I'm closing in on purchasing a Dell PowerEdge R710 rack server and am curious to know the difference between Dell's power saving bios setting and their performance bios setting. Should I be concerned about choosing the power saving setting? I'll be using this rack for terminal services and definitely want performance when performance is needed. That being said, for the other 3/4's of the day when employees have gone home I'd prefer it if this server wasn't running at 110%.
Thanks in advance.
The following Dell Whitepaper goes in depth on the differences between the different power profiles: http://en.community.dell.com/techcenter/extras/m/white_papers/20248740 (page 20-36)
Below you can find some relevant pieces of information mentioned in the whitepaper:
Each profile simply enables/disables some BIOS features, the table below provides an overview of the features. This is documentation for 12th generation servers, while the R710 is 11th generation. But I'm quite sure DAPC (Dell Active Power Controller) is similar to what Power saving mode is in the 11th generation servers, but can't confirm.
It goes in depth on the different profiles.
This article provides -some- insight into what the C-states feature is about: http://crtech.tips/performance-mode-bios/
There are some performance vs watt comparisons in the paper, i didn't read the analysis, but at first glance it seems that only the DENSE option has significant implications. Someone with more time/technical background might be able to fill in on this.
I don't know the details but the R710 has a BIOS Power/Performance options page. In it you can select to turn on and off features which will either save power and boost performance.
You can change these settings so I wouldn't worry about it.
Donno about r710, but for servers my approach is to have BIOS in performance mode and eventually let the OS manage power consumption when on low load via ACPI, cpuperf or whatever you like
I hooked up a WattsUp! meter to our R710 and I couldn't tell much of a difference between the two either at idle or at full tilt. So I left it at Maximum Performance. At idle they only draw 185 watts, full tilt I got it up to 295 watts (in our config.)
-Dave