thecomputerguy
Well-Known Member
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So I get called out for a consult.
Upon arrival I see, 2 very old windows XP computers (6 years old), 1 DC running Server 2003 setup only as a DC, DNS, and file server. Server config is 2x120gb HD's running RAID 1 using onboard raid on an old HP Server, 1x250gb HD internal Backup, no external backup.
The server runs but I really have no idea of the state of the hard drives as there is no RAID utility, I could have reboot the server and manually gone into the RAID BIOS but I didn't want to risk rebooting such an old machine.
His workstations are not setup for folder redirection, nor is his email exchange based, so he's lugging PST's around. I explain to him my concern that if one of his workstations hard drives failed, everything on that workstation would be lost including all of his saved emails. He tells me a loss like that would be utterly devastating. I explain to him that I cannot account for the state of his hard drives in his server, they are very old, there is no diagnostic utility for the drives, and they are 75% full. His backup system also is not working.
Implementing folder redirection on new computers would be impossible because it would max out the capacity on the server.
He has an extremely nice office in a well off area, he was prepared to upgrade his workstations, and pay for much more than he needed to ensure he wouldn't have to do this again anytime soon. So I'm thinking a high end i5 or i7 with 8gb or so of RAM, selling the workstations is the easy part.
He knows I'm not happy about the current state of his server, and I told him I would quote him on a new server.
REMINDER: 2 workstations & 1 server.
OPTIONS: I believe my options are as follows.
2 New workstations are a given.
1.) I'm going to quote him $3k for a new Dell T310 with 2x500GB Raid 1 OS, 2x500GB Raid 1 Data (Most expensive)
2.) Implement a NAS with backup solution (Eh.... may not be possible due to some software possibly requiring an OS)
3.) Remove the server altogether and install backups on the individual workstations. (Cheapest).
My end goal is to get his life's work off of this 7 Year old server and get the data from the server, and the data from the workstations backed up properly.
Suggestions?
Upon arrival I see, 2 very old windows XP computers (6 years old), 1 DC running Server 2003 setup only as a DC, DNS, and file server. Server config is 2x120gb HD's running RAID 1 using onboard raid on an old HP Server, 1x250gb HD internal Backup, no external backup.
The server runs but I really have no idea of the state of the hard drives as there is no RAID utility, I could have reboot the server and manually gone into the RAID BIOS but I didn't want to risk rebooting such an old machine.
His workstations are not setup for folder redirection, nor is his email exchange based, so he's lugging PST's around. I explain to him my concern that if one of his workstations hard drives failed, everything on that workstation would be lost including all of his saved emails. He tells me a loss like that would be utterly devastating. I explain to him that I cannot account for the state of his hard drives in his server, they are very old, there is no diagnostic utility for the drives, and they are 75% full. His backup system also is not working.
Implementing folder redirection on new computers would be impossible because it would max out the capacity on the server.
He has an extremely nice office in a well off area, he was prepared to upgrade his workstations, and pay for much more than he needed to ensure he wouldn't have to do this again anytime soon. So I'm thinking a high end i5 or i7 with 8gb or so of RAM, selling the workstations is the easy part.
He knows I'm not happy about the current state of his server, and I told him I would quote him on a new server.
REMINDER: 2 workstations & 1 server.
OPTIONS: I believe my options are as follows.
2 New workstations are a given.
1.) I'm going to quote him $3k for a new Dell T310 with 2x500GB Raid 1 OS, 2x500GB Raid 1 Data (Most expensive)
2.) Implement a NAS with backup solution (Eh.... may not be possible due to some software possibly requiring an OS)
3.) Remove the server altogether and install backups on the individual workstations. (Cheapest).
My end goal is to get his life's work off of this 7 Year old server and get the data from the server, and the data from the workstations backed up properly.
Suggestions?