






🚀 Mini ITX, Mega Power – Own your virtual empire!
The Supermicro A2SDi-4C-HLN4F is a Mini ITX motherboard powered by a quad-core Intel Atom C3558 CPU with a low 16W TDP. It supports up to 128GB ECC DDR4 memory, features 8 SATA3 ports, an M.2 slot, and a PCIe 3.0 x4 slot for extensive storage options. With quad Intel Gigabit LAN ports and robust virtualization support, it’s engineered for high-performance SOHO servers, personal clouds, and media streaming setups.
| ASIN | B077BT1DRT |
| Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,125 in Computer Motherboards |
| Brand | Supermicro |
| Customer Reviews | 3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars (13) |
| Date First Available | September 13, 2017 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 10 x 10 x 10 inches |
| Item Weight | 1 pounds |
| Item model number | A2SDI-4C-HLN4F-O |
| Language | English, English, English, English, English |
| Manufacturer | Supermicro |
| Memory Speed | 2133 MHz |
| Number of USB 2.0 Ports | 2 |
| Product Dimensions | 10 x 10 x 10 inches |
| RAM | 1 TB DDR |
| Series | A2SDI-4C-HLN4F |
| Voltage | 1.2 Volts |
V**Y
Perfect for Proxmox Virtualization
Excellent. You can attach 4 SATA drives, 8 SSDs, an M.2 card, plus a PCI card allowing you to attach even more drives. With so much storage capacity using a virtualization OS like Promox or VMware, you can create dozens of file systems, each with its own operating system. The 16 core Atom CPU can handle them all if they are used primary for file transfer operations such personal cloud services, SOHO LAN based web sites, and media serving.
I**A
Mine was DOA. Where is the QA Supermicro. So disappointed
Mine was DOA. Where is the QA Supermicro. It will not boot and will get stuck on POST at 71. I tried everything. I think I will go with an ASRock board next time as I have one already running very good for almost 4 years now.
P**P
Perfect for a DIY NAS
Used in OpenMediaVault NAS. Be aware that the NICs are not detected during installation of Linux based OS (I had to use a temporary NIC in order to install OpenMediaVault) but when the OS is ready they become available. Also it is better to start installation from scratch because of the onboard UEFI : if you try to use an existing drive, it might be not detected because of the difference in the partition formatting. But in the end it works great so this board clearly fits my needs.
J**N
PCIe and SATA share lanes!
The most important thing to know about this board is that the PCIe and SATA share lanes. Which means if you want 8 SATA ports, you don't get the PCI-E port. For 6 SATA ports you get 2x PCI-E, and for 4 SATA ports you get 4x PCI-E. In my opinion, the price vs what you get isn't worth it. So if you need 7+ SATA ports and the PCI-E, this board is not for you.
J**E
PCIe and SATA share lanes.
Linux NIC support lacking, was a pain to setup using Open Media Vault. Used in an eight bay NAS.
A**S
Perfect small NAS board
I use it with Xigmanas. OS boots from internal USB3 port - a really nice touch. Installation goes without a hickup and FreeBSD ipmi kernel module works as expected. raidz2 5HD resilver takes ~20% of all 4 CPUs so this is good for home LAN only. Pros: soldered CPU is at a price/performance sweet spot, compact form factor, lots of SATA3 ports, ipmi with web management, ECC memory, lots of fan headers. Cons: Soldered CPU, too few PCIe lanes, no support for NVMe SSD (unless you are ready to sacrifice the # of SATA ports), price, no redfish support, and I miss a finer control over fan speed. On balance, I am happy with it for now.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
3 days ago