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HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen11 review: A supremely versatile rack server


An ideal partner for SMBs and enterprises with diverse and demanding workloads





The HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen11 on the ITPro background





















IT Pro Verdict












Pros


  • Highly flexible design

  • +

    Good value; Gen4/5 Xeon Scalable CPUs

  • +

    Big storage capacity

  • +

    Remote management tools





Cons



  • A Rack server in a data center

The
ProLiant DL380 has always been HPE's flagship rack server with its rich
set of hardware features that allows it to handle just about any
workload you care to name. The latest Gen11 model on review here has a
lot to live up to and doesn't disappoint as it delivers plenty of new
and welcome features

It
seems unreal that we exclusively reviewed the Gen10 version over five
years ago but rest assured, the long-awaited DL380 Gen11 is a
significant update. Naturally, support for Intel's Gen4 Xeon Scalable
CPUs heads up HPE's hardware menu and the server is ready and waiting
for Intel's Gen5 CPU family refresh.

System
memory is more than doubled to 8TB using HPE's DDR5 SmartMemory and
expansion potential sees a big boost with room for up to eight PCIe
Gen5 slots and two OCP 3 mezzanine cards. The storage layout doesn't
see any major updates but none are needed as capacity has always been
impressive, although the DL380 Gen11 adds support for SAS4 and EDSFF
NVMe storage devices.

HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen11 review: Storage features

Storage
choices are outstanding as the DL380 Gen11 supports a remarkable range
of interfaces, devices, and form factors. At the front, you'll find
HPE's standard triple drive bay layout allowing up to 12 LFF, 24 SFF, or
36 EDSFF drives to be presented.

At
the cost of some expansion slots, you can add up to three dual-drive
SSF bays at the rear. You'll need to check HPE's thermal restrictions as
a maximum of 30 SFF drives are supported, but a 4-LFF or 8-SFF midplane
cage can be installed which sits over the CPUs, replaces the air shroud
and requires the CPUs to be fitted with 1U performance heatsinks.

Inside the HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen11

(Image credit: Future)

Unlike HPE's AMD-powered servers,
all its Intel-based models have RAID embedded on the motherboard. This
comes in the shape of Intel's VROC (Virtual RAID on CPU) controller
which supports up to fourteen SATA drives or eight direct-attached NVMe
devices and offers software-managed RAID0, 1, 10, and 5 arrays.

HPE's TriMode backplanes deliver SAS4 plus NVMe support and RAID
card options are extensive – our system was supplied with HPE's
MR416i-p Gen11 PCIe controller complete with a battery backup pack.
There's also a dedicated space above the PSU bays for HPE's NS204i-u
Gen11 boot device which presents two hot-plug M.2 NVMe SSD slots at the
rear and provides mirrored redundant storage for running an OS or
hypervisor.

HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen11 review: Build and expansion

The server's chassis is very solidly built and removing the lid reveals a tidy interior with the two CPU
sockets positioned towards the front of the motherboard and flanked on
each side by banks of eight DIMM slots. Note that the chassis is
thermally rated to support every Gen4 CPU model up to the 60-core
Platinum 8490H. 

Value looks good as HPE's entry-level
preconfigured model check here P60636-421 costs around £3,300. This includes a
single 20-core 2GHz Silver 4416+ CPU, 32GB of DDR5 SmartMemory, eight empty SFF drive bays, an MR408i-o OCP RAID controller, and a single 1,000W hot-plug PSU.

Our
CTO (configure to order) system offered much more as it was supplied
with dual 32-core 2.1GHz Gold 6430 CPUs, 256GB of DDR5, one 8-bay SFF
cage, and two 800W PSUs. As we had relatively high-spec CPUs, our system
also had six high-performance hot-plug cooling fan modules.

Our
system came with the primary and secondary riser cages each offering
three PCIe x16 Gen5 slots and you can add a tertiary riser above the PSU
bay with two more Gen5 slots. The OCP 3 slots are located under the
primary and secondary riser cages and along with 'o' designated RAID
cards, HPE offers quad Gigabit, dual 10GbE, dual and quad 10/25GbE, and
dual 100GbE OCP 3 cards.

HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen11 review: Server management

Remote
management services are in abundance and get off to a flying start with
HPE's iLO6 embedded controller which offers a wealth of remote
management and monitoring services and introduces HPE's trusted security
features. Building on iLO 5 features such as Secure Start and 'silicon
root of trust' firmware fingerprinting, the iLO 6 SPDM (Security
Protocol and Data Module) authenticates all hardware components plus
optional PCIe expansion cards and alerts you to 'hostile' devices.

The HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen11 console

(Image credit: Future)

The
iLO6 links up with HPE's OneView app which provides a central web
console for monitoring and managing all HPE systems, hypervisors,
storage arrays, pools, and switches. Next up is HPE's iLO Amplifier Pack
which offers discovery, inventory, and compliance reporting for up to
10,000 Gen8, 9, 10, and 11 servers. 

Part of HPE's GreenLake cloud
services, Compute Ops Management (COM) presents a portal for viewing
your entire infrastructure, managing server deployments, and automating
system lifecycle compliance policies. Available as a 90-day trial, COM
sees a freshly designed portal and a new feature is the facility to add
local OneView instances to its interface so they can be remotely
accessed – useful if you have older Gen8 and Gen9 servers as these can't
be directly managed from COM.

We added the DL380 Gen11 to our COM
account by entering its serial number and product ID, providing tags
for easy identification, and placing it in a group. The COM home page
provides an overview of all systems showing their health and you can
drill down and see all hardware components, RAID configurations, the
installed OS, and more. It provides remote console access too, and
within minutes of adding our server, COM advised us of its lack of
baseline service pack and firmware compliance and offered to remotely
upgrade it for us.

The HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen11's thermal controls

(Image credit: Future)

HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen11 review: Is it worth it?

There
are good reasons why the ProLiant DL380 is one of HPE's most popular
servers as it offers an incredible expansion potential and a wealth of
storage services at a good price. The DL380 Gen11 delivers plenty of new
features making it ideal for a wide range of demanding enterprise
workloads and HPE's remote management features are simply the best.

HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen11 specifications


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