Raspberry Pi demolished by monster 128-core ARM CPU!

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  • Опубликовано: 20 май 2024
  • The collab nobody knew we needed. I took my 6-node Raspberry Pi cluster to ‪@ServeTheHomeVideo‬ and faced it off against a 128-core monster ARM server.
    Huge thanks to Micro Center for making this possible!
    Shop Micro Center’s Top Deals: micro.center/1yz
    Check out Micro Center’s PC Builder: micro.center/2vs
    Submit your build to Micro Center’s Build Showcase: micro.center/6i9
    Visit Micro Center’s Community Page: micro.center/dpq
    Support me on Patreon: / geerlingguy
    Sponsor me on GitHub: github.com/sponsors/geerlingguy
    Merch: redshirtjeff.com
    2nd Channel: / geerlingengineering
    #Sponsored #ARM #RaspberryPi
    Mentioned in this video:
    - ServeTheHome (website): www.servethehome.com
    - ServeTheHome (RUclips): / servethehomevideo
    - The video Patrick has is the "Supermicro ARS-210ME-FNR", with the M128-30 CPU
    - DeskPi Super6c [Amazon]: amzn.to/3AH8kNh
    - DeskPi Super6c [Direct]: deskpi.com/collections/deskpi...
    - DeskPi Super6c Mini ITX case [Amazon]: amzn.to/3XnJxHP
    - DeskPi Super6c Mini ITX case [Direct]: deskpi.com/collections/deskpi...
    - Guide for Raspberry Pi CM4 NVMe boot: www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/202...
    - DeskPi Super6c Ceph Storage Cluster video: • 6-in-1: Build a 6-node...
    - Top500 Ansible Automated Benchmark Playbook: github.com/geerlingguy/top500...
    - Blog post with more benchmarking results: www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/202...
    Contents:
    00:00 - 24 cores - but not the same
    00:52 - Apples to Apples
    03:50 - Size comparison
    04:52 - ARM in the cloud? Edge?
    05:55 - ARM v ARM: top500 showdown
    06:44 - New new bramble
    07:38 - No time for microSD, we go NVMe
    08:56 - Super6c, Super improved
    10:27 - Linpack on the Pis
    12:02 - Linpack on the Ampere Altra Max
    12:46 - Price to performance
    13:53 - Benchmarking methodology
    14:56 - Is ARM the most efficient?
    16:46 - GPUs: efficiency kings
    17:48 - Platform maturity vs x86
    19:38 - So what's the verdict?
    20:39 - Surprise Stolen Supermicro
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Комментарии • 950

  • @ServeTheHomeVideo
    @ServeTheHomeVideo Год назад +1183

    What a super-fun collaboration exploring Arm server options! Thank you for stopping by Jeff!

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  Год назад +89

      It was so fun to do this video... maybe we can figure out another fun project for next year?

    • @PrinceDare
      @PrinceDare Год назад +14

      Hope you got back the Server he stole lol at the end we all saw you Jeff. lool 🤣🤣🤣

    • @vicmaxabc
      @vicmaxabc Год назад +4

      We need more of those!

    • @slowtrigger
      @slowtrigger Год назад +4

      Keep doing more, that was fun

    • @flekkzo
      @flekkzo Год назад +3

      @@JeffGeerling You could set up a mastodon instance on a pi cluster. See how it holds up:)

  • @meatbyproducts
    @meatbyproducts Год назад +1834

    2021 Linus flexes doing videos on million dollar home, 2022 Jeff flexes showing off he ownes multiple Rasberry Pi units.

    • @lordjaashin
      @lordjaashin Год назад +46

      i make my pies in owen too lol

    • @meatbyproducts
      @meatbyproducts Год назад +20

      @@lordjaashin stupid auto correct

    • @monad_tcp
      @monad_tcp Год назад +32

      he has the last batch of RPIs while they were still made.
      But the PI entered the halls of history, it was good while it lasted.

    • @meatbyproducts
      @meatbyproducts Год назад +67

      @@monad_tcp I think he is the reason for the shortage. He just uses them once and throws them away after each video lol

    • @yourboi1842
      @yourboi1842 Год назад +5

      They that rare? I traded someone a pin zero w for like a pair of wire strippers and a 32v 20a power supply

  • @draconightwalker4964
    @draconightwalker4964 Год назад +479

    Patrick and Jeff. In one video. Talking ARM servers and RPIs. Awesome

  • @otrab1080
    @otrab1080 Год назад +380

    Amazing that he was able to find 6 compute modules let alone regular Raspberry Pis

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  Год назад +170

      The secret is to order them in late 2020 😭

    • @juntapiezas
      @juntapiezas Год назад +11

      It just the RaspberryPi trend since the beginning. I remember the months I needed to get my hands on the first one...

    • @jeroentaverne8232
      @jeroentaverne8232 Год назад +20

      Call this Pi server "unobtainium"

    • @juliusfucik4011
      @juliusfucik4011 Год назад +5

      I can still get them rather easily, but at 3-4 times the price. It's insane.

    • @nathanhamman418
      @nathanhamman418 Год назад

      @@JeffGeerling Now you tell us.

  • @3v068
    @3v068 Год назад +147

    It seriously makes my day when you're feeling good enough to make a video and post it. Glad to see you upload again Jeff.

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  Год назад +89

      Thanks for that-this video will end up being a bit of a swan song for 2022, sadly... I have to get surgery, and though overall I'm feeling a bit better than summer, I've had complications enough that I have to get a pretty major surgery in a week that'll knock me out until next year :(
      But hopefully after I recover, I'll be a lot better off! Maybe I'll be able to feel 100% again, it's been a while since I was feeling my best.

    • @RedFalcon696
      @RedFalcon696 Год назад +15

      ​@@JeffGeerling Really hope you feel better soon and that the surgery helps.
      You have done amazing work, and we all appreciate what you do.
      In fact, you inspired me to setup a Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4 and I/O Board with native-boot NVMe, which is what I am writing this message to you on right now. :)
      Thank you for all that you do Jeff, you have made the world a better place and are an inspiration to all!

    • @daveamies5031
      @daveamies5031 Год назад +8

      @@JeffGeerling 🤞🏻that the surgery goes well, hopefully even better than expected 🤞🏻Wishing you can feel 100% again (it's been over 30 years since I had a day without pain so I don't really remember how 100% feels)

    • @3v068
      @3v068 Год назад

      @enrique amaya coming from an atheist, not only does he live you, he loves everyone.

    • @crunchTwist
      @crunchTwist Год назад

      @3V0 person here, who types words that people read when in front of their face. I'm an atheism denier. I don't believe that people don't believe in skyman. You can't prove you exist, so I win. Wish maker-of-video man all the good things and speedy recovery. I like how you speak words out loud and I hear them. Subscribed.

  • @DJEshelman-personal
    @DJEshelman-personal Год назад +45

    When I saw this thumbnail I literally went to "The Collab nobody knew they needed" only to find it was the first line of the description. Great minds and all that...
    Good stuff y'all!

  • @hikingpete
    @hikingpete Год назад +46

    That was a great collab. The scripting was fantastic and you guys interacted seamlessly.

  • @vicmaxabc
    @vicmaxabc Год назад +11

    I love both channels, looking forward to more colabs!

  • @nlcirque
    @nlcirque Год назад +9

    Great collaboration from 2 of my favorite tech channels.

  • @esra_erimez
    @esra_erimez Год назад +21

    Two of my favorite RUclipsrs! I'm glad to see what Patrick's studio looks like!

  • @sshogo64
    @sshogo64 Год назад +1

    What an awesome vid guys! Not only did i learn new stuff, I couldn't be but happy to see you both school us on a badass project. One of the best vids I watched coming from your end. Thank you both!

  • @wolvenar
    @wolvenar Год назад +1

    Great job with this video.
    A lot of information packed in here to work with.

  • @netnerd9472
    @netnerd9472 Год назад +4

    Jeff nicking the server at the end is the cherry on the top. Great video guys, I enjoy both of your channels :)

  • @lavavex
    @lavavex Год назад +4

    This collab is great! Love it!

  • @Akshun82
    @Akshun82 Год назад +1

    Loving the content, good Sir. Definitely the best collab of '22!

  • @rafaelsuarez7415
    @rafaelsuarez7415 Год назад

    Owesome ! Thanks to both.
    Hope your getting beter Jef ,

  • @niklasxl
    @niklasxl Год назад +6

    good to see a colab with you and Patrik :D

  • @petermuller608
    @petermuller608 Год назад +4

    Loved this video. Will love a follow up on the LTT screw driver even more!

  • @Smytjf11
    @Smytjf11 Год назад +12

    Hey, this is great! Y'all make great crossovers.

  • @spyrule
    @spyrule Год назад +1

    Have been a fan of STH for almost 10 years now... Has always been a great website, and the forum is great as well. The hardware sale section is an amazing place to find deals on server grade hardware that is coming out of production if your looking to setup a good home server cluster.

  • @thatLion01
    @thatLion01 Год назад +4

    This is an amazing with Patrick. Thank you both

  • @NoobHuman
    @NoobHuman Год назад +3

    Woah, I'm so interested to see the results!

  • @DavidVincentSSM
    @DavidVincentSSM Год назад

    love love love the collab!! More please!

  • @paulussantosociwidjaja4781
    @paulussantosociwidjaja4781 Год назад

    This is monstrous. Thank you for the learning, Jeff and Patrick, too! Cheers!

  • @Daggenthal
    @Daggenthal Год назад +18

    I seriously love ARM so much, so this got me really excited!! Great video :D I've waited years and years for someone to fully push out ARM to the mainstream desktop for "regular" consumer usage, and while the Pi's + others are capable, nothing was ever the same as your usual x86-64 for typical tasks / light gaming. Well, when Apple announced their M series of chips, I got excited and purchased one right away after reviews! Been happily using my M1 Max as a daily driver, all because I love ARM and really want to support it as much as I can, even if it's coming from Apple, who doesn't truly *need* the money but ended up making a product that I had been looking for for quite some time.
    I'm just happy that a major company took the plunge, and I'm happily following suit. Maybe someday we'll all be on ARM!

    • @lordjaashin
      @lordjaashin Год назад +5

      not for much longer. the way arm is going it is killing itself by spitting in its customers face by forcing major companies to use its gpu along with its cpu. after this many companies are looking at risc v. hopefully, risc v takes off as it is open source

    • @jnharton
      @jnharton Год назад

      For what it's worth, afaik, the big selling point of ARM cpu designs was in power savings not so much raw performance. -- Even if a particular design/SoC performed at a mere fraction(say 50%) of an Intel x86/x86-64 system the former would kill in terms of power savings. // Things have improved a lot and now that even Intel chips are SoC-like...

    • @vikingforties
      @vikingforties Год назад

      @@jnharton Performance as well. At the socket level Ampere M128-30 matches or exceeds top bin Epyc Milan for Data Centre workloads whilst burning less energy. Anandtech and STH have published stats.

    • @jnharton
      @jnharton Год назад

      @@vikingforties I was really talking about the broader history and not so much the current state of affairs. Also, given that x86 development was, for a long time, presumably based on single core, single thread performance and ARM is a relatively new architecture...

    • @vikingforties
      @vikingforties Год назад

      @@jnharton Ahh. got you. I take your point.

  • @paulstubbs7678
    @paulstubbs7678 Год назад +8

    Wow, I cannot believe how compact the STH studio is, it really stood out when both were in there

  • @m-rtin
    @m-rtin Год назад

    Fantastic video Jeff, hope to see you guys collab again!

  • @peterluo1776
    @peterluo1776 Год назад

    Great video Jeff 👍👍
    I might pick few tips to build my first PI cluster.

  • @blakeseufert7340
    @blakeseufert7340 Год назад +6

    Serve the "large scale, high performance data center" home. Great collab guys.

  • @leadfarmer5563
    @leadfarmer5563 Год назад +6

    Two of my favorite channels in one video. This awesome!!

  • @robvanscheijndel
    @robvanscheijndel Год назад +1

    I like those collaborations, it gives more insights and different views on the topics we love.

  • @criticaltinkering
    @criticaltinkering Год назад +1

    You guys are both great! Fun to see you together.

  • @shangtsung2450
    @shangtsung2450 Год назад +3

    Thank you for the great video, Jeff! I would like to inquire, if there are any current alternatives to RPi that are capable of running Xen?

  • @ShadeAssault
    @ShadeAssault Год назад +11

    I love the collab with STH! Keep up the great content! I have been running my own "server" (TS3) since the early 2010's. Never realized that was homelab-ish territory. Now I run a bunch of servers off of RasPi's, Local PC's, and a NAS. Totally Cosplaying as a SysAdmin. Want to do more in the future and you are helping me do that!

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 11 месяцев назад

      can you imagine a raspberry pi with that monster 128 core arm processor in it?🤣

  • @DinosGaming
    @DinosGaming Год назад

    love the collaboration, hope u doing well man. love the videos

  • @sherrilltechnology
    @sherrilltechnology Год назад

    Great video and I love the direction that ARM is going!!

  • @n0madfernan257
    @n0madfernan257 Год назад +67

    yes, the collab we never knew we needed. good thing red shirt jeff must be busy somewhere else.

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  Год назад +30

      Just don't watch to the end 🫣

    • @n0madfernan257
      @n0madfernan257 Год назад +17

      @@JeffGeerling i commented before finishing the whole thing... oh no....

    • @ServeTheHomeVideo
      @ServeTheHomeVideo Год назад +18

      @@n0madfernan257 We are still trying to find the Ampere server

    • @n0madfernan257
      @n0madfernan257 Год назад +5

      @@ServeTheHomeVideo Hope he appears secretly at your channel and still return it in one piece... and hope red shirt jeff does not use his favorite grinders and whatnots

  • @mindtreat
    @mindtreat Год назад +3

    Brothers in ARM's

  • @freeeflyer
    @freeeflyer Год назад

    I just made the connexion between you and the fantastic ansible roles everyone use.. THANKS A LOT FOR THAT !

  • @Aviatorpaal
    @Aviatorpaal Год назад +1

    I loved the transition you made to the STH clip :D

  • @vidyajamesu
    @vidyajamesu Год назад +3

    I love the labels on your fan drawers.

  • @THEMithrandir09
    @THEMithrandir09 Год назад +15

    We should compare Wh for fixed unit of work. E.g. the same compilation/render and just look at the power consumed to do the work.

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 Год назад

      That's what GFLOPs/W and MIPS/W benchmarks represent on a standard scale that should convert to other loads, provided everyone uses the same benchmarks without cheating. Of cause, additional numbers are needed for idle and near idle power consumption.

  • @markhuebner7580
    @markhuebner7580 Год назад

    Awesome! Thanks man!

  • @chrisdixon5241
    @chrisdixon5241 Год назад +1

    Another great video Jeff!
    I was already impressed by your 6-pack Pi. Time for a new T-shirt, "My other computer is a 128 core Ampere"? :)

  • @GeoffSeeley
    @GeoffSeeley Год назад +4

    Hey it's Patrick STH! He always has the coolest and latest "toys" to play with. Nice comparison guys!

  • @TankR
    @TankR Год назад +3

    RE: first bit about 24 RPi cores vs 24 x86_64 cores. A, say, 1GHz ARM and 1GHz x86 are VERY different. ARM will always win on the power consumption front, but even if using a reduced instruction set(IIRC) the x86 will walk all over an ARM twice before it even realizes what happened, and a few more times before it hits the ground. Yes, application matters. Programming matters. Auxiliary processing load matters. But straight clock for clock ARM and x86 are not comparable, its x86 on top all day long. You cannot replace a x86 desktop with an ARM and expect the same performance. But that was never what they were supposed to do, its not their design case. Remember, the right tool for the right application ;)

  • @ShinyTechThings
    @ShinyTechThings Год назад +1

    I've been trying to get a review sample of a ARM based server for a while and it's great to see this one here!

  • @jantoniotorre
    @jantoniotorre Год назад

    Seeing a video with this two makes me very happy, great guys

  • @Dygear
    @Dygear Год назад +13

    x86 servers also have a mechanism for attesting the boot process that simply doesn't work right now with an arm server.

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 Год назад +1

      You mean the lockdown to Microsoft signed boot images?

  • @Kowanza
    @Kowanza Год назад +20

    18:09 You should try out Armbian. Their support of older arm boards is phenomenal. My tiny cluster of 4 Orange Pi pc's form ~2015 is still running perfectly with kernel 5.15 thanks to Armbian.

    • @DrTune
      @DrTune Год назад

      seconded, armbian is pretty great

  • @videobenny3
    @videobenny3 Год назад +2

    Love Love LOVE my MicroCenter in St Louis Park. Excellent sponsorship! Beats the fiasco of Kamikoto knives and Scottish Titles (what a scam those were).

  • @dolex161
    @dolex161 Год назад

    i was waiting for this video :) im so excited for all the amazon stuff to trickle into our home labs!! Pat and Jeffy G!!! what a team combo!!

  • @movax20h
    @movax20h Год назад +4

    What. CM4 modules cost now 165$. This is insane.
    Great video Jeff.
    Also, I am bit on the edge about getting DeskPi Super6C. It only has 2x1Gbit uplinks, and even utilising two of them is tricky due to the type of switch chip used. If it would had 10Gbps, or maybe even 2.5Gbps, it would be an interesting option. Also lack of some BMC to access serial console and power state of CMs is not great. They could have added a small stm32 micro with a 100Mbps ethernet to just do some telnet to interact with few things on board and serial ports, and maybe small http server to view some minimal metrics, it would be useful. And where is RTC battery. I can live without it probably for cluster setup where I would be using NTP, but come on.

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  Год назад +1

      I think the Turing Pi 2 is probably the more flexible option, and hopefully their production run will get underway soon (they just said they're tooling the line for a first 1,000 unit run).

  • @g.s.3389
    @g.s.3389 Год назад +52

    in case you think of using one of them for virtualization it would be nice to have the performance per core. that is because next year there will be a shift in licencing from cpu to core (read VMware here).

    • @anon_y_mousse
      @anon_y_mousse Год назад +7

      @Greyson Sounds like a reason to use qemu.

    • @g.s.3389
      @g.s.3389 Год назад +5

      @Greyson thanks for the comment, yes but, if you own a million dollar company you want to stay on the safe side and then you buy support from the vendor (read RedHat or Suse). if you get a problem installing a SW (SAP, Dynamics, VDI) and you have problems to whom are you asking, do you have enough people in IT to go through the opensource code and find a solution....
      Being technology enthusiastic, having an home lab is completely different in managing company/corporate infrastructure, you want reliability and support. if you look around many applications are born as opensource but there is always a "pro" version, for the support.

    • @joee7452
      @joee7452 Год назад +1

      @@g.s.3389 Just to be picky, you miss stated your example. RedHat and Suse are opensource. Opensource and free are not the same. I get what you mean though. I have 2 sides in my DC. The internal side runs on things like docker, haproxy, a lot of Ubuntu for simplicity. The client side runs on kubernetes (openshift), F5, and RedHat for added support. I have no issues supporting either, but when you are dealing with things in the enterprise, they want to have a company support to be able to contact for some types of things.

    • @joee7452
      @joee7452 Год назад

      @@skechergn It depends on the pricing. If the core pricing ends up equaling what the CPU pricing would be at a certain point, it is just targeting the new processor setups. There is a large difference in the amount of vms you can run on 24 cores/512GB ram and 140 cores/2TB ram.
      Especially when you start looking at containers on VMs on a hypervisor. Containerization is really hammering VM virtualization. I have a pair of IBM power servers (for redundancy) running Openshift. It's running the same workload that use to sit on a 12 system ESXi cluster because of the number of different VMs it needed and the number of servers to make it n+1 for the hardware. Those 2 power servers still have plenty of resources to add a ton of additional containers to it before it would even comes close to high utilization on one node in a failed scenario.
      I can see why VMware would need to go to the core level overall to not only make more money on the higher end server chips but also allow them to be price competitive on smaller core numbers. If the price per CPU is based around say what will now cost for 40 or 64 more cores, then if you come in needing 24 or 36 cores, then it would be cheaper then the old CPU cost.

    • @joee7452
      @joee7452 Год назад

      @@skechergn Your still assuming it will be a higher (then inflation) cost with the new licensing. We can't say it will or won't until we see it put in place across the board. It could be a way to enable charging more across the board and it wouldn't surprise me. But it could also be a way to make the costs more cost effective also. If it becomes cheaper on the lower end and more expensive on the higher end, then they are really just trying to be cost effective against competition.
      Again, I am not saying it will work out that way, I am just saying we are assuming that it will raise prices (beyond inflation) for customers without any evidence yet.

  • @allezvenga7617
    @allezvenga7617 Год назад

    Thanks for your sharing

  • @ameno9653
    @ameno9653 Год назад

    Great job with this video

  • @garyhuntress6871
    @garyhuntress6871 Год назад +10

    Two guys that I don't watch at 2X speed. Great pairing, great content!!

  • @lateral1385
    @lateral1385 Год назад +1

    Thank you for the manual captions and timestamps.

  • @jeffyvilcandelario8872
    @jeffyvilcandelario8872 Год назад +1

    One of the best collab intros i have watched so far... :)

  • @MarcoGPUtuber
    @MarcoGPUtuber Год назад +3

    Have you been served?...in the home?

  • @jonathanmyers8477
    @jonathanmyers8477 Год назад +3

    By Grabthar's Hammer...Cool Content!

  • @kinto92
    @kinto92 Год назад

    Yay! Both of my favorite channels!

  • @BennyTygohome
    @BennyTygohome Год назад +8

    I wish Patrick greeted Jeffrey in third person "This is Patrick"

  • @IngwiePhoenix
    @IngwiePhoenix Год назад +61

    I was in the market for an ARM VPS but couldn't find any good ones. Honestly I am so ready for ARM to just take over the server space more and more - its super efficient, less cluttered than x86 and has some great nicities. Unfortunately, software support is still a little hit or miss - especially when talking about Phones and Tablets where SystemReady isn't implemented properly - be it on purpose or not. Honestly I'd love to play around with one of those! These ARM servers are awesome as heck! ^_^

    • @AdithaJayasuriya
      @AdithaJayasuriya Год назад +6

      Try Oracle. They give 4 core ARM Amperes for free.

    • @morosis82
      @morosis82 Год назад

      AWS EC2 m6g, uses AWS graviton.

    • @GustavoNoronha
      @GustavoNoronha Год назад +1

      I'm using Graviton, as Arm 64 makes sense to match my M1 Max laptop. However, AMD Milan is way more efficient than any Arm server chip up to this point, you don't get much in terms of efficiency if you are on AMD, right now.

    • @morosis82
      @morosis82 Год назад +2

      @@GustavoNoronha Epyc is crazy, it's amazing how they just leapfrogged everyone else.

    • @stefsmurf
      @stefsmurf Год назад +2

      @IngwiePhoenix Did you not pay attention? Literally said in the video 16:28 that ARM isn't inherently more efficient than x86. In fact, the lack of libraries and application support can make it LESS efficient. What apple did with the M1 came down to building an ARM chip made specifically for OS X, down to the point where it theoretically should be good for gaming, but isn't since apple doesn't put as much thought or support behind it. Also, apple decided efficiency at all costs, to the point where the damn thing throttles on certain tasks to keep the battery life well and the cpu cool.

  • @nathanh3538
    @nathanh3538 Год назад

    both of these guys are in their element. I can see their enthusiasm and excitement

  • @BraxtonMeyer
    @BraxtonMeyer Год назад +5

    why doesn't patrick have more questions about how you got into his recording studio?
    /s

  • @grtitann7425
    @grtitann7425 Год назад +5

    Besides of being an incredible interesting subject, i love how you pulled a page out of the influencers that contaminate RUclips and the media with Nvidia GPUs visible just because (LTT, TechSpot and others) with your strategic placement of AMD CPUs.
    Here is a like going your way!

  • @JimmytheCow2000
    @JimmytheCow2000 Год назад +1

    The subtitles are the best. "red shirt jeff acts suspicious" hahah love it!

  • @morosis82
    @morosis82 Год назад +1

    I remember years ago Top Gear did a race between a Prius and an M3. All the M3 had to do was keep up with the Prius, while the Prius thrashed it's way around the track.
    At the end they measured how much fuel was used and the V8 M3 was significantly more efficient at the speed they were driving around the track.
    I think the pi is great as a testbed platform, low power edge deployment, etc. But it never really stood any chance when real compute capacity and io connectivity is required.

  • @yalopov
    @yalopov Год назад +9

    Those linpack benchmark results were super interesting, didn't know m1 max chip was that far ahead. I wonder how long will it take for competitors building arm64 processors to catch up

    • @vikingforties
      @vikingforties Год назад +6

      Comparing different things here. An M1 client CPU to CPUs designed to operate in a DC (e.g. Ampere Altra & Graviton). Data Centre and cloud workloads tend to force the economics for your compute & I/O efficiency per rack of servers and storage. M1 still needs a focus on per core performance because there's way more single threaded stuff that it has to deal with.

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae Год назад +3

      An other indicator how much 'node size' matters. A they mentioned in the video: the M1 uses a newer TSMC process.

  • @willfancher9775
    @willfancher9775 Год назад +5

    Does the Super6c require all 6 compute modules to be installed, or can you have some unpopulated without damaging anything?

    • @jpconstantineau
      @jpconstantineau Год назад +2

      I have 5 pi in mine... Works fine. I can't wait to find one more to fill it up. Note that only the first one has extra ports...

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  Год назад +1

      ^ This

  • @CKILBY-zu7fq
    @CKILBY-zu7fq Год назад +1

    Very cool and inspiring, the idea of the pi concept has grown. I like how it compares to other similar products, I should have kept mine. But I have real need for real applications. No time to play and learn unnecessary studies that I already know without a computers input.
    Yes my cousin invested the computer chip, but there is more to this story then what is shown, but, its when, it's truth is seen, that's when it all changes.

  • @MaidLucy
    @MaidLucy Год назад

    That was a great collab!

  • @ericblenner-hassett3945
    @ericblenner-hassett3945 Год назад +6

    Let us hope Red Shirt Jeff does not use an angle grinder for that end clip....

  • @jincyquones
    @jincyquones Год назад +4

    Oracle Cloud has some really generous "always free" quotas for VMs on their Ampere machines.

    • @vikingforties
      @vikingforties Год назад +2

      Search for "OCI Ampere A1". 4 vCPUs, 24GB RAM, multiple distros, adequate storage and lots of regions. What's not to like?

  • @Hreimr
    @Hreimr Год назад

    Such an awesome collab :)

  • @jgurtz
    @jgurtz Год назад

    Wow, two of my favorite tech chans together, awesome!

  • @zambonidriver42
    @zambonidriver42 Год назад +6

    Jeffy G?

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  Год назад +8

      Apparently I'm Jeffy G and Jeff from Craft Computing is Crafty Jeff XD

    • @zambonidriver42
      @zambonidriver42 Год назад +1

      That means you’re ….not crafty. 😗

  • @Atabascael
    @Atabascael Год назад +5

    11:30 - seems jeff is into only fans :D

  • @jeffsadowski
    @jeffsadowski Год назад

    Very cool. Major improvement.

  • @cosput
    @cosput Год назад

    Very cool, great video

  • @douggale5962
    @douggale5962 Год назад +4

    Don't forget that I/O bandwidth is next to nothing on the PI and the real server probably has excessive lanes. Don't feel bad though, even desktops have crippled I/O compared to what they should have.

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  Год назад +1

      Yeah, like my desktop Ryzen CPU gets crippled by x1 and x4 PCIe 3.0 slots even though the CPU has plentiful PCIe 4.0 available :(

  • @thrillscience
    @thrillscience Год назад +3

    You just barge into his studio when he's recording?

  • @JarredSutherland
    @JarredSutherland Год назад +1

    Nice video! I really do hope that the Pi is available soon. I would love to put the CM to use.

  • @Fudmottin
    @Fudmottin Год назад +1

    That's some pretty crazy stuff! I have a couple Raspberry Pi 3s running Stretch. They weren't cutting it for me so I just decided to drop $$$ for an Apple M1 Mac Mini with the 16GB of RAM and base everything else. External SSD is a lot cheaper although slower. The plan is to run it headless with a direct 1GB/s Ether connect to my router which goes to my cable modem. The router gives my house WiFi. It's kinda old, but I'm not sure what to update it with yet.
    That's my lazy solution to a local server. It's double plus cool to see that there are still hobbyists out there building custom computers. It's like the 1970s with 2020s tech. Good stuff.

  • @DerekDavis213
    @DerekDavis213 Год назад +3

    At 0:30 , 3960x 24-core is old technology.
    A modern 16-core Ryzen 7950x offers greater performance, for just $550 USD.

  • @silenthill4
    @silenthill4 Год назад +3

    Might be useful if raspberry pis were actually obtainable one of these years

  • @chrisguli2865
    @chrisguli2865 Год назад

    Nice benchmark comp Jeff! Rasp Pi's have become like gold now - amazing. That ARM system is a beast. He who dies with the most teraflops, wins!😂😂

  • @abx42
    @abx42 Год назад

    Maker center does that bring me back reminds me of my youth going to radio shack to pick up components to put a well anything together.

  • @cdl0
    @cdl0 Год назад +8

    Atlas might not be the best blas library. There are others which may give significantly better performance, including openblas and the libraries bundled with official arm development compiler suite. You can also usually win a bit more performance by experimenting with the relevant compiler flags.

    • @jnharton
      @jnharton Год назад

      If the point is /benchmarking/, then you use the same program on the different hardware configurations because you want a comparative sense for which is better. Otherwise you use whatever can perform /best/ on the hardware you have, as you are suggesting.

    • @cdl0
      @cdl0 Год назад

      @@jnharton The linpack test does use the same source code on each system. Blas is a standard library, so does the same thing on every system. Clearly, you need to compile and link the code in the way that gives the best performance for the target hardware.

  • @wotsac
    @wotsac Год назад +4

    Microcenter is legit. I stopped in for the first time in ages this summer. Not only did they HAVE the 8gb Pi4, it was on sale for $60.

    • @Slada1
      @Slada1 Год назад

      rpi available and on sale, wow

  • @gamingonthespectrum
    @gamingonthespectrum Год назад +2

    I would really like to see you cluster multiple of these together, imagine the power of 4-8 of these

  • @tosvus
    @tosvus Год назад

    I've been around for many years in the computer world (granted more on the software side, but built my fair share), so I was pretty surprised to hear some terms I have never encountered before! :)

  • @cvmagic404
    @cvmagic404 Год назад +3

    What really concerns me, the realization that red shirt Jeff is not confined to the Geerling basement. We don't need that harbinger of chaos roaming free to spread this madness!

  • @rpavlik1
    @rpavlik1 Год назад +8

    So I really enjoy the large box labeled "Only Fans" 🤣. Also it's pretty surprising your efficiency went up when overclocking, apparently the opposite usually happens on desktop pc's. Wonder if that means there's more headroom in the silicon?

    • @chrisguli2865
      @chrisguli2865 Год назад

      Naked processor of the day, for only $20/month.😂😂

  • @TheOnewithforce
    @TheOnewithforce Год назад

    Watching both channels, always useful in a different areas. Would enjoy a further cooperation with Patrick. Well done.

  • @QuentinStephens
    @QuentinStephens Год назад

    Double trouble and doubly awesome! More!

  • @noext7001
    @noext7001 Год назад +3

    you could also get dual xeon for 50$ and have 20 core beating those shitty rpi

  • @paullandry6573
    @paullandry6573 Год назад +8

    What a savings.... LOL love it! Just bought the motherboard and trying to get the CPUs

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  Год назад +3

      I've had an order in with DigiKey for a month or so... hopefully they come through!

    • @MatthiasDuyck
      @MatthiasDuyck Год назад +2

      Loved this reference

  • @JasonsLabVideos
    @JasonsLabVideos Год назад +1

    YEAHHHH!!! THIS IS AWESOME !!!!