GbE, which is important since lower-end SKUs do not have that level of networking available. We tested the 10GbE speeds at line rate performance using iperf3, which is what we would expect.
We also now have the Intel Atom P5322 in (as some folks may have seen in a recent video), so we are just starting to see Snow Ridge parts be used more broadly, but we are still very early in that cycle.
Next, let us get to the power consumption, STH Server Spider, and our final words.
I love these articles about edge devices. Please keep them coming.
Here is the datasheet: (Inspur, why an image? I NEED text to search against!)
https://en.inspur.com/en/edge_computing/2729110/2022110714192551030.png
Also, to get pricing you need to contact them for a quote.
So this sounds more like an advertisement instead of a review.
Huawei is a Chinese company, and was kinda obliterated by the US government, what about Lenovo and Inspur?
Would they follow the same fate as Huawei?
I don’t get it. Anyone buying servers new is getting a quote since you don’t buy them on a website and order. I think they’ve said that’s why they don’t put prices in the server reviews