Welp, that was a harrowing procedure.
I:
- swapped drives/RAM/cards between the case/PSU/board/CPU of the main and server, giving the server much more workability, thermal headroom, and extra card space
- tried to swap CPUs to give the server moar coars but for some reason, Proxmox throws a fit booting with SVM enabled on the 5700X -- bizarrely, Windows works fine on that CPU with SVM enabled, so I'm guessing it's some kind of BIOS fuck-up on Gigabyte's end -- when it comes time that a 6 core really isn't enough for that thing, I suppose I'll be ready to move on to another platform entirely anyway. That'll be the excuse I need to finally overhaul my rack and get a couple blades or something.
- split the 64 GB of RAM between my main and server, each getting 2x16. I'll eventually need to buy a 2x32 kit for the server, I guess -- 4x16 in any combination wouldn't boot, but 2x16 was fine in any configuration so I know none of the DIMMs are bad. Bizarre considering I know all four slots work, I had 4x8 when it was powering the main, and I know the CPU can handle all four slots being driven as I did that with the B450 board. Strange. I guess from now on I'm better off ignoring the second set of DIMM slots in anything Ryzen and just pretending I have the two and that's it.
- moved my B450 board, 5700X and A770 along with the X540 card into the Fractal Design 1100 mATX case that used to hold my Sandy Bridge-era XP build. Jury's out on this, but the trusty, dusty 600BQ lives again and is plenty for this build anyway. It does get a bit hotter than I'd like. I might move to a bigger case at some point.
Throughput was initially rather disappointing until I realized I was going through an extra layer of virtualization by connecting through Samba. I installed the NFS client for Windows and after a couple of registry tweaks to set the Anonymous user UID and GID, got it hooked up that way. It's much faster and is definitely going quicker than 2.5, but as I figured it's still not coming anywhere close to saturating 10Gbps. I think the bottleneck is going to be the fact that my RAID is software and isn't being cached by anything except the Linux disk caching mechanism, and that VM only has 8GB to do that with.
Before:
After:
Pay no mind to exactly what I was copying, I just wanted to do a quick test and needed something of a convenient size.