SeaMicro’s Minor Revolution In The Data Center

June 14, 2010

Not since the advent of virtualization has the data center faced such an opportunity for change.

Low-cost, ultra-low-power servers – sometimes called microservers – may finally get a jolt of legitimacy.

On Monday, secretive Santa Clara start-up SeaMicro formally launched its long-awaited remake of the x86 server: a 512-processor box that doesn’t use Intel’s ubiquitous Xeon chips but low-power Atoms instead. Atoms are the processors sold in $300 netbooks – giving rise to the observation that SeaMicro’s SM10000 is really just a collection of netbooks stuffed in a one box.

Expect vendors such as Dell to begin making microservers. SeaMicro claims it will cut power use by 75 percent.

It’s an observation that is essentially true. The result is a server that uses one-quarter the power and takes up one-quarter the space while performing the same amount of work. CEO Andrew Feldman says Atom is three times more efficient in performance per watt than Xeon. The reason is it can better power down when not in use and doesn’t waste energy trying to anticipate future workloads, as Xeon does.

That is why the SeaMicro box is better suited to the Internet, where traffic is bursty and generally only places lightweight demands on a server.

The SM10000 is the brainchild of Gary Lauterback, a former AMD fellow and Sun Microsystems engineer, and “is an enormous transformation of the data center,” claims Feldman.

He may not be exaggerating. Zeus Kerravala, a long-time tracker of the server industry at Yankee Group, says: “As an analyst I am often skeptical of technologies people tout as revolutionary, but this one I was really impress with.” If Dell and other top tier vendors aren’t already thinking about microservers “I’d be surprised,” he says.

In truth, SeaMicro isn’t the first company to conceive of low-power servers or ones running Atom. Super Micro Computer launched a rack-mounted Atom blade last year, and Hewlett-Packard markets a $400 MediaSmart home-server with Atom. In Austin, TX, Smooth Stone is working on technology to bring even lower-powered ARM processors, those in many cell phones, to the server market.

Improved efficiency is what motivated cloud-computing vendor Rackable Systems to make use of small servers with modest power to handle fluctuating Internet workloads.

However, SeaMicro hopes to take Atom boxes a step further. The company built into the SM10000 a 1.28-terabit communications fabric powerful enough for a super computer and installed a custom ASICs to handle the complex load balancing for 512 processors. A single box can replace 40 dual-socket, quad-core servers, two Ethernet switches and two terminal servers, says Feldman.

It also shrank the size of processor motherboards to the size of a credit card, taking off unnecessary components and reducing the power draw.

According to IDC, the package may catch on with Web 2.0 companies. Companies spend $27 billion globally a year buying energy to run their servers, the research firm says. Most would die to reduce the bill.

“I think it is a radical approach” that Web 2.0 companies will quickly adopt for their public clouds, says research analyst Katherine Broderick.

The SeaMicro, which raised $25 million from backers including Khosla Ventures, Draper Fisher Jurvetson and Crosslink Capital and received a $9.3 million Department of Energy grant, will make the box available in July. Selling for $139,000, it is likely to begin earning its investors a return.


Analyst: AMD 12-Cores vs. Intel 6-Cores Server Chips

April 1, 2010

This week, AMD and Intel launched their latest generation of high-end server chips.

The AMD Opteron 6000 (Magny-Cours) is a set of 8- and 12-core processors for dual- and quad-CPU servers. Not to be outdone, Intel has introduced the 8-core processor Xeon 7500 (Westmere), that could be deployed in mammoth 256-processor configurations.

To help us understand the differences between these 2 competing family of chips, we asked Insight64 analyst, Nathan Brookwod to share his views on these latest chips.

In 2-socket configurations, AMD delivers better performance despite Intel’s faster cores

AMD Magny-Cours (now the Opteron 6100) for both two socket and four socket configurations.

In the two-socket world, AMD faces Westmere-EP (Xeon 5600), which has six cores and twelve threads. Westmere’s cores are faster than Magny-Cours’ cores. Westmere wins some single-threaded contests, but AMD can overwhelm them if it gets to fire up all its cores, or if memory bandwidth or capacity is an issue.

In 4-socket configurations, AMD wins in price but Intel can scale to 64-sockets!

In the four-socket world, AMD faces Nehalem-EX, aka Becton, which has eight cores and sixteen threads. Becton’s cores are faster than Magny-Cours’ cores, and Intel has more on-chip cache (24MB to AMD’s 12MB) but AMD has 12 cores to Intel’s 8, and AMD charges the same price for the chips in 2P and 4P systems, while Intel charges almost 2x the price (per chip) for Becton, compared with Westmere-EP. Magny-Cours will win some benchmarks against Becton, and lose some, but it will always be less expensive. Some customers will value Intel’s greater expandability (to 8, 16 and 64-socket arrangements) and others will be attracted to AMD’s lower price.

Can Itanium survive to latest performance onslaught?

Brookwood’s law (“It’s easier to measure price than performance”) will give AMD an advantage in the two-way and four-way segments, but Becton will have almost no competition (other than Itanium and Power 7) for the higher-end niche of the server market. It’s hard to see how Itanium can survive for long against this Xeon onslaught.


[Video] Intel Confirms Launch Of “Westmere” Server Chip Mid-March, Details Cloud Security Functions

March 2, 2010

Intel server chip chief Kirk Skaugen confirmed the imminent release of the company's first 6-core chip since the ill-fated Dunnington

At a security event last night in San Francisco, Intel vice-president Kirk Skaugen confirmed the release date of Intel’s next-generation lineup of 32-nm Xeon server processors, including the first six-core Xeon chips since 2008 (Dunnington).

“In about 2 weeks it’s highly anticipated that we’ll be announcing this Westmere processor… When you buy that [chip], you should be able to get your return in about 5 months. But we’re probably most excited about – relative to just another crank of energy and performance – is the security features that are going into the processor,”told Skaugen to reporters during a media event hosted by security company RSA.

Scheduled in March 16, Intel will release a dozen dual-socket, 32nm Xeon processors as well a workstation version (Core i7) of the six-core chip.

“But what probably we’re most excited about – relative to another crank of energy and performance – is the [2] security features that are going into the processor,” added Skaugen.

The 2 new security features included in the Westmere line are:

  1. 7 new instructions call AES-NI, that will deliver encryption and decryption up to 9 times faster and up to 2 times more SSL functions than in the past;
  2. Trusted eXecution Technology (TXT) that is integrated in the processor, the chipset and Intel motherboards. “So for example, if you’re using VMotion to dynamically move a workload from a server to another, you want to set policies that say “I’m only going to move a workload to a server I know the secure root of trust has been verified… So, if I’m on a non trusted server I won’t be allowed to run [an application] on a trusted server, and vice-versa… all these kind of policies can be set up at the cloud level through the software that will be enabled on top of these new hardware,” said Skaugen.

Intel claims cloud domination

The Intel executive also provided reporters with some interesting statistics:

  1. a little under 40% of the world’s servers today are still single core;
  2. Xeon servers represent about 90% of the cloud infrastructure.

“With this new chip, everything that you know and love about Intel on energy efficiency, you’ll still get. So you can retire 15 single core servers and put in one Westmere server that is going to have the same performance, but you also going to get the trusted execution technology that can deliver that new secure root of trust,” concluded Skaugen.

Follows is a video excerpt of Skaugen comments:


[360° View] Nehalem EX: Intel’s First Worthy Competitor To AMD Opteron’s Dominance Of High-End Server Market

May 26, 2009
Intel Nehalem EX servers will not ship until earlier next year. For early adopters, itll be a forklift upgrade.

Intel Nehalem EX servers will not ship until earlier next year. For early adopters, it'll be a forklift upgrade.

Earlier today, Intel gave a preview of its upcoming high-end server chip dubbed “Nehalem EX” to a small group of journalists and analysts in San Francisco.

The 8-cores Nehalem-EX chip will be in production later this year and for sale in systems in early next year.

In launching the Nehalem EX, Intel will finally have a worthy competitor to AMD’s Opteron chip for the high-end server market (4 processors/sockets or more); Intel is currently shipping an appalling 6-cores server chip (Xeon 7400) that is no match, even for Opteron’s quad-core Shanghai processor.

“With Nehalem EX, Intel has aggressively attack the constraint on performance of the previous chips, including the amount of memory bandwith, memory capacity, cache, QPI links… This is going to be a really powerful chip when it comes out. There’s no doubt in my mind that AMD’s dominance of the 4P and above space will be seriously challenged by the Nehalem EX,” explains Insight64 analyst Nathan Brookwood.

But until early next year, AMD has the upper-hand on the high-end server market and knows it.

“The equivalent to their Nehalem EX and Dunnington processors are our Opteron 8000 series processors in 2009 and in 2010, it will be our 6000 series (Magny-Cours) processors.

The thing you need to remember is that we offer processors for 4-socket servers and higher that have direct connect architecture today. Intel customers are still forced to leverage their Dunnington processors for 4-socket and higher that uses a front-side bus to access memory which tends to be more inefficient in multi-socket servers.

When we launch our six-core Istanbul processors next month, they will be available in 2P, 4P and 8P configurations. If you want Direct Connect Architecture with an Intel solution in 4P and higher, you are forced to wait until their Nehalem EX part is available [next year!],” said Phil Hughes, an AMD spokesman.

Intel’s Nehalem EX is a “forklift” upgrade

With Nehalem EX, Intel is partially moving away from using buffered memory – which consumes more power and costs more than standard memory – by adopting DDR3 memory and integrating the “buffers” on the motherboard; still making it a more complex solution, which could potentially affect memory performance.

“The devil will be in the details and how Intel is implementing this,” added Brookwood who thinks Intel will have a hard time to convince customers to do a “forklift” upgrade to Nehalem EX from their current Xeon systems.

Here’s a video excerpt of our conversation with Boyd Davis, the general manager of Intel’s server platforms group marketing who conducted this morning briefing, and where he talks about Intel’s VT Flex Migration feaure which lets customers run virtual machines on Xeon servers (Core2 and Nehalem), despite their architecture differences.

IBM on the power of Intel’s Nehalem EX

And for Alex Yost, IBM’s vice president for System x (IBM’s x86 servers) and BladeCenter, Nehalem EX servers will be the most powerful X86 servers, bar none.

Finally, here’s Yost’s presentation at the Nehalem EX briefing:


AMD Counters Intel’s “Disingenuous” Server Claims Over Xeon 5500 (Nehalem) Performance, Price

April 6, 2009
An Intel Nehalem server system cost almost twice as much as an equivalent (2 memory channels) AMD Opteron server

An Intel Nehalem server system cost almost twice as much as an equivalent (2 memory channels) AMD Opteron server

AMD finally strikes back at Intel’s competitive server claims.

It took indeed several days for AMD to respond to some of the claims that Intel made when it launched its next-generation server chip Xeon 5500 (Nehalem) last week.

And reading through the counter-claims, Intel’s Nehalem looks more of a jumbo-jet than a supersonic jet fighter!

Here’s a summary of my conversations with AMD’s server Chief Pat Patla and manager John Fruehe.

So is the slowest Nehalem chip really faster than the fastest Opteron chip, including AMD’s Istanbul server chip coming out at the end of the year?

How can that be? The slowest Nehalem is a dual-core chip. How can their dual-core chip be faster than our quad-core? They [Intel] just say those things without anything backing up their statement. The only benchmarks Intel published is on their top end parts. Nothing on the lower end. Intel has done a great job in marketing. I don’t necessarily agree that they have done a great job in driving value for the customers.

But Intel has added the super fast QuickPath Interconnect (QPI) with Nehalem?

QPI is actually a copy of HyperTransport. As a matter of fact, they could have licensed HyperTransport which is an open standard but instead they decided to go with their own proprietary infrastructure.

Now, Intel will rave about the performance of QPI but it’s only if you buy their top end parts. If you buy their mid-range parts, the QPI speed drops down, and if you buy their lower end parts the QPI speeds drop down even more.

Meaning that if you have an application that rely on high I/O and high memory throughput but doesn’t need a lot of compute power, like a Web server, a file server or network infrastructure – which are the real backbone of today’s data centers - you would have to buy the fastest Nehalem processor to get the fastest QPI! Instead, we offer the same HyperTransport speed on all of our Opteron chips.

And hyperthreading?

Real men use real cores. We’ve got real cores across our products. Hyperthreading is basically designed to act like a core except that it only gives 10 to 15 percent performance bump for real applications workload. That’s because hyperthreading requires the core logic to maintain 2 pipelines: its normal pipeline and its hyperthreaded pipeline. A management overhead that doesn’t give you a clear throughput.

You’re saying that Nehalem chips are overpriced. Why?

Yes. A Dell server with the Nehalem 2.93 GHz chip is 104 percent more expensive (~$6.100) than the same configured server equipped with a Shanghai processor at 2.7 GHz (~$3,000). At this price, I sure hope so that they are faster. So if you’re in a tough economy and you’re trying to make your budget dollars as far as you can, you’re probably not going to buy half as many Nehalem servers but more cost effective Opteron servers.

It’s somewhat disingenuous to layout all the benchmarks and say “we’ve got a better platform” and completely ignore the pricing aspect of it.

Why are Intel-based servers more expensive than AMDs?

  1. First off, the price of the Nehalem chip itself is more expensive than the Opteron chip;
  2. Then, they use DDR3 memory which is more expensive, draws more power and has higher latency. So DDR3 is not a good choice for 2009. But in 2010, the tables will turn on DDR3 with lower prices, lower latency and lower power;
  3. The Nehalem servers have 3 channels of memory, versus 2 for the Opteron. So where we would put 2 DIMMs, they would put 3 DIMMs in, which makes it 50 percent more expensive in DIMMs and it’s going to consume 50 percent more power from the memory perspective;
  4. Because of the size of the socket and because of the 3 memory channels, Intel needs to have more layers on the board, plus special VRMs, etc… making the whole infrastructure more expensive to build.

What about Intel claim that a customer can consolidate 9 single core servers on one single Nehalem server ?

We also support all the virtualization platforms (VMware,Microsoft HyperV, Xen…) which let one dual-socket server support on average 5 to 10 virtual machines. So what Intel is really talking about is virtualization and we do that as well! There’s no reason that you could not support the work of 10 single core servers on an Opteron. They are making that sound as something unique that only Intel can do, but they’re not the only platform that runs virtualization.

Intel also claims that in some cases, Nehalem servers have an ROI of only 8 months!

Again, it’s disingenuous to talk about ROI to the IT world as a hardware vendor. Because people look at a complete solution: it’s hardware, software, lifecycle management, licensing, power, security… And if you look at any TCO models – which is what you’d use to do an ROI analysis – it will say that acquisition costs (hardware and software) is about 25 percent. And the software is a lot more expensive than the hardware. So if your hardware is about 10 percent of the cost of the total solution, how are they coming up with an ROI of 8 months? I’m sure they are doing the math thinking “if you’re buying the server today and you unplug 10 single core servers, the amount of power that you’d save would payoff this server.”

And Nehalem servers being a cash machine after 8 months?

Maybe after 8 months, it starts to print off enough money to pay for the 104 percent price premium that you pay at the beginning! You could virtualize 10 servers on an Opteron platform using virtualization and unplug them. And because we are half as much in cost, our ROI should technically be 4 months, shouldn’t it? If they can do it in 8 months, and we cost half as they do, we should do it in 4 months, right? But I wouldn’t make that statement to customers because I’ll be laughed out of their office, because it’s not how they measure ROI.

Is Nehalem really all that bad?

Intel have done a lot of great work to bring down the idle power, which is great on a desktop but less an issue in servers. So, while Nehalem has a very low idle power, in a data center you have to set all of your parameters around the highest amount of power the platform can draw. And by design Nehalem servers draw more power than Opteron servers. Which means that you can put less of them in a data center than AMD servers


Intel Itanium Is The Preferred Chip For The “Also-Ran” Server Makers

April 2, 2009

When launching the latest Xeon server chip, Intel conveniently omitted to talk about its “other” server family, the Itanium.

Probably because Itanium has simply not lived up to the expectation Intel – and others – set forth, almost 15 years ago.

Then Itanium was predicted to dominate the server business, and then trickle down to eventually get into desktops and notebooks. And ultimately replace the X86 architecture altogether, recalls chip analyst Nathan Brookwood.

Well, obviously that didn’t happen and never will even if all of the major server suppliers like H-P, Unisys, Hitachi, NEC, Silicon Graphics – but to the exception of Sun and IBM – have adopted Itanium as their mainframe alternative platform.

“Itanium has become the prefered plaftorm for the also rans in the server business,” quipped Brookwood.

Despite its commercial failure, Intel still wants to hang on to Itanium. And that’s because, Itanium is the only server chip in Intel’s arsenal that can actually compete with the reliability and scalability of its rival RISC-processors like Sun’s SPARC or IBM’s POWER. “[Itanium] is delivering to that very high end mission critical market segment,” explained Pat Gelsinger, Intel’s vice president in charge of the server business.

However, to lower development costs, Intel decided to converge the Itanium platform to the Xeon platform (chipset, QPI’s fast interconnect…). “That will happen when the next generation of the Itanium chip, Tukwila, will launch [probably later this year],” adds Brookwood.

The good news for enterprise customers and the server OEMs like H-P, is that Itanium is not going away. The bad news for Intel, is that it will never be a growth opportunity.

Here’s an excerpt of Brookwood’s comments on Itanium:


If Intel Xeon 5500 (Nehalem) Was An Airplane It Would Be An F15, A Jumbo Jet And A Glider

March 31, 2009

Now that’s a funny and of course a preposterous analogy, courtesy of Intel’s vice president Pat Gelsinger. So, if the Xeon 5500 (Nehalem) server chip was an airplane it would be:

  1. a supersonic plane like an F15;
  2. with carriage capacity equivalent to a jumbo jet that can fly around the globe;
  3. and fuel efficient like a glider!
Nehalem is the ultimate green supersonic jumbo jet!

Nehalem is the ultimate green supersonic jumbo jet!


Intel Nehalem Is Also A Cash Machine!

March 31, 2009

Speaking yesterday at Intel’s most important server launch ever, vice president Pat Gelsinger said that the latest Xeon 5500 becomes a cash machine for IT after only 8 months of use.

“It’s printing money that allows IT to go focus on innovation and business value [...] The value proposition is so high that even Intel IT is very interested,” added Gelsinger.

However, this “value proposition” becomes reality only if enterprises “refresh” single or dual-core servers with the new quad-core Xeon 5500.

Which is why Gelsinger conveniently pointed to an IDC study revealing that 80% of the world’s 30 millions X86 servers are single or dual-core servers.

Is Nehalem, Intel’s secret bailout plan for shrinking IT budgets? Let’s start printing some money then :)


Intel: Slowest Nehalem Server Chip Outperforms Fastest AMD Opteron; Current Or Future

March 25, 2009
Intel's server chief is very optimistic on Nehalem's performance over AMD's Opteron

Intel's server chief is very optimistic on Nehalem's performance over AMD's Opteron

Today, Intel started to drum up next week’s launch of it’s next-generation server chip dubbed “Nehalem”.

Talking at a Dell press conference today, Kirk Skaugen, Intel’s vice president of the Digital Enterprise Group launched a direct attack on AMD’s Opteron server chip dominance.

“Relative to AMD… I can confidently say that our lowest performance Nehalem will outperform the fastest performing Shanghai. Which is probably an unprecedented statement,” said Skaugen.

Adding that,

“Of course I want the benchmarks to legitimise that from third parties but at least I want you to walk away with the scale of performance that we are talking about here… but I think it’s an unprecedented leap and I think we feel very good that even this 4-core (each core mutithreaded), even with [AMD Opteron] Istanbul out in the end of the year… We feel quite strong that Nehalem is going to be a strong leadership product even against the next-generation coming that is isn’t shipping from the competition.”

Intel made an “exception” for Apple’s Nehalem workstation launch

Skaugen also explained that Apple’s launch of Nehalem workstations three weeks ago was an “exception” and that the “official” launch – with partners, OEMs… – will happen next week, on March 30th.

“We needed to thoroughly test the chip on all the platforms it will be made available on. We did this earlier with Apple, because it only involved one operating system and a small number of hardware configuration,” adds Skaugen.


HyperMegaNet Sells Mac Clones In Europe; Apple Weights Response

February 6, 2009
PearC is a Mac clone lineup, with models comparable to the Mac mini up to an entry-level Mac Pro

PearC is a Mac clone lineup, with models comparable to the Mac mini up to an entry-level Mac Pro

The German computer maker is opening a new front – in Europe this time – in the Mac clones war against Apple.

Following Florida-based company Psystar – that was sued last July by Apple for selling Mac clones in the U.S. – HyperMegaNet launched this week its PearC lineup, composed of 3 desktop machines (Starter, Advanced and Professional) which come pre-installed with the latest Mac OS X 10.5, Windows Vista or both (dual-boot).

The computers are built-to-order and sold in Europe from $645 (499 euros).

Comparing Apples and PearCs

It’s hard to directly compare PearCs and Macs as Apple’s only standalone consumer desktop is the Mac mini (814 euros) which turns out to be 45% more expensive than a comparatively equipped HyperMegaNet Starter tower (559 euros).

The price gap widens greatly however when comparing the high-end Mac Pro tower – with only one quad-core CPU – (2,700 euros) with an equivalent PearC Advanced (967 euros) machine.

HyperMegaNet computers does not go beyond one processor per machine, while the Mac Pro could host up to two quad-core Intel Xeon chips.

It’s legal in Germany!

In an interview with German magazine Der Spiegel Online, HyperMegaNet spokesperson Dirk Blößl states that in Germany the PearC line is absolutely legal and that a PearC is first and foremost a PC, which runs also Mac OS X.

We’ll see if the lawyers of the Cupertino, Calif.-company agrees with that!


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