What do you mean? Those don't look like HP machines (they look like the same SuperMicros ARP uses) https://www.instagram.com/p/BLCqVjDhnTD/ brycec: hashtags suggest differently touche. I didn't see that there were even any hashtags (Seems like up_the_irons added a handful of .\n which pushed the hashtags out of view https://www.dropbox.com/s/7ynnx6q9cqi792i/Screenshot%202016-10-02%2012.42.41.png?dl=0 ) Dropbox photo: "https://www.dropbox.com/s/7ynnx6q9cqi792i/Screenshot%202016-10-02%2012.42.41.png?dl=0" Three of them are indeed HPs HP's iLO has an SSH interface that's quite useful. We can bootstrap machines remotely (e.g. in Frankfurt) without fuss. And those with 25 disks are simply a great benefit to a Ceph cluster. 7200 RPM, 10,000 RPM or 15,000 RPM Disks? 1 RPM because you didn't really need that data any time soon :p #greencomputing 0 rpm is greener :) SSD4life up_the_irons: I take it by 'fuss' you mean having to setup a private network then VPN into it as the IPMI interfaces are generally insecure? Yes, exactly ant: hahaha i love it with modern technology you can find out where power cuts are. which makes it easier to go somewhere there's power, or know when somewhere gets power back. i wish it wasn't as useful though.. up_the_irons: so you assume the iLO's ssh is secure? :) dne: no, but we don't SSH to it over the Internet directly. We go through intermediate switches and then to iLO using RFC1918 space. ok, good :) so the SSH portion of iLO talks only to a local network