HPE ProLiant MicroServer Gen11 Review Great New Mini Server

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HPE ProLiant MicroServer Gen11 Topology

Here is the quick topology of the system. This is one of the smaller systems that we review these days.

HPE ProLiant Microserver Gen11 Topology
HPE ProLiant Microserver Gen11 Topology

Here we can see the four Broadcom NICs that are based on the Broadcom BCM5719 controller.

HPE ProLiant Microserver Gen11 Broadcom BCM5719
HPE ProLiant Microserver Gen11 Broadcom BCM5719

These are certainly a step up from having something like four Intel i210-at NICs, but it is still 1GbE which is starting to feel slow at this point.

HPE ProLiant Microserver Gen11 Management

Management is provided by HPE iLO. We can see the iLO chip on the motherboard. HPE makes its own iLO controllers instead of using something like an ASPEED AST2600 BMC.

HPE ProLiant MicroServer Gen11 ILO 1
HPE ProLiant MicroServer Gen11 ILO 1

Once you log in, it is a familiar iLO experience. The default password is on the bottom of the unit which is a good idea to grab a phone photo of before you get the system running.

HPE ILO 6 Login
HPE ILO 6 Login

Onboard, our system came with an iLO 6 Essentials license, but you can get higher license levels if you need them.

HPE ILO 6 Essentials
HPE ILO 6 Essentials

For many organizations, this is just about the best feature of this entire system. If your company is built around iLO management, then having that continuity between the data center platforms and edge platforms like this is great. If you are accustomed to smaller server vendors, then you might also find this a bit frustrating since instead of having something like a standard MegaRAC SP-X or OpenBMC interface with all of the features available, HPE has perhaps more features, but they are behind higher levels of iLO Advanced licensing.

A part of me wishes that HPE just gave the full iLO experience here. It is not like someone is going to take these 2-8 core platforms and build massive server farms endangering HPE’s mainstream iLO business. At the edge, remote management is key. For small businesses with perhaps 1-3 of these deployed on site, having to get an iLO Advanced license key and input it into the servers is a bit of a pain.

HPE ProLiant MicroServer Gen11 Performance

On the performance side, there are probably going to be two sets of folks. First, if you are coming from an older MicroServer platform, the Intel Xeon E-2400 or Intel Xeon 6300 series is going to be an enormous upgrade. At launch, these systems came with the Intel Xeon E-2400 series in 2-4 core configurations. HPE adopted SKUs up to the Intel Xeon 6369P (8 cores/ 16 threads) after the Xeon 6 launch.

Intel Xeon E 2434 Lscpu
Intel Xeon E 2434 Lscpu

I have made it fairly clear where I stand with pieces like Intel Xeon 6300 Launched for Entry Servers with 2019 Core Counts and then once the AMD EPYC 4005 Grado launched the gap between AMD and Intel in this market widened significantly.

The Entry Server Market is Wide Open for AMD as Intel Half-Abandons its Entry Xeon by Patrick Kennedy

Read on Substack

Just to give you some sense, here is the Xeon E-2434 in our MicroServer Gen11, the top-of-the line of the 4-core parts at launch, versus the older AMD EPYC 4124P part in the Lenovo ThinkSystem ST45 V3 we reviewed. That EPYC 4124P is a lower-end part than the Xeon from a pricing perspective at closer to half the 1kU MSRP, yet it is signifiantly faster than the Xeon E.

HPE ProLiant Microserver Gen11 With Intel Xeon E 2434 Versus Lenovo ThinkSystem ST45 V3 With AMD EPYC 4124P Geekbench 6 Comparison
HPE ProLiant Microserver Gen11 With Intel Xeon E 2434 Versus Lenovo ThinkSystem ST45 V3 With AMD EPYC 4124P Geekbench 6 Comparison

Here is the Geekbench 5 result that scales with higher core counts better:

HPE ProLiant Microserver Gen11 With Intel Xeon E 2434 Versus Lenovo ThinkSystem ST45 V3 With AMD EPYC 4124P Geekbench 5 Comparison
HPE ProLiant Microserver Gen11 With Intel Xeon E 2434 Versus Lenovo ThinkSystem ST45 V3 With AMD EPYC 4124P Geekbench 5 Comparison

While the Xeon E-2400 to Xeon 6300 transition was adding a 100MHz or a few hundred MHz bumps in the line, the AMD EPYC 4005 update added 15%+ performance from the Zen 5 bump, but also introduced parts like the 16 core 65W TDP parts that align with Windows Server license packs.

Further, the AMD Zen 4/ Zen 5 parts use the same instruction sets as the bigger socket Zen 4/ Zen 5 counterparts, so you can live migrade between the big EPYC CPUs and these entry server CPUs. Intel claims that the Xeon E-2400/ Xeon 6300 are P-core designs, but they do not support features like AVX-512, so you do not have the same instructions between the Xeron 6900P, 6700P, and 6500P, nor the E-core parts like the Xeon 6700E.

AMD EPYC 4005 Grado Versus Competition
AMD EPYC 4005 Grado Versus Competition

For the edge, as one other small one, the EPYC 4000 series has a weak, but present integrated GPU with media engines. Using the EPYC 4000 series would have allowed HPE to do things like support 4K digital signate at the edge as an example.

This was one area where if HPE used AMD EPYC 4004/ 4005 it would have had a much more robust platform. The Xeon E/ Xeon 6300P CPUs are a weak point of the MicroServer Gen11.

23 COMMENTS

  1. Curious, are you aware of any competitor SKUs to this system that exist outside of Chinese “NAS” PCs? I don’t think Dell or Lenovo have direct competitors.

  2. My disappointment is immeasurable.
    And my day is ruined.

    4 x 1G port configuration is a joke in 2025 on such systems. 11th gen intel processors (or comparable xeons) are also kind of a joke. Not a fan of AMD, but would it be better if it had AMD epyc inside…
    Well, at least ilo seems more fun of a form factor this time.

  3. This stuff is cool, but is going to be far too expensive for the average homelabber. Maybe I’ll pick up a used on in 4 years.

  4. “The main rear I/O block consists of four USB 3 (5Gbps) ports and four 1GbE Broadcom NIC ports.”

    Someone tell HP we’re in 2025.

    The only thing they got worthwhile, that mini pcs don’t is ILO. Other than that, irrelevant.

    Still, Pikvm helps a lot.

  5. i made better with epyc 4004 and Gigabyte MC13-LE3 2 x 25Gb/s LAN ports and 2 x 1Gb/s LAN ports ,
    HPE hire engineers from Synology ?

  6. I have this same system, upgraded it to a Xeon E-2436 as that fits right within what the system can do realistically with TDP and power. I’ve upgraded from the Gen10 plus and Gen10 plus v2, as it’s a nice form factor and iLO is a lifesaver.

    I’ve noticed these non-labelled MCIO and OCP connectors on the mainboard as well. Is there any way I can validate whether these are operational through schematics, lspci output, whatever, other than plugging something in?

  7. I’m not too fussed with the lack of hotswap bays, as a cheap hotswap backplane tends to flake out and drop disks momentarily in my experience. I’ve switched multiple home hobbyist NAS servers (Rosewill 4u chassis) over from hotswap to direct SATA to eliminate this problem.

    After checking the price ($1000 – $1300) I’m also not too fussed about the lack of multi gig ethernet ports. I would just add a mellanox card or maybe even one of those new Intel e610-xt2 NICs if the problems from previous models have been corrected (waiting patiently for the STH review).

  8. “Hey, I was down at the e-waste center and got a whole truck load of Broadcom 1GbE PHYs for free! What should we do with them?”

  9. I’d wager that the issue isn’t one little thing. The engineers making the MicroServer look like they care about their product. What they don’t have is someone to do bean counting to hipness. They’re making tradeoffs like “OK we’ll use the more expensive Xeon because it’s been Xeon” and “We’ll do quad 1G again.” They need to because they’ve got legacy. They need the MSP’s that sold G8 to sell G11 so they need to keep quad NICs. Bean counters then say OK so we’ve got to have this for backwards compatibility.

    What they don’t have is someone to advocate making it “cool”. They should just hire Patrick as a consultant to see if he gets excited about a design. These aren’t selling in enough volume to make impactful earnings for HPE. But they’re the perfect boxes to enter into HPE over another ecosystem.

    This is a review by someone who has done 100’s of these reviews. Why they wouldn’t just say “Patrick help” is beyond me.

    I’m hoping Dell or Lenovo gets wise and just asks STH to make a better MicroServer.

  10. 1 GbE makes me SO ANGRY HP :( Will never acquire first, second, or third-hand. Bought N36L and N54L first-hand decade+ ago.

  11. Patrick ,

    Obviously you never haven’t had an Gen10 on/in hand.
    the diskslot screws were already used there.
    My AMD version also has 2 PCIe slots.
    and a 200W internal PSU, instead of the dreadful adapters

  12. In my opinion once an edge server gets this much bigger than a Raspberry Pi it should be able to accommodate an AI accelerator such as the Tenstorrent Blackhole. At the same time, new kit with old features can be useful just for the warranty. I wish it came in beige without the green rectangle.

  13. Quite disappointing.

    I built a NAS with an Asrock ITX AM4 board with both 10G ethernet and IPMI and added three 4TB U.2 drives while having space for three more.

    I know that that is, of course, not a competitor against something like this, but unless someone specifically needs pre-built hardware without the software, there really is no point in buying this. Especially since some Chinese brands like Ugreen have started making some really interesting 4 and 6-bay configurations in that space too.

  14. I had used to specify HP Microservers for my company’s needs for many edge and backline tasks back in the N40L and N54L AMD days, they were a server-grade system at prices cheaper than I could build and undercutting the Dell competition. A few of these systems are still in use! I have given up on using HP Microservers for anything at all since they went with wimpy and naff Intel processors at elevated prices with inadequate performance. The system design has not moved on since 2013 or so.

    I have just built for myself a little all-SSD NAS server based on a Topton board which has comparable performance, 10/2.5 GB Ethernet, two (slow) M2 nVme ports and 6 SATA ports with SSD RAID 5, all for a fraction of the price and giving solid 10G ethernet performance. No I don’t get an HP warranty or support, but I’m the warranty and support here. If I was still pre-retirement and spec’ing for my company, HP would still not be on the list. Need to do better.

  15. Maybe aggregate the 3x1Gb NIC ports and add a 10Gb PCI board. Don’t really see the market for sorta standing still user technology and features. OK nice CPU, etc. but still seems backwards.

  16. The Gen11 Microserver and the ProLiant ML110 Gen11 appear to share the same system board. In the ML110 the MCIO is labeled as front panel connectors and the rear slot supports a SAS daughterboard.

    When buying HP your vendor can do system prep including entering the ILO licenses. I’m all for calling out vendors c-note and grand-ing customers but don’t make it weird.

    I recognize the drive screws from Compaq Pentium 4 desktops. I wonder if they are what is left of the Compaq purchase.

  17. From the listing image, I thought the fascia was 3d printed!

    I have a Gen8 Microserver, which I’ve upgraded the CPU and RAM, put in a proper HBA, but it’s only 1Gb networking. It was fine when I bought it in 2014. 11 years and three generations later and HP is still putting 1Gb networking on their Microservers.

  18. Interesting system and review for the most part, but:
    “This was one area where if HPE used AMD EPYC 4004/ 4005 it would have had a much more robust platform. The Xeon E/ Xeon 6300P CPUs are a weak point of the MicroServer Gen11.”
    – This sort of comment makes me wonder if the writer is too invested in their own opinions as opposed to seeing the market the way it really is. Having an Intel CPU is a compelling sales argument, there is a sizeable portion of users for this kind of system who will not buy something running an AMD chip – full stop. I’m certain there are customers on the other side of the fence the same way but I suspect there are less of them. I couldn’t find any statistics on the matter, it would be interesting to see such numbers. I’ve had AMD related experiences like buying a HD2900XT which was so bad I ended up never using it at all, still have it with less than 20hrs of running time. I keep it as my physical reminder to never buy their GPU’s and aside from a few used ones to benchmark I have stuck to my guns on that. I also bought the X2 6400BE something or other that was such a disaster that I sold it almost immediately at a small loss and kept using my old Pentium 4 rather than it – which I think should mean a bit more than any rant I could have against them. Let me just say that my Pentium 4 ate the lunch of the many generations newer X2 6400BE which was the fanciest ‘Black Edition’ chip AMD had to offer then, and it was worse or equal to the architecture handicapped Pentium 4 in so many things I literally laughed out loud when I benched them next to each other again and again trying to work out what I was doing wrong. After loads of digging, my mistake was to do a fair comparison. I found which benches and settings to use to go maximum fanboyism to let the AMD chip win… Noped out really quickly. Ditched that whole PC within a week I think, two maybe. Kept using my trusty P4 – trying to figure out where to go from there heh. I did eventually go core2quad and so on of course. The AMD GPU I kept because it was worth so much less when it was 1 day old than I paid for it that it made no sense to sell it. And I got the rare 1gig model with faster memory – not that it made a difference really, it was still a slow buggy POS but it was at least a relatively rare one…
    I could keep going, I kept trying AMD stuff and kept being burned by it until 10yrs ago or so. Then I just tattooed an ‘intel inside’ logo on my forehead and accepted my fate… Joking about the tattoo, although it has crossed my mind primarily because I really *wanted* AMD to do better and I think I kinda wanted to join the “cool kids” instead of being stuck with the pocket protector sporting intel boys – but facts are facts.
    — for those who don’t get this kinda thing, this is obviously anecdotal, it’s just my opinions and experiences, and with a sprinkling of humor. Don’t get bent out of shape by it, if you had a great experience with AMD – all the power to ya. Tattoo a little green logo on your bumcheek. Dye your hair green.

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