HP ProLiant DL585 G5 Server

Overview

A powerful server with a strong emphasis on reliability and serviceability to reduce overall device cost.

Editors' rating:

7.8/10

RRP:

AU$32,820.00

The good

  • Excellent redundancy for reliability
  • Very good management options
  • Easy installation and maintenance
  • Good warranty/support service

The bad

  • Quality does not come cheap
  • Current Intel processors would likely give better performance

The HP ProLiant DL585 G5 is a powerful server with a strong emphasis on reliability and serviceability that reduces overall device cost.

A high-end server really is an engineering marvel, comparable to the great buildings of the world. This marvellous machine manipulates massive quantities of data every single day. A good server will analyse your company's data as well as itself, to ensure it will continue to operate at full capacity 24 hours a day. Even the best equipment will fail eventually so designers paid close attention to making the repair process as efficient as possible.

Features
Getting the HP ProLiant DL585 G5 up and running out of the box is a painless process. SmartStart CDs (for 32- and 64-bit Windows) in combination with the ROM Based Set-up Utility (RBSU) prepared the machine for the operating system installation. A great discovery was that no 3.5-inch floppies are used to set the RAID up! Select a few options and enter the Windows install key, SmartStart then requests a Windows install disc and completes the installation itself.

Good management does not stop with installation. There is also remote, web-based iLO management and the Systems Insight Manager allows central management of servers and other equipment. Optional packs also exist for server migration and virtual machine management.

Design
It is attention to detail that keeps HP amongst the leaders. HP claims that its customers experience just one-tenth the downtime of the industry average. Examples of HP's attention to detail include things such as using shipping screws to ensure everything remains stable until it is delivered.

With the lid off, you can see the server's error display panel, allowing for quick diagnosis of hardware faults. Each fan, power supply and memory slot has its own fault LED. CPUs have two LEDs each (the second LED is for temperature). The minimum amount of cabling is also used, carefully laid to make servicing easy. CPUs and RAM are not visible with the lid off, but these are housed in a removable drawer accessed easily from the front of the machine.

Redundant systems are critical to making servers reliable. This unit's redundant components include its fans, power supplies and even the ROM. Hot replacement can be performed on its hard drives, fans and power supplies. The fans (three pairs), span the full 4RU device providing effective straight-through cooling.

At the front are two USB ports, VGA socket and access to all the drives. Up to eight hot-replaceable SFF drives can be installed, the slimline DVD/CD-RW drive comes standard and an additional slimline bay (for a floppy drive) is available. At the rear is another VGA socket, two USB ports, two PS2 ports, a serial port, the iLO2 management port and two gigabit network ports. Inside the DL585 there are nine expansion slots (2x PCI-X and 7x PCI Express) with the ninth slot taken by the RAID controller, leaving eight free.

How we tested
After a subjective assessment of the native pre-installed operating system (if any), accompanying software and the hardware itself, MS Windows Server 2008 was installed in preparation for benchmarking. Test software used was Cinebench 9.5 and Intel Sungard 2.5. Power consumption is also measured.

Performance
The machine consumes a whopping 62.4W while powered down (of course, the machine would not be normally powered down) and 411W while idle. Our score for typical power consumption was 551W — a little high, but this is a powerful server. It would be good to see more energy efficient processors in high-end servers.

Benchmark Test Overall
Cinebench 1 CPU Render 72 seconds
16 CPU Render 10 seconds
Sungard 210 seconds

Verdict
Benchmark test results highlight that this is a very powerful machine, but it is not the fastest in its price range ($32,820). A recent test of a Sun Fire server by the Enex TestLab discovered its benchmark scores were 50 per cent better (for a device roughly three quarters of the price).

But brute force is not everything. For IT managers, equipment running a little slower is less concerning than excessive and expensive downtime. High quality hardware and software engineering is important.

HP offers a range of service options to reduce management time. Available services include finance, system installation, integration and life-cycle management. HP prides itself on having excellent phone support for clients in addition to relatively simple maintenance that can often be done by the client.

The full on-site warranty including parts and labour is three years standard and includes a 90-day set-up support service. HP customer service offers support for Windows and some Linux-based systems as well as Solaris and VMware.

Specifications

Cabinet (chassis)
Dimensions (W x H x D) 48.3x17.6x67.3 cm
Weight 36 kg
Hard drive storage
Hard drive type Eight-bay Small Form Factor (SFF) Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) drive cage
Hard drive size No hard disk drive in standard configuration (tested with 2x 72GB drives) GB
LAN
LAN ports 2
LAN standards supported 1000Base-T
Management
Web-based management Yes
Memory
RAM capacity 256 GB
Memory specification compliance PC2-5300
More Information
Other For more specifications and configuration options, see the HP website.
Physical features
Standby power 411 W
Power
Power source AC Adaptor
Processor
Processor manufacturer AMD
Processor model 4x AMD Opteron 8356 quad-core processor
Clock speed 2.30 GHz
Number of processors installed 4
Number of processors supported 4
Product type
Product type Rack
Video
Graphics processor Nvidia NForce Professional 2200 and 2050 chipsets, and AMD-8132 chipset
Expand

(Back to top)

Talkback

Add your opinion

In order to post a comment, you need to be registered. (Sign In or register below)

Post your comment

Terms of Service - As a ZDNet registrant, and by using this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understand our Privacy Policy.

ZDNet Australia Live

The stupidest part about a wireless solution for the burbs is that it will actually cost more to put an antenna on the roof to get the si...

10 minutes ago by GregoryB1 on Blowing the digital dividend on wireless NBN

The problem is not range of the cell in the urban areas where Turnbull wants LTE instead of fibre, it is the number of users. In urban ar...

13 minutes ago by GregoryB1 on Blowing the digital dividend on wireless NBN

After the Second World War, the pursuit of pleasure domains the entire world atmosphere, Lancel (Lancel) to adapt rapidly into the demand...

1 hour ago by PokArrackpask on Spam sees Westnet blocked by BigPond

RT @DellEnterprise: Dell Secureworks talks with ZDNet about Android's biggest #security flaws - http://t.co/LSFLQVFq #infosec

NBN users opt for 100Mbps: Customers are picking the top fibre plan that is available on the National Broadband ... http://t.co/sjtFSU3g

"Customers are picking the top fibre plan that is available on the National Broadband Network (NBN), more than a... http://t.co/M3P24Htn

Another thing I found so misleading here is the step on how you assume to make the USB bootable . (The NTLDR needs to be renamed to USBNT...

2 hours ago by WindowsAnalyzer on Boot Windows XP from a USB flash drive

You can also use the help of these links, just incase your stuff failed, I probably got Windows build by using the Pebuilder as per the i...

2 hours ago by WindowsAnalyzer on Boot Windows XP from a USB flash drive

RT @CorrieB: An iPad for every child: Inevitable or impossible? http://t.co/I7uS8l9s Thx to @timbuckteeth for this; http://t.co/jxkqIRIp

RT @MADinMelbourne: roxon "will enable more families to access credit" @MLolderandwiser: Privacy Act amendments http://t.co/Mv4c7PC2 via @zdnetaustralia

NBN users opt for 100Mbps - ZDNet Australia http://t.co/fLfHMzPn #australia #technews

RT @konradski: Whaddayaknow - turns out Wi-Fi CAN interfere with a plane's navigation systems http://t.co/ospQCU2S

This story has been voted 5 times in the last 24 hours!

6 hours ago, NBN's Tassie upgrade to cost $1.3 million

Sorry no deal Cinders, I'd rather send my money to someone and watch them desperately try to stop the NBN as this has much better enterta...

6 hours ago by Hubert Cumberdale on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

What else can you expect from a Dodo customer?

6 hours ago by Hubert Cumberdale on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

NBN users opt for 100Mbps - Communications - News - ZDNet Australia: NBN users opt for 100Mbps - Communications ... http://t.co/btB9gKWg

NBN users opt for 100Mbps http://t.co/xKqEb4bE via @zdnetaustralia

Biometric bugs too dangerous for public? http://t.co/8JLz5tdF via @zdnetaustralia

Oh please dont be unkind, I gotta have some fan's. btw I agree I dont set the standard, but who does I wonder?

8 hours ago by Doubt on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

You agree but give him thumbs down... I think you'd better take the medication before one of your alter ego's Fred/Frank/Frergers appear...

8 hours ago by Beta on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

Exploring: http://t.co/rT7RPZLA

+1

9 hours ago by Beta on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

War talk dominates #AusCERT 2012 - http://t.co/SlBpMj0c - #security #cyber

So we agree it was a stupid idea and even stupider comment then ;-)

9 hours ago by Beta on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

Not you obviously ;-)

And stop giving yourself thumbs up FFS.

9 hours ago by Beta on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

Ok Beta, understand now, just one point who sets the standard?

9 hours ago by Doubt on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

Oh no Beta you misunderstand me. I like my waterfront home and deep water jetty, it's those "other" people who can move to Willunga.

9 hours ago by Doubt on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

I agree with you Magnus, but really most people like living on the coastal fringe.

9 hours ago by Doubt on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

Travel Tech Q&A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray http://t.co/vYexrDwu #ipad

Exploring: http://t.co/YNVjdrct

Exploring: Travel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray: Ewan Gray, Skyscanner's director for Asia ... http://t.co/bNLCyobv #ICTChallenge

Exploring: Travel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray: Ewan Gray, Skyscanner's director for Asia ... http://t.co/HEPuJgyt #ICTChallenge

#NewSouthWales ditches registration stickers 4 light #vehicles in favour of #technology http://t.co/xX5N0Rp9

Another use is city based top surgeons using 8K resolution monitors to provide real-time assistance to country surgeons and doctors to op...

9 hours ago by Magnus on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

In terms of capacity, fibre is basically future proof. Never mind 100Mbps or even 1Gbps. Computer scientists have already achieved 100 gi...

9 hours ago by Magnus on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

What I like about Mike Quigley is that he is making it happen, despite all the bull**t barriers being put in front of him by Coalition po...

10 hours ago by Magnus on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

Anonymous hacks Reliance's Internet filtering server - ZDNet (blog) http://t.co/uObU1HBP http://t.co/0UBXxwX4

Which Windows will make for a better tablet? http://t.co/4mAHg850

Gonna be crowded when TA switches of the inter webby thingy and everyone moves there, just as you suggested though.

11 hours ago by Beta on NBN users opt for 100Mbps

Yes "without secure internet identification methods" I cannot see a future for online voting be it a referendum or selecting a Gov (at ...

12 hours ago by Taskmanager on A farewell to democracy: Kaspersky

Listening to @stilgherrian cover AusCERT and cyberwar, http://t.co/6lGUEz8H

Travel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray http://t.co/VN5tGJzC

#Westpac Board goes paperless with #Ipads with #Tabula #App http://t.co/duxuj2fd #Cybersecurity #Bank

Microsoft is serious about open source??? http://t.co/mqQGgta7

@joedamato just try varying caps randomly. Maybe they do this http://t.co/1FN5FwYv

NSW outlines datacentre migration plans - Hardware - News - ZDNet Australia http://t.co/OQfUl0D1

"on the new fast Internets everyone wants the fast plan" #orly #nareally #yarly http://t.co/kvfCa84A

Chrome overtakes IE: does it matter? http://t.co/e4SILk8a

A ZDNet study showed that British Facebook users are drunk in 76 percent of their photos.

The HDMI cable ripoff and why retail is really dying http://t.co/eFT7zEW7

Travel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray http://t.co/IUysbyKf

Travel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray http://t.co/V7vL5QB9

ZDNet reports Microsoft launches its own social service http://t.co/VJS5BkwF

by http://t.co/vmlLt4bh: Travel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray: Ewan Gray, Skyscanner's director for Asia P... http://t.co/4bfDRXo4

Travel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray http://t.co/CtNlVWN7

Travel Tech Q and A: Skyscanner's Ewan Gray: Ewan Gray, Skyscanner's director for Asia Pacific, shares some of h... http://t.co/ZxjpmqiM

This story has been voted 12000 times in the last 24 hours!

2 days ago, Is Bill Gates a great leader?

Facebook Activity

Keep up with ZDNet Australia

ZDNet Events Calendar

ZDNet Events Calendar