Unboxing and assembly of first Xeon D-1567 Supermicro system, the SYS-5028D-TN4T 12 Core Bundle 2

Posted by Paul Braren on Oct 25 2016 (updated on Oct 26 2016) in
  • Virtualization ESXi Efficiency HomeLab HomeServer
  • Supermicro's first Xeon D-1567 System!

    Unboxed, drives installed, OS install started, options shown

    Despite Typhoon Chaba and Hurricane Matthew related delays (slowing shipping from Taiwan to San Jose to Miami to Connecticut), it's here, one of the world's first Xeon D-1567 systems! Mine shipped out from Wiredzone in Miami mid-last-week, one of several shipped out that week, after the usual 4 hour memory burn-in test. It's likely the very first seen in the wild. This 12 core beast of a system wouldn't have existed at all if it wasn't for the many participants in the TinkerTry poll!

    I'm happy to present to you a detailed, uncut, and perhaps-too-thorough video of the entire unboxing, assembly, BIOS verification, and initial OS install procedure. That's right, no steps is skipped, and the leisurely pace allows you to follow along with me, in real time, as you prepare your Bundle 1, 2 or 3 12 core system for your OS of choice. You'll see it's all rather straight-forward, and if you make it to the end, there's some optional bits (and a 2nd M.2 NVMe drive adapter) that might be of interest to you in the future.

    In the video, you'll see me install the following items that are representative of what you might already have in your lab:

    Well, I realize 10TB isn't exactly typical. I really do use a lot of that space for backups and media, and it allows me to re-purpose 2TB and 4TB drives elsewhere, saving some watts too.

    So glad my SYS-5028D-TN4T Xeon D-1541 now has a more powerful 10GbE-connected sibling, in time to create quite the VMware vSphere 6.5 cluster (Q4 2016)!

    Heatsink-Fan-combo-SNK-C0092A4L-seen-inside-Xeon-D-1567
    New CPU Heatsink/Fan assembly is apparently called the SNK-C0092A4L for the Xeon D-1567, instead of the SNK-C0057A4L found with the Xeon D-1541.

    Note that this new Xeon D-1567 system isn't yet on the VMware HCL (Compatibility Guide), but the Xeon D-1541 has been for a while, and Supermicro is clearly working to fix this gap, as explained by Supermicro in the interview I recorded at VMworld here. Other than the core count and cache sizes, and a possibly better CPU heat sink/fan combo called the SNK-C0092A4L, these systems are completely identical, even the BIOS 1.1c. This is good, and should make deployment a snap, see how simple it is to install ESXi 6.0 and Window Server 2016 Hyper-V.

    Tools used

    Qty 1 Ouya H30207 Phillips Screwdriver PH1 x 200mm
    Qty 1 Revlon Clipper
    Qty 1 6 Inch Nylon Cable Ties in Black and White

    Video Index

    HH:MM:SS
    00:00:00 - intro/overview
    00:04:38 - actual unboxing begins
    00:08:07 - cover removed, let's have a brief look around
    00:09:48 - accessories bag contents
    00:12:58 - remove 2 white nylon wire ties
    00:14:12 - two 2.5" SSDs installed
    00:22:10 - 6" black wire tie installed, to tidy up wires routed to the 2.5" drive bay
    00:23:37 - new CPU heatsink / fan discovered
    00:25:05 - one 3.5" HDD installed
    00:29:45 - M.2 NVMe installed, sorry my arm kept blocking your view
    00:33:00 - chassis cover put back on
    00:34:00 - router with DHCP and 10G/1G switch
    00:35:50 - Cyberpower PFCLCD UPS
    00:39:30 - Power it up, first POST
    00:40:40 - iKVM/IPMI IP address identified from temporary VGA monitor
    00:46:42 - iKVM demonstration (Remote Console)
    00:48:53 - verify BIOS settings (optional), ensure UEFI mode
    00:53:31 - mount the ISO (Windows in this demo, could be Linux or VMware ESXi, etc)
    OPTIONAL - accessories and future ideas below
    00:57:07 - Low Profile PCIe slot EZDIY adapter for 2nd M.2 NVMe drive
    01:02:18 - my "doh" moment, you'll see
    01:03:28 - redeem myself somewhat, showing 2.5 to 3.5 caddy adapter
    01:03:56 - for easier USB 3.0 access, QTY 2 StarTech.com USB 3.0 extension cables
    01:04:56 - that carbon fiber look, VVIVID 5ft-1ft

    Video

    Supermicro SuperServer SYS-5028D-TN4T 12 Core Xeon D-1567 Bundle 2 unboxing/SSD inst. [no-edits/4K]
    2160p

    What are the other reasons this 4K video is unedited?

    In case you find 4K video production of interest, and/or are wondering why I didn't have time edit this and get it to you with any kind of timeliness, well, let's just say that 4K video is early days, check out this this completely impractical work-flow:

    • took ~2 hours just to copy the 1 hour 10 minute 26 GB MOV file from iPhone 7 Plus to Windows 10 PC over USB
    • took ~1 hour to move 23GB MOV file (unedited) up to YouTube, using all of my home's generous upstream bandwidth of 30Mbps for the duration
    • took ~5 hours for YouTube to allow playback at 360p
    • took another ~3 hours for YouTube to prepare the other resolutions right up through 4K
    • based on my 20 minute of 4K footage that I produced with the new 64 bit Camtasia 9 last week, any edits to this 1 hour 10 minute video would require ~12 hours of render time to output an MP4 version for YouTube upload, with all CPU cores being about 70% busy the whole time. It could be interesting to try again on newer equipment, to see whether Camtasia 9 can finally really leverage modern GPUs, but that wouldn't affect the other

    See also at TinkerTry

    "TinkerTry'd Supermicro SuperServer 5028D-TN4T Assembly and Windows 10 OEM build procedure" published on Aug 19 2015.
    TinkerTry-24-threads-of-excecution-Xeon-D-1567-699x613
    12 Core Bundle 2, just after I added 2 additional 32GB DIMMs, 128 Total [max].